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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico 

Hurricane Barbara Hits Mexico, Kills At Least Two

May 30, 2013

Hurricane Barbara hit Mexico's Pacific coast Wednesday near the port of Salina Cruz in Oaxaca. The storm flooded roads, toppled trees and killed 2 men as it pounded the area with heavy rain and 75 mph winds

Oaxaca, Mexico — Hurricane Barbara drenched a sparsely populated stretch of Mexico's southern Pacific coast with rain Wednesday after making the second-earliest landfall since reliable record-keeping began in 1966. It quickly lost strength over land but not before killing at least two people, including a man identified by local officials as a US surfer.

The director of civil defense for Oaxaca state, Manuel Maza Sanchez, said a 61-year-old man from Colorado died while surfing at Playa Azul, a beach near the resort town of Puerto Escondido, when Barbara made landfall at midafternoon as a Category 1 hurricane about 120 miles to the east. He said the man was dragged out by waves kicked up by Barbara and then battered against the shore.

The US Embassy in Mexico City was not immediately able to confirm the man’s name.

Maza Sanchez also said a 26-year-old Mexican man drowned in the nearby city of Pinotepa Nacional while trying to cross a rain-swollen creek.

Farther to the east, near the landfall area, 14 fishermen who set out to sea Wednesday morning in the town of Tapanatepec, Oaxaca, had been reported missing, Maza said.

Barbara came ashore with winds of about 75 mph and lost power as it moved inland. By Wednesday night, maximum sustained winds had dropped to 50 mph as the storm slogged northward, but flooding was reported in some areas and remained a threat.

On May 23rd, the National Hurricane Center had said odds favor a below-normal hurricane season in the eastern Pacific for 2013. It said 11 to 16 named storms were likely, below the 15-storm annual average for 1981-2010.

But Barbara appeared to start the Pacific season unusually early, and it also made landfall farther east than any other Pacific hurricane since 1966. Such storms often form closer to the resort of Acapulco, to the west.

Officials in Oaxaca had rushed to prepare emergency shelters and suspended school for children in coastal communities as rain began lashing the coast when the storm formed close to shore.

The major Gulf oil port of Coatzacoalcos is located on the other side of the narrow waist of Mexico known as the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. But the hurricane center predicts that Barbara will dissipate into a rain system well before reaching Coatzacoalcos.

Maza Sanchez said ports had been closed to navigation in tourist resorts of Puerto Angel, Puerto Escondido, and Huatulco, all located more than 120 miles to the west.

He said classes would be suspended at schools along the coast for the rest of the week. Storm shelters were set up in 20 towns at the local schools.