MEXICO CITY, Oct. 18, 2009

Hurricane Rick Weakens to Category 4

Forecasters Say Storm Headed for Baja Peninsula is Still Very Dangerous

  • Hurricane Rick, a Category 5 storm in the Eastern Pacific, approaches Baja California, Sunday, October 18, 2009.

    Hurricane Rick, a Category 5 storm in the Eastern Pacific, approaches Baja California, Sunday, October 18, 2009.  (NOAA)

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(CBS/AP)  Updated 11:08 p.m. EDT

Forecasters say Hurricane Rick has weakened in the eastern North Pacific but is still a dangerous storm and could veer into resorts at the tip of the Baja California Peninsula by midweek.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami, Fla., says as of Sunday night, winds were down to 145 mph. It makes it a Category 4 storm. The peak winds as a Category 5 were 180 mph.

Forecasters say a hurricane watch may be required for parts of southern Baja California on Monday.

The eye was centered about 410 miles south of Cabo San Lucas as of 11 p.m. EDT Sunday.

More weakening is expected over the next couple of days.

Large swells will cause potentially dangerous surf along the southern Baja California coast and west-central coast of Mexico.

Forecasters called on all those in Mexico's southern Baja California peninsula and along the mainland coast to closely monitor the storm, adding Rick would remain an extremely dangerous hurricane for the next day or two before losing some punch over cooler waters.

The hurricane was projected to stay well off the Mexican coast for days before closing in on the Baja California Peninsula as a Category 1 or Category 2 hurricane sometime Wednesday, forecasters said.

Authorities in the resort city of Acapulco closed the port to small craft after Rick kicked up heavy waves and gusts of wind.

Acapulco's Civil Protection Department had warned that rains from the outer bands of the storm could cause landslides and flooding in the resort city, but no such effects were reported.

Rick was the second-strongest hurricane in the eastern North Pacific since 1966, when experts began keeping reliable records, said Hurricane Center meteorologist Hugh Cobb.

The strongest was Hurricane Linda, which generated maximum winds of 185 mph in September 1997.

"Rick is probably going to go into the record books as one of the most rapidly intensifying hurricanes," Cobb said.

The storm was generating some waves up to 50 feet high near its core, Cobb said, adding there were ship reports of 16-foot seas elsewhere off the Mexican coast.

He said the storm's danger should not be underestimated, however, as Rick will still have the potential as a Category 1 or Category 2 storm to provoke heavy rains and unleash mudslides.

Cobb said it is still uncertain whether the eye of the storm will make landfall.

Rick was forecast to pass early in the week near Socorro Island, about 300 miles southwest of Cabo San Lucas. The island is a nature reserve with a small Mexican Navy post and it hosts scuba-diving expeditions in winter months.

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Add a Comment
by sightpoint October 18, 2009 11:54 PM EDT
It still won't be enough to put out the fire. I think CA has been burning non stop for ten years now? What is left to burn? Oh well here comes the fun!
Reply to this comment
by Providence-- October 18, 2009 1:51 PM EDT
Imagine being in a old wooden ship with 50 foot waves.
Reply to this comment
by payasyougo October 18, 2009 9:54 AM EDT
After it hits, California can be declared a disaster area and the government can hide the financial rescue in the disaster relief funds.
Reply to this comment

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