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Deadly Hurricane Beryl brings storm surge, flash flooding to Jamaica as Category 4 storm


Fisherman Hamilton Cosmos looks at vessels damaged by Hurricane Beryl at the Bridgetown Fisheries in Barbados, Monday, July 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan)

Jamaica is bracing for a near-direct strike from Category 4 Hurricane Beryl on Wednesday, after the record-breaking storm left multiple people dead on islands in the eastern Caribbean.

The Cayman Islands and Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula are in Beryl’s path later in the week, and the southern Gulf coast of Texas, including Corpus Christi, was in Beryl’s forecast cone of uncertainty for late in the weekend.

Hurricane Beryl could bring life-threatening storm surge from six to nine feet, flash flooding and mudslides to Jamaica and Haiti, and officials are warning residents to take shelter or evacuate the most prone areas.

As of 2 p.m. Wednesday, Beryl was 45 miles south of Kingston, Jamaica, paralleling the southern coast of the island, with maximum sustained winds of 140 mph. The hurricane is traveling west-northwest at 18 mph.

Hurricane-force winds extend outward up to 45 miles from the center and tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 185 miles.

After passing Jamaica, Hurricane Beryl will track near or over the Cayman Islands on Wednesday night or early Thursday before approaching the Yucatan Peninsula just south of Tulum and Cancun as a weaker hurricane on Thursday night.

Mexico has issued a hurricane warning for the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula from Puerto Costa Maya near the Belize border north to Cancun.

A tropical storm watch is in effect for the coast of Belize from south of Chetumal to Belize City.

Forecasters said Beryl will weaken over the Yucatan but could regain hurricane strength as it moves back over water in the Bay of Campeche and then the Gulf of Mexico. The southern half of Texas’ Gulf Coast was in the forecast cone of uncertainty as of Wednesday morning.

“We are most concerned about Jamaica, where we are expecting the core of a major hurricane to pass near or over the island,” National Hurricane Center Director Michael Brennan said in an online briefing Tuesday. “You want to be in a safe place where you can ride out the storm … Be prepared to stay in that location through Wednesday.”

Even if the eye of the storm doesn’t make landfall on Jamaica, the island will take a blow from the upper right quadrant, the strongest and most devastating part of a hurricane.

“I am encouraging all Jamaicans to take the hurricane as a serious threat,” Prime Minister Andrew Holness said in a public address late Monday. “It is, however, not a time to panic.”

The Cayman Islands could see between 2 and 4 feet of storm surge. Though Haiti and the Dominican Republic are not in the direct path of Beryl, the hurricane is close enough to bring a potential storm surge of 1 to 3 feet along the southern coasts, the hurricane center said.

Record-breaking storm

Late Monday, Beryl became the earliest storm to develop into a Category 5 hurricane in the Atlantic and peaked at winds of 165 mph Tuesday before weakening to a still-destructive Category 4. It was the first Category 4 storm to occur in June and the earliest Category 4 on record in the …read more

Source:: The Mercury News – Entertainment

      

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