Waterspout draws lots of attention in Manzanillo, Colima

Towering hundreds of meters over the sea, a waterspout formed Wednesday in a bay in Manzanillo, Colima.

Commonly called a culebra de mar (water snake) in Mexico, the tornado-like phenomenon appeared in Santiago bay, the smaller of Manzanillo’s two main coves.

It captured people’s attention around 1:30 in the afternoon before dissipating upon making landfall.

Waterspouts are common in the area during the rainy season, and can also occur over lakes and rivers.

On July 24, a group of surfers spotted one over the open ocean while they were riding waves off Peña Blanca Beach, in Manzanillo bay.

The waterspout was visible from many areas of the port.
The waterspout was visible from many areas of the port.

According to experts, the whirlwind formed by a waterspout can reach speeds up to 80 kilometers an hour, and the column can reach heights of 900 meters above the water.

The diameter is usually 15 to 46 meters, though larger ones can be as wide as 100 meters.

A waterspout dissipates when it hits land or the air inside the whirlwind becomes cold, losing the energy to spin. Although stronger ones can last up to an hour, the average lifetime of a waterspout is just 10-15 minutes.

The energy in a waterspout is equivalent to a weak tornado on land. Though not devastating on a large scale, they can be potentially dangerous to boats and coastal infrastructure.

Sources: AF Medios (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Víctor Rodríguez

Former Pemex CEO’s legal troubles deepen with a 4.8 billion-peso corruption complaint

0
Already behind bars on domestic abuse charges, Víctor Rodríguez is now the target in a federal probe of irregularities in a no-bid vehicle leasing contract as head of the state-owned oil company.
newborn tapir in Chiapas

A Chiapas zoo welcomes a newborn tapir, a conservation win for the endangered mammal

0
The birth is signficant because tapirs, which are related to horses, are threatened in Mexico by habitat fragmentation, deforestation, poaching, vehicle strikes and slow reproductive rates. 
El Mayo

Cartel leader ‘El Mayo’ Zambada says he’ll accept a life sentence, but asks for medical care

2
By pleading guilty early in the process and now indicating that he won't contest any sentence, El Mayo has saved authorities a spectacle of a trial but reduced the chances of new information emerging.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity