Storm Pamela Knocks Down Trees, Floods Streets in Western Mexico

Storm Pamela Knocks Down Trees, Floods Streets in Western Mexico
A man speaks on his mobile phone as hurricane Pamela pounds the Pacific coast resort with strong winds as it makes landfall in Mazatlan, Mexico, on Oct. 13, 2021. Daniel Becerril/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

MEXICO CITY—Hurricane Pamela was set to dissipate on Wednesday night after knocking down trees, damaging businesses, and flooding streets in the western Mexican state of Sinaloa, the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) and Mexican officials said.

Mexico’s National Guard police said officers helped some people trapped in their homes by flooding, and were working to clear debris, and dozens of fallen trees in the beach resort of Mazatlan. Some shops and restaurants in the area were damaged, the National Guard added in a statement.

Hurricane Pamela pounds the Pacific coast resort with strong winds as it makes landfall in Mazatlan, Mexico, on Oct. 13, 2021. (Daniel Becerril/Reuters)
Hurricane Pamela pounds the Pacific coast resort with strong winds as it makes landfall in Mazatlan, Mexico, on Oct. 13, 2021. Daniel Becerril/Reuters

Mexican authorities opened 40 temporary shelters in Sinaloa in anticipation of heavy rains and winds.

Reuters images showed palm tree fronds whipping in the wind and a bank with its windows blown out.

Hurricane Pamela pounds the Pacific coast resort with strong winds as it makes landfall in Mazatlan, Mexico, on Oct. 13, 2021. (Daniel Becerril/Reuters)
Hurricane Pamela pounds the Pacific coast resort with strong winds as it makes landfall in Mazatlan, Mexico, on Oct. 13, 2021. Daniel Becerril/Reuters

Sinaloa is the country’s top grower of corn, Mexico’s staple grain, as well as a major producer of tomatoes and other fruits that figure prominently in the country’s agricultural exports to the United States.

The NHC’s latest advisory ranked Pamela as a tropical depression about 255 miles northeast of Mazatlan and said it was packing maximum sustained winds of 35 miles per hour.

“The center of Pamela will continue to move over Central Mexico until dissipation,” the NHC said.

Pamela is set to unleash another 1 to 3 inches of rain in western Durango state and northern Nayarit state on Wednesday evening, before bringing rain to parts of Texas and Oklahoma through Thursday.

Swells generated by Pamela are expected to affect portions of the southern Baja California peninsula, southwestern and west-central mainland Mexico through Wednesday evening, likely producing “life-threatening” surf and rip conditions, the NHC added.

Before reaching Sinaloa, Pamela passed near the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula, home to key tourist destinations such as Los Cabos, where no damage was reported.