After growing into a hurricane Saturday, Orlene quickly added power, and its maximum sustained winds were up to 130 m.p.h. by early Sunday, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center.
The storm was forecast to roar past the Islas Marias, a former prison colony being developed as a tourist draw, late Sunday and then head for a sparsely populated, lagoon-dotted stretch of mainland by Monday night or early Tuesday. Orlene was centred about 105 miles southwest of Cabo Corrientes -- a point of land that juts into the Pacific just south of Puerto Vallarta -- and was headed north at 7 m.p.h. early Sunday.The centre said the storm would likely strengthen more Sunday, then begin weakening as its moved closer to land. But it was still projected to hit as a hurricane.
It could bring flood-inducing rainfall of up to 10 inches in some places, as well as coastal flooding and dangerous surf.Mexico's National Water Commission said Orlene could cause "mudslides, rising river and stream levels, and flooding in low-lying areas." The hurricane centre described Orlene as a small storm, with hurricane-force winds extending out about 10 miles from the centre and tropical storm-force winds out to 60 miles .
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