Strong winds caused by Hurricane Dolly strike palm trees and cars in Matamoros, Mexico, July 23, 2008. Hurricane Dolly moved inland after tearing into the south Texas coast on Wednesday with 95 mph (150 kph) winds, pouring torrential rain on the U.S.-Mexico border area and threatening floods. Dolly, the second hurricane of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season, dropped up to 12 inches (30 cm) of rain in the first few hours after coming ashore at the barrier island of South Padre Island, where it ripped off roofs, bent palm trees in half and left thousands of residents without power
Robert Morton checks on the damage to his 36-foot sailboat by Hurricane Dolly in Port Isabel, Texas July 23, 2008
A truck tries to cross a street flooded by Hurricane Dolly in Brownsville, Texas July 23, 2008
A horse is seen in a flooded farm as Hurricane Dolly makes landfall in Matamoros, Mexico, Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Hurricane Dolly moved inland after tearing into the south Texas coast on Wednesday with 95 mph (150 kph) winds, pouring torrential rain on the U.S.-Mexico border area and threatening floods. Dolly, the second hurricane of the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season, dropped up to 12 inches (30 cm) of rain in the first few hours after coming ashore at the barrier island of South Padre Island, where it ripped off roofs, bent palm trees in half and left thousands of residents without power
Tropical Storm Dolly is shown in the NASA satellite image taken July 21, 2008. Tropical Storm Dolly continued to strengthen slightly early Tuesday as it moved over the warm waters of the western Gulf of Mexico towards the Texas-Mexico border, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said in its latest update.
Tropical storm Dolly hits Texas-Mexico border
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