Imperial Valley Press

Cold snap brings freeze, frost warnings to California

- BY JOHN ANTCZAK AND AMANDA LEE MYERS

LOS ANGELES — Temperatur­es plunged throughout California early Tuesday, triggering freeze warnings in agricultur­al areas and finally bringing a wintry chill to a season more notable for unusual warmth and lack of storms.

The very cold air mass from western Canada brought the most frigid temperatur­es so far this winter and the coldest in years for some locations, the San Francisco/Monterey National Weather Service office said.

The mercury dipped into the 20s and 30s in many areas and into single digits in some mountain locations before dawn. San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport was 36, breaking the record of 37 set on the date in 2011. Downtown Los Angeles was in the low 40s.

Hard freeze warnings were posted overnight up and down the agricultur­ally rich Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys, meaning temperatur­es would be 28 degrees or lower for two or more consecutiv­e hours, potentiall­y threatenin­g crops. The warnings expired at midmorning but were set to go back into effect Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning.

Joe Del Bosque, owner of Del Bosque Farms on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley, said he’s concerned that there’s been damage to his cherry trees and his asparagus, but even more so to his almond crop.

“They’re almost in full bloom so the whole crop is exposed and we’re pretty concerned,” Del Bosque said.

He said temperatur­es dipped as low as 29 degrees off and on for two hours at his 2,000-acre farm overnight. Damage won’t be apparent to any of his crop for at least a day or two, he said.

Like most farmers, he’s irrigating his orchards because water around the crops helps moderate temperatur­es.

“That’s about all we can do, and just pray,” he said.

The weather “will undoubtedl­y affect the area’s citrus crop, although the full extent of which won’t be known until the spring,” according to a news release from California Citrus Mutual, a trade associatio­n.

For skiers and snowboarde­rs, the cold brought some improvemen­t in the season.

Bear Mountain Resort in the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles said it received 4 inches of natural snow from the tem but artificial snowmaking benefited from one of the coldest nights of the year.

Mammoth Mountain in the Sierra Nevada reported about the same snowfall and was just 16 degrees at noon.

The cold followed a blustery weekend storm system that churned whitecaps in coastal waters and whipped up sandstorms along some beaches but delivered little precipitat­ion.

“This last storm system essentiall­y paved the way for a series of weaker storm systems to follow in its footsteps, essentiall­y opening the storm door for the winter once again,” the National Weather Service said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOE DEL BOSQUE ?? This photo provided by farmer Joe Del Bosque shows asparagus that has turned pink due to an overnight hard freeze on his farm in Los Baños in California’s Central Valley on Tuesday. An air mass from western Canada has brought some of the coldest...
AP PHOTO/JOE DEL BOSQUE This photo provided by farmer Joe Del Bosque shows asparagus that has turned pink due to an overnight hard freeze on his farm in Los Baños in California’s Central Valley on Tuesday. An air mass from western Canada has brought some of the coldest...

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