PUERTO SAN CARLOS, Mexico — Hurricane Norbert swept across Mexico’s southern Baja California peninsula on Saturday, tearing off roofs and forcing hundreds of people to flee flooded homes.
It hit land near Puerto Charley on Baja’s southwest coast as a Category 2 hurricane, but weakened to Category 1 after emerging over the Gulf of California, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami. Norbert was expected to reach mainland Mexico sometime before dawn today.
Baja residents fled to shelters in school buses and army trucks as floodwaters rose in their homes. Winds uprooted palm trees and the water rose knee-high in some streets of the town of Puerto San Carlos.
“We left our house because we were scared. Our house is pretty poor and the water was already coming in,” said Maria Espinosa, 54, who arrived at a high school with her daughter and two grandchildren. They joined about 60 other people sitting on foam mattresses and blankets.
Streets turned into rushing, knee-deep rivers in Ciudad Constitucion, on the southern peninsula. Furniture, car parts and trash cans floated down the roads that were deserted except for a few police patrols and a soaked dog on high ground.
More than 2,000 people were in the city’s shelters, many of them from coastal villages where nearly all homes had lost their roofs, said Miguel Arevalos, the local Civil Protection director.
“We came here because our roof is gone, the wind ripped it off,” said Luis Mesa, 39, taking shelter at an elementary school after fleeing his village of Pueblo Nuevo. “They said on the radio it was going to get really ugly.”
Robert Fernandez, sales manager of the Paradiso Resort and Beach Club in Sonora’s popular vacation town of San Carlos, said the hotel set up sandbags along the beach, reinforced its windows and warned visitors against swimming in the ocean.
“But we don’t think it will be too bad,” he said.
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