Earl strengthened into a hurricane Wednesday and roared toward a nighttime landfall in the Caribbean nation of Belize as it brushed by Honduras, leaving felled trees and power lines in its path.

The storm dumped rain on nearly all of Honduras, where officials reported a lobster fishing boat was hit by a large wave in the Caribbean and capsized. Most of the 83 people on board were rescued, but the navy was looking for two missing people.

Authorities rescued four families in the coastal city of Trujillo after a river jumped its banks.

Lisandro Rosales, head of Honduras’ emergency commission, said there were reports of large numbers of trees and utility poles being knocked down. Schools and universities closed across Honduras’ Atlantic provinces as did two commercial airports.


The commission warned of torrential rains, particularly along the northern coast. The storm swept by the popular tourist destination of Roatan Island in the afternoon.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Earl threatened to bring heavy rains, flooding and high winds to Belize and Mexico.

In Belize, the government opened storm shelters and used radio and television broadcasts to urge residents of low-lying areas to move to higher ground.

Officials also ordered the international airport in Belize City to close, and archaeological reserves and national parks were shut. The Belize Tourism Board announced that cruise ship calls had been canceled for this week.


The government’s chief meteorologist, Dennis Gonguez, said the storm would likely come ashore as a Category 1 hurricane.

Long lines of vehicles formed at gas stations across Belize as residents filled their tanks in advance of Earl’s arrival. Stores were busy with people buying water and food.

Employees of the Caribbean Villas Hotel, in San Pedro on Belize’s Ambergris Caye, pulled in beach chairs and chaise longues as rain began to fall on the popular beach resort.

“Anything that’s not anchored in, we’ve pulled back and out of the way,” said hotel manager Paul Jewitt.


“It’s a big storm but we’re feeling relatively good over here,” he added, noting the hurricane was expected to make landfall farther south.

“There’s some rainfall; it’s not anything excessive,” Jewitt said. “Obviously it’s going to get a lot harder as the day goes on.”

Maj. Shelton DeFour, national coordinator of Belize’s National Emergency Management Organization in Belmopan, said the cays — low-lying islands — were among the priorities in making hurricane preparations.

“The main aspects of the operations, in terms of movement of people from the cays, that operation so far went well,” DeFour said. “People must take necessary precautions. Shelters are opening, search and rescue personnel on standby, and we have deployed most of the public officers in the hot spots, particularly Belize City.”


“We are encouraging people to move to high ground, seek shelter, stay away from the coastline,” DeFour said, noting heavy rain was already hitting the capital, Belmopan. “The outer bands are upon us, so the conditions atmospherically are deteriorating, which means that from here on we are actually in a hurricane setting. People have to be smart.”

At the Palms Oceanfront Suites on Ambergris Caye, Ana Ico said the hotel began preparing two days ago and gave guests the option to evacuate to the mainland or stay at the hotel. About 12 guests chose to remain, Ico said.

“We’re giving them some water, flashlights, and informing them as we get updated on the storm,” she said.

On Sunday, Earl was a weaker tropical wave but knocked down power lines and started a fire that killed six passengers on a bus in the Dominican Republic.


Late Wednesday afternoon, Earl was a Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. It was centered about 150 miles east of Belize City and moving west at 14 mph.

A hurricane warning was in place for Belize, parts of Mexico and islands off Honduras’ north coast.

Jones writes for the Associated Press.