User:Macbookair3140/sandboxClean1

July

 * July 6
 * 1230 UTC (5:30 a.m. PDT) – Tropical Storm Blanca forms about 420 mi (675 km) south-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California.


 * July 8
 * 0900 UTC (2:00 a.m. PDT) – Tropical Storm Blanca weakens to a tropical depression.


 * July 9
 * 0300 UTC (8:00 p.m. July 8 PDT) – The final advisory is issued on Tropical Depression Blanca as it degenerates into a non-convective area of low pressure.


 * July 10
 * 0900 UTC (2 a.m. PDT) – Tropical Depression Four-E forms about 900 mi (1445 km) south of the southern tip of Baja California.
 * 2100 UTC (2 p.m. PDT) – Tropical Depression Four-E strengthens into Tropical Storm Carlos.


 * July 11
 * 2100 UTC (2 p.m. PDT) - Tropical Storm Carlos strengthens into the second hurricane of the season.


 * July 12
 * 2100 UTC (2 p.m. PDT) - Hurricane Carlos is downgraded back to a tropical storm.


 * July 14
 * 1000 UTC (3 a.m. PDT) - Tropical Storm Carlos re-strengthens back into a Category 1 hurricane.
 * 2100 UTC (2 p.m PDT) - Hurricane Carlos strengthens into a Category 2 Hurricane.


 * July 15
 * 0300 UTC (8 p.m. July 14 PDT) - The NHC upgrades an area of low pressure several hundred miles south of Manzanillo to Tropical Depression Five-E.
 * 1500 UTC (8 a.m. PDT) - Tropical Depression Five-E strengthens into Tropical Storm Dolores.


 * July 16
 * 2100 UTC (2 p.m. PDT) - Carlos dissipates into a remnant low and the NHC issues its last advisory.
 * 2100 UTC (2 p.m. PDT) - The NHC downgrades Tropical Storm Dolores to a tropical depression.


 * July 17
 * 0300 UTC (8 p.m. July 16 PDT) - The weakened Tropical Depression Dolores dissipates and the NHC issues their last advisory.


 * July 30
 * 1500 UTC (8 a.m. PDT) - The NHC begins issuing advisories on Tropical Depression Six-E, located near the boundary of the Central Pacific.
 * 2100 UTC (11 a.m. HST) - The CPHC upgrades Tropical Depression Six-E to Tropical Storm Lana, the first Central Pacific storm of 2009.