MANILA, Philippines – Tropical Depression Verbena is expected to make its final landfall in the northern portion of Palawan on Tuesday evening, November 25, after passing over the coastal waters of the Cuyo archipelago, which is also part of the province.
At 4 pm on Tuesday, the center of the tropical depression was located off the municipality of Cuyo. It is moving west at a slower 25 kilometers per hour from the previous 35 km/h.
The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical, and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) said in its 5 pm bulletin that Verbena still has maximum sustained winds of 55 km/h, with gustiness of up to 70 km/h.
But Verbena may strengthen into a tropical storm within 6 to 12 hours, and “further intensification is likely” once it reaches the West Philippine Sea on Wednesday, November 26. Over the West Philippine Sea, it is projected to pass north of Kalayaan Islands on Wednesday evening.
Verbena has made landfall at least six times:
Monday, November 24
Tuesday, November 25
Verbena, which has triggered floods and landslides, is still bringing significant rain to nearly a dozen provinces in the regions of Mimaropa, Bicol, and Western Visayas on Tuesday evening. These provinces are:
The rest of Bicol, rest of Western Visayas, Negros Occidental, Northern Samar, and Eastern Samar will also have scattered rain and thunderstorms on Tuesday evening due to the trough or extension of the tropical depression.
Meanwhile, only portions of Mimaropa and Western Visayas remain under Signal No. 1 as of 5 pm on Tuesday. Strong winds persist in these areas:
If Verbena becomes a tropical storm, Signal No. 2 could be raised.
The surge of the northeast monsoon or amihan and Verbena are also causing gusty conditions in areas not under tropical cyclone wind signals here:
Tuesday, November 25
Wednesday, November 26
Thursday, November 27
Conditions in certain seaboards remain dangerous as well, due to both Verbena and the northeast monsoon.
Up to very rough seas (travel is risky for all vessels)
Up to rough seas (small vessels should not venture out to sea)
Up to moderate to rough seas (small vessels should take precautionary measures or avoid sailing, if possible)
Verbena is the Philippines’ 22nd tropical cyclone for 2025, and the third for November, after Typhoon Tino (Kalmaegi) and Super Typhoon Uwan (Fung-wong).
It may exit the Philippine Area of Responsibility early Thursday morning, November 27. Outside PAR, it could reach its peak intensity late Thursday or early Friday, November 28.
While Verbena is affecting fewer provinces, the shear line is still causing rain in much of Luzon, particularly Metro Manila, the Cordillera Administrative Region, Central Luzon, Calabarzon, Cagayan, Isabela, Quirino, and Nueva Vizcaya. The following areas must stay on alert for floods and landslides:
Tuesday afternoon, November 25, to Wednesday afternoon, November 26
Wednesday afternoon, November 26, to Thursday afternoon, November 27
Thursday afternoon, November 27, to Friday afternoon, November 28
The shear line refers to the point where cold air from the northeast monsoon converges with the easterlies or warm winds from the Pacific Ocean. – Rappler.com


