Hurricane John rips apart Tropical Storm Ileana off Mexico coast

The National Hurricane Center expects Ileana to dissipate Tuesday, and Mexico has dropped its warning and watches.

A woman walks towards the Atlantic Ocean in Buxton, North Carolina.  (Photographer: Ted Richardson/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) – Call it a case of sibling rivalry. Or maybe tropical-cyclone cannibalism. Whatever the name, Hurricane John is destroying a slightly older sibling.

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Tropical Storm Ileana was named Sunday afternoon in the eastern Pacific, and John came a few hours later. Initially they were about 460 miles (740 kilometers) apart and running roughly on parallel tracks.

Mexico’s west coast spared

Ileana had a lot of promise at first. Closer to Mexico’s west coast, it prompted tropical storm watches and warnings in the port city of Manzanillo and the resort areas of Cabo San Lucas. Early Monday there was even a chance it would become a hurricane.

But by Monday evening, Ileana was starting to look like it was becoming part of the much larger John, according to a forecast discussion from the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

A few hours later, John was“bringing high wind shear over Ileana, tearing it apart,’’ said Jeff Masters, co-founder of Weather Underground in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Hurricane John not expected to be much of a threat

The National Hurricane Center expects Ileana to dissipate Tuesday, and Mexico has dropped its warning and watches. Meanwhile John is forecast to get even bigger, becoming a major hurricane with winds of 120 miles per hour Wednesday.

Fortunately, John is expected to head northwest, far out to sea, where it shouldn’t be much of a threat.

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