Aug
20
2007
The current forecast puts it in the southern area of the state of Quintana Roo, with the fringe touching Cancun. As of 10:22 pm, Aug. 20, 2007, all public services are functioning in Cancun. We are experiencing wind and rain in the Hotel Zone, but nothing heavier than a tropical storm so far.
Aug
19
2007

Photograph by Anita Brown, 8:04 a.m, from our back window.
Aug
19
2007

It now looks as if it will hit land south of Tulum. If so, Cancun will not be severely affected.
Whew.
Chattanooga Times Free Press –AP–Tourists also streamed out of resorts on Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula and formed long lines at the airport to try to fly home. Twelve empty planes had arrived Sunday to move travelers out, said airport spokesman Eduardo Rivadeneira.
Forecasters said Sunday that Dean’s eye could come ashore on a sparsely populated stretch of the coast about 100 miles south of Cancun, sparing the resort city that was ravaged by Hurricane Wilma in 2005. The nearest beach town, Tulum, is about 25 miles north of where the hurricane is expected to make landfall.
The Quintana Roo state government has set up 530 storm shelters in schools and other public buildings, with an estimated capacity to hold 73,000 people. Hundreds of people have already been ordered to evacuate from low-lying areas along the coast.
Aug
18
2007

(CNN) — Hurricane Dean gained fury Saturday as it moved across the Caribbean and headed toward a dangerous rendezvous Sunday with Jamaica, by which time forecasters fear Dean will be a destructive Category 5 monster packing 155 mph winds.
And even worse could be yet to come. The latest forecast predicts that by Monday, as Dean nears Cancun and other tourist areas along Mexico’s eastern Yucatan coast, its sustained winds will be 160 mph, with gusts as high as 195 mph — wreaking new havoc on an area heavily damaged just two years ago by Hurricane Wilma. Continue Reading »