Hoʻohou a Ingrid a me Manu ʻino tropical a me ka makani pāhili

Ua ʻike ʻia ʻo Manuel lāua ʻo Ingrid e pākuʻi iā Mekiko me ka hoʻokahi a ʻelua kuʻi a hōʻino i kekahi mau hoʻomanaʻo i hoʻolālā ʻia no ka hoʻolauleʻa ʻana i ka lā kūʻokoʻa o ka lā 15 a me 16 o Kepakemapa.

Ua ʻike ʻia ʻo Manuel lāua ʻo Ingrid e pākuʻi iā Mekiko me ka hoʻokahi a ʻelua kuʻi a hōʻino i kekahi mau hoʻomanaʻo i hoʻolālā ʻia no ka hoʻolauleʻa ʻana i ka lā kūʻokoʻa o ka lā 15 a me 16 o Kepakemapa.

Ua hāʻule ka makani ʻino ʻo Manuel ma ka ʻaoʻao hema hema o Mexico i ke kahakai o ka Pākīpika i ka lā Lāpule ʻoiai he mau kaukani ma ke kahawai ʻo Gulf o ka ʻāina i ʻimi e hoʻomaha mai ka hoʻokokoke ʻana i ka Hurricane Ingrid ma waena o ka hoʻoweliweli ʻana o ka ua nui, nā wai kahe weliweli a me nā ʻōpala ma nā kahakai ʻelua.

Ua ʻōlelo ka US National Hurricane Center ma Miami ʻo Ingrid, ka lua o ka makani ʻino o ka ʻAkelanika, hiki ke hōʻea i ka ʻāina nui o Mekiko i ka Pōʻakahi ma hope o ka hōʻiliʻili ʻana i ka ikaika ma luna o nā wai mahana o ke Kaiwa o Mexico. Ua hoʻopaʻa ʻia ʻo ia i nā makani ikaika o 85 mph (140 kph).

ʻO Manuel, ke kākoʻo nei i ka makani kiʻekiʻe loa o 70 mph (110 kph), ma kahi o 40 mau mile (65 mau kilomita) mai ke kahakai Pākīpika kokoke i ke kūlanakauhale awa ʻo Mexico ʻo Lazaro Cardenas i ka Lāpule kakahiaka nui. Ua ʻōlelo ka poʻe wānana e neʻe ana ka ʻino i ka pae ʻāina i manaʻo ʻia.

Ua hoʻopuka ke aupuni Mekiko i ka Pōʻaono i kahi ʻino no ka Pākīpika o ka ʻāina mai Lazaro Cardenas a i Manzanillo. ʻO ia ka mea i ʻōlelo ʻia e ka poʻe wānana i ke kakahiaka nui o ka lā Lāpule he liʻiliʻi paha ka liʻiliʻi o Manuel e lilo i ʻino ma mua o kona hiki ʻana i ka ʻāina. Ua manaʻo ʻia e nāwaliwali koke ka ʻino i ka wā i hoʻomaka ai ke poʻo i loko o ka loko Mekiko.

Ua hōʻike aku ka poʻe wānana i nā pōʻino o nā ʻino ʻelua.

Ua manaʻo ʻia ʻo Manuel e hoʻolei i 10 a 15 mau ʻīniha o ka ua ma luna o nā ʻāpana o nā mokuʻāina ʻo Mekiko o Oaxaca a me Guerrero me ka nui o 25 mau ʻīniha i hiki i kekahi mau wahi kaʻawale. Ua ʻōlelo mai nā mana e hōʻike ana kēlā ua i kahi hoʻoweliweli weliweli loa i nā mauna, kahi e hiki ai ke kahe ʻana o ka wai a me ka lepo.

Ua manaʻo ʻia ʻo Hurricane Ingrid e hoʻolei i ka ua nui loa. Ua hoʻokumu ʻia ʻo ia ma ke kakahiaka Sabati ma kahi o 160 mile (290 km) hikina o Tampico, Mekiko, a neʻe i ke komohana ʻākau ma 7 mph (11 km). Ua hoʻomaka ʻia kahi ʻōlelo ʻino mai Ingrid mai Cabo Rojo a i La Pesca.

Ma ka moku'āina o Tamaulipas ma ke kūkulu'ākau, kahi i manaʻoʻia aiʻo Ingrid e hana i ka'āina, ua'ōlelo ke aupuni ma kahi'ōlelo ua hoʻopauʻia nāʻahaʻaina Independence Day ma nā kūlanakauhaleʻo Tampico, Madero a me Altamira. Hoʻomanaʻo ka lā 15 a me 16 Kepakemapa i ke kaua kūʻokoʻa o Mexico mai Sepania.

Ua hoʻomaka nā luna o ka mokuʻāina ʻo Gulf o Veracruz e haʻalele i nā kamaʻāina kahakai i ka pō Pōʻalima, a ua ʻōlelo nā luna hoʻomalu kīwila ua ʻoi aku ma mua o 5,300 mau kānaka i neʻe ʻia i kahi ʻāina palekana. ʻO kēlā mau mea, ma kahi o 3,500 poʻe i noho ʻia i nā hale noho aupuni me ke koena e noho pū me ka ʻohana a me nā hoaaloha. ʻAʻole i hōʻike koke ʻia nā ʻeha i hoʻopiʻi ʻia ma ka ʻino.

ʻOi aku ma mua o 1,000 mau hale ma ka mokuʻāina ʻo Veracruz i hoʻopilikia ʻia e ka ʻino i nā degere like ʻole, a ua loaʻa i nā alaloa he 20 a me nā alahaka 12 i nā pōʻino, e like me ka mana mālama kīwila o ka mokuʻāina.

Ua hāʻule kahi alahaka ma kahi kokoke i ke kūlanakauhale ʻo Veracruz o Misantla ma ka Pōʻalima, e ʻoki ana i ka wahi mai ke kapikala mokuʻāina. He ʻumikūmākolu mau kānaka i make i ka wā i kanu ʻia ai ko lākou mau home i ka ua nui i hoʻokumu ʻia e Tropical Depression Fernand i ka Pōʻakahi.

Ua kau aku nā luna o ka moku'āina i kahi makaʻala ʻalani, ka mea kiʻekiʻe loa, ma nā wahi o ka hema o Veracruz.

He aha e lawe ʻia mai kēia ʻatikala:

  • In Tamaulipas state to the north, where Ingrid is expected to make landfall, the government said in a statement that Independence Day festivities were cancelled in the cities of Tampico, Madero and Altamira.
  • National Hurricane Center in Miami said Ingrid, the second hurricane of the Atlantic storm season, could reach the Mexican mainland early Monday after gathering strength over the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico.
  • Manuel was expected to dump 10 to 15 inches of rain over parts of the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Guerrero with maximums of 25 inches possible in some isolated areas.

<

No ka mea kākau

Linda Hohnholz

Lunahooponopono no eTurboNews ma ka eTN HQ.

Kaʻana like i...