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Travel advisory issued for Mexico as major hurricane approaches

People throw stones into the ocean as hurricane Patricia nears in the Pacific resort city of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, Thursday, Oct. 22, 2015.
Image Credit: AP Photo/Cesar Rodriguez

Canada's foreign affairs department was urging the nearly 2,000 Canadians believed to be in parts of Mexico possibly in the path of a major hurricane to seek shelter and move to safety if they can.

The U.S. National Hurricane Centre describes hurricane Patricia as "potentially catastrophic" and Canadian officials issued a travel warning as the Category 5 storm was poised to make landfall on Friday.

"Canadians in the affected areas should seek shelter, and consider leaving if it is safe to do so," Foreign Affairs said in a statement. "Some airports are closed and flights to and from the affected areas have been suspended. If Canadians are leaving by land, they should do so without delay, as road closures may occur at short notice."

The storm was honing in on a Pacific coastline dotted with sleepy fishing villages and gleaming tourist resorts, including the popular beach city of Puerto Vallarta and the port of Manzanillo. After hitting land, Patricia's projected path would quickly take it over mountainous terrain that is prone to dangerous flash floods and landslides.

Foreign Affairs said 500 Canadians are currently registered as being in the affected state of Jalisco, but estimated the true number was closer to 2,000.

Travellers who booked their trips through major travel company Transat account for more than 450 of them, according to spokeswoman Debbie Cabana.

Those clients, however, will not be leaving the country any time soon. Cabana said travellers are being moved to safe locations in accordance with the individual emergency plans established by all hotels in the area.

"It's not unusual for this region to have hurricanes," she said. "They're not all as strong as the one that we're experiencing, but (hotels) are kind of prepared for this kind of event."

Cabana said clients may be relocated from ocean-front rooms to less exposed quarters, adding some hotels may opt to move guests off the premises altogether.

WestJet, which had 295 WestJet Vacations customers in and around Puerto Vallarta, was also asking clients to stay where they were.

"It's very important that guests follow the emergency response instructions of the hotel in which they are staying," said spokesman Robert Palmer. "It's very important that they do not try to venture out on their own to get away or avoid the storm."

The company's local representatives have been going from hotel to hotel to ensure customers are safe and have the information they need, said Palmer, adding that any guest who made their own plans to escape the storm could be putting themselves in danger.

"Once the guest does that we've lost track of them, we don't know where they are and don't know if they're in a safe place," he said, noting that some hotels were sending guests to evacuation centres further inland on the advice of local authorities.

With the local airport closed, WestJet cancelled one flight on Friday and five scheduled flights set for Saturday but said it was prepared to put on extra flights to get customers out of Mexico after the storm had passed.

Foreign Affairs cautioned those in the area that Patricia could bring about food and water shortages in addition to damage caused by flash flooding. Canadians are strongly discouraged from visiting the Mexican coast between San Blas and Lazaro Cardenas.

In Puerto Vallarta, residents reinforced homes with sandbags and shop windows with boards and tape, and hotels rolled up beachfront restaurants. The airport was all but deserted, but lines formed at a bus station with people anxious to buy tickets to Guadalajara and other inland destinations.

One Canadian couple, however, had no plans to move away from the heart of the storm.

David Lloyd of Edmonton just moved into a Puerto Vallarta high rise with his wife and said they intend to try to ride the storm out at home.

"We've just pulled everything off the patio that could be blowing around. We're establishing a safe zone inside the apartment that will be away from any windows," Lloyd told ABC news. "We'll hunker down."

Lloyd said he expects that he could be without power for up to four days if early forecasts prove accurate.

Larry Kehler, who owns Cafe Roma in Puerto Vallarta, said by mid-afternoon the sky was overcast, light rain was falling, but there was no wind and the temperature was about 26C.

"They've basically shut this city down," said Kehler, a native of Steinbach, Man. "There's nobody on the streets much."

Kehler said he questioned how much of an impact the storm would have on Puerto Vallarta because a mountain range separates his community from where the hurricane is expected to make landfall.

But Arthur Fumerton, an Ontario native who is now the director of a before and after school program called the Volcanes Community Education Project, said he is about two kilometres away from the beach and has taken precautions.

"We've all taped up windows and so on anticipating," he said.

He said students were dismissed early on Thursday from schools, which remained closed on Friday, and the storm is expected to hit in the early evening.

"Everything's pretty well shutdown right now," he said. "They were evacuating along the beach areas."

— with files from the Associated Press.

Follow @mich_mcq on Twitter

News from © The Canadian Press, 2015
The Canadian Press

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