Currently in San Francisco — October 25, 2023: Wind on Wednesday

Plus, Hurricane Otis makes landfall in Mexico as a Category 5.

The weather, currently.

Wind on Wednesday

Wednesday temps get cooler, with a midday high in the mid-60s and partly sunny skies all day. The aspect of the day that will set it apart from others this week: the wind. Coming in from the west, the wind speeds will noticeably increase, heading up toward 13mph with gusting up to nearly 20mph. And it’ll stay breezy overnight as some clouds and fog roll in.

What you need to know, currently.

Hurricane Otis made landfall early Wednesday near Acapulco, Mexico at Category 5 strength — the strongest hurricane landfall in recorded history on Mexico’s west coast — and the strongest ever in the Eastern Pacific Ocean.

Initial reports show a partial collapse of a shopping mall, and palm trees stripped completely bare of leaves due to the strong winds. The city has almost completely lost power. The National Hurricane Center, in its final advisory before the storm struck, called it a “nightmare scenario.”

According to the Washington Post (gift link), Otis strengthened from a Category 1 to a Category 5 in just 12 hours — the fastest rate ever recorded for a hurricane in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, and one of the fastest rates in world history.

Before Otis, no hurricane stronger than a Category 1 had ever made landfall near Acapulco in recorded history, and the storm’s extremely rapid intensification mean residents and visitors there had less than 24 hours warning before Otis made landfall. On a personal note, it’s hard to imagine going to bed expecting some rain and strong winds, and waking up to a city in catastrophic chaos.

Around the world, warming ocean waters are making extremely rapid intensification of tropical cyclones like Otis more likely. There have been only eight instances of storms strengthening as fast as Otis in recorded history (with comprehensive records dating back more than 70 years) — five of them have occurred in just the past 8 years.

What you can do, currently.

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