Trees fall, power goes out in heavy rain
Wind gusts Monday afternoon, reaching 83 kph/52 mph, toppled at least 85 trees, a billboard and three telephone poles.
Wind gusts Monday afternoon, reaching 83 kph/52 mph, toppled at least 85 trees, a billboard and three telephone poles.
A large tent fell on hundreds of festival attendees taking shelter in heavy rain and strong winds on Saturday.
Alberto probably won’t become a hurricane, but it’s still capable of high winds and sustained rain that will cause flooding in other regions.
Rainy weather and high winds won’t be taking the weekend off, Conagua reports.
Unfortunately for the new convention center, it’s not technically “Powered by Samsung.” It’s powered by the CFE.
Damaging weather is possible this weekend as a cold front is set to clash with the Peninsula’s high temperatures.
Among the groups at risk are diabetes patients because heat and resulting dehydration increase the concentration of glucose in the blood.
Early 2018 hurricane predictions are troubling, but take them with a grain of salt.
A high pressure system lingering over the Yucatán Peninsula will bring high temperatures and humidity this weekend, reports the National Water Commission.
Waterlogged streets, traffic accidents and blackouts bedeviled various parts of the city during a prolonged rain storm on Sunday afternoon.
We have been waking up to temperatures in the teens (C) and 60s (F), waiting for highs around 30C/85F. And it’s been this way for more than a week in tropical Yucatán.
Part of the roof at the old Sidra Pino bottling plant in the Santiago neighborhood collapsed Tuesday. Although damage is not visible from the street, authorities said a south-facing exterior wall is teetering as well.
The Atlantic’s 2017 hurricane season, which in April was forecast to be quiet, is now expected to be more active than normal.
The region’s rainy season kicks off with perhaps three days of scattered thunder storms.
The fishermen feared lost at sea have been rescued, regional port captain Bernardo Crespo Silva reported today.
At least four fishermen have been missing since a surprisingly powerful storm hammered the state Thursday afternoon.
Thursday’s winds affected a large part of the state, toppling trees and billboards, all because of what fishermen call the cordonazo de la Santa Cruz.
The north coast of the Yucatán Peninsula will be hit with the first norte of the 2016-2017 season.
The Gulf of Mexico is about to break its record for being hurricane-free.
Much-anticipated rain is back, and by tomorrow it may become more intense, bringing with it lightning and strong winds with gusts up to 55 mph.
Nature’s gifts to us all on Christmas are coming…
The weather right now seems perfect to many of us, but in a region where citizens have acclimated to the heat, some people start shivering this time of year.
That’s all for now
That’s all for now