Since making landfall near Cuixmala, Mexico at 6:15 PM CDT Friday night, Hurricane Patricia—which approached Mexico’s southwestern coast with up to 200-mph winds near its eye—has been downgraded to a tropical storm.

According to Reuters, “there were no early reports of deaths” and “major damage was averted because the powerful storm did not hit large population centers” (like Puerto Vallarta and the center of Manzanillo), though Mexican officials are still assessing damage sustained in smaller villages.

Though the brunt of its direct impact may have passed, the US National Hurricane Center warned that heavy rainfall could put residents in the storm’s path “across northeast Mexico into coastal sections of Texas” at risk of “life-threatening flash floods and mudslides” later today.

As Mexico braced for the hurricane’s impact Friday evening, the national police force tweeted these pictures of its initial effects:

Efectos de #HuracánPatricia en Melaque #Jalisco. Reiteramos petición a ciudadanía de resguardarse. Llame al 088 pic.twitter.com/VqWsh9CFlP — Policía Federal Mx (@PoliciaFedMx) October 23, 2015

At 1:49 PM CDT today, CNN reporter Mario Gonzalez posted this photo, taken in the same region:

Early this morning, some redditors who were stranded in the hurricane’s predicted path gave updates:

One woman even related how she was trapped in Puerto Vallarta last night during her honeymoon:

“Well, our wedding was just wonderful; really couldn’t have asked for more. I’m looking forward to writing a full recap here once we get our photos. But right now, we’re sheltering under mattresses with taped windows in our hotel room in Puerto Vallarta as hurricane Patricia bares down on us, along with 4 other couples whose rooms were too close to the beach. Not exactly what we imagined for our honeymoon. But we’re happy to be together, and to be safe.”

For real-time updates on tropical storm Patricia, check out Reddit’s live news feed below, with updates, comments, safety warnings, and video streams of the storm’s progress: