Storms
Beatriz had been threatening some of Mexico's most popular resorts and left tourists sheltering in hotels, but all warnings have now been cancelled.
Pacific ports which were closed along the coast are gradually being reopened.
The US National Hurricane Center said winds had fallen to 110km/h (70mph) and were expected to continue weakening over the next two days.
The first Pacific hurricane - Adrian - formed earlier this month, causing no damage, but forecasters predict a busier hurricane season over the Atlantic.
Casualties have been light. One tourist is reported to have been injured by a falling tree in Acapulco.
The Mexican government issued a red alert for areas around the resort city of Manzanillo.
And hurricane warnings were issued along coast from Lazaro Cardenas north to Cabo Corrientes.
The effects of the tornado will be felt for years to come, but one of its lasting legacies will be the loss of all the mature trees that once dotted the area's landscape.
Those beautiful trees that dotted places like Springfield's Court Square, and Wilbraham Mountain into Monson, took generations to mature, and just minutes to disappear.
"I think that I shall never see a poem as lovely as a tree," wrote American poet Joyce Kilmer almost 100 years ago. Chances are he was inspired by trees like the ones that now stand sideways and uprooted over many parts of the Pioneer Valley.

Atlanta Braves fans stand under cover in the upper deck as rain falls on Turner Field during a rain delay in the top of the 5th inning of their game against the Texas Rangers Saturday afternoon in Atlanta, Ga., June 18, 2011.
But witnesses told police that Shufen Yang was too late.
Whether it was heavy rain, slippery roads or unusually gloomy conditions, Yang could not get out of the way Saturday evening as the tree crashed on her 1993 Honda Accord.
The 55-year-old Marietta woman was pronounced dead at the scene, the only reported fatality resulting from a round of thunderstorms that swept through the area Saturday afternoon.
"It's one of those freak things," said Cobb County police spokesman Officer Mike Bowman. "I can't think of anything [similar] that I can recall that we've handled before."
In fact, this year's death rate has not been matched since the 1950s and is most comparable to rates pre-1925, before effective mass communication, doppler radar and tornado warnings. Through June 7, 525 tornado deaths have occurred - the sixth most on record in a single year (with six months remaining, although most tornado deaths historically occur by mid-June).
Government weather researchers said yesterday that, while similar extremes have occurred throughout modern American history, never before have they occurred in a single month, as they did in April.
The last time anything remotely like it happened was the spring of 1927, which also had many tornadoes and flooding, said Harold Brooks of the Storm Prediction Center in Oklahoma.
For farmers, the damage has hurt their crops, and their pocketbooks.
Mick Rausch is no stranger to Spring storms, especially those that strike right in the middle of wheat harvest.
"I can remember doing wheat harvest when I was 8, 9, 10 years old," said Rausch.
Since a young age, Rausch has always hoped for a good crop.
"Farmers are eternal optimists," said Rausch.
Until the June 9th hail storm hit, Rausch had been fairly lucky.
"You've got a whole years worth of income potential out there. The thought of losing a whole year's work in a 5 minute storm, it can lead to some sleepless nights," said Rausch.
This storm, however, lasted for just under an hour.
Baseball, even softball-sized hail, left five of Rausch's un-harvested wheat fields mostly damaged.
Water Resources Minister Chen Lei warned that at least 10 major rivers in the affected areas were threatening to burst their banks.
"Severe floods triggered by heavy rains will continue to threaten parts of southern China," he said yesterday in remarks posted on his ministry's website.
"There is an increasing possibility that downpours, with enhanced frequency and intensity, will continue to lash regions in the south."
Persistent rains since early June have swamped many areas across a wide swath of China and the state weather bureau today forecast continued downpours during the next three days, with the summer typhoon season approaching.
Authorities have evacuated 292,000 people from along the Qiantang river in Zhejiang province on the east coast after heavy rains caused the river to swell dangerously, official Xinhua news agency said.
Meanwhile, the coast guards have been searching for three trawlers and 45 fishermen who went missing in the Bay of Bengal on Friday.
Officials suspect they may have strayed into Bangladeshi waters. Indian authorities asked the Bangladesh government to give them shelter.
Meanwhile, heavy rain wreaked havoc in Orissa as well as two people were swept away in the overflowing Baitarani river. Earlier in the week, two others had died when a wall collapsed after heavy rainfall.

Two travellers push a car on a flooded street in the seat of Changshan County in Quzhou City, east China's Zhejiang Province, June 19, 2011. A fourth round of heavy downpours has battered Changshan County and its neighbouring areas since Saturday evening, bringing a rainfall of more than 150 millimeters. Days of torrential rains have saturated the mountainous county, putting the residents in danger of landslides and mud-rock flows.
Latest data from the flood control headquarters of east Zhejiang Province showed that by 7:00 a.m. Sunday, 2.66 million people had been affected by continuous rainstorms in 545 townships of 50 counties under nine cities in Zhejiang. A total of 171,000 hectares of crops were destroyed and 989 enterprises were shut down, incurring 4.96 billion yuan (751.5 million U.S. dollars) in direct economic losses.
Persistent downpours caused a mudslide in Changshan County on Sunday at noon, which flushed several local homes at Longtan Village of Tianma Town, killing two and leaving one missing.









