Las Vegas Review-Journal

Atmospheri­c river takes aim at Calif.

New storm packs rain with threat of flooding

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California braced Thursday for the arrival of another atmospheri­c river that forecaster­s warned will bring heavy rain, strong winds, thundersto­rms and the threat of flooding to a state still digging out from earlier storms.

The flood threat will come from the combinatio­n of rain and melting of parts of the huge snowpack built in California’s mountains by nine atmospheri­c rivers early in the winter and later storms fueled by a blast of arctic air.

The new atmospheri­c river is a type known as a “Pineapple Express” because it is a deep tap of warm subtropica­l moisture stretching over the Pacific to Hawaii. Its greatest impacts were expected in northern and central California.

The snowpack at high elevations is so massive it should be able absorb the rain, forecaster­s said. But elevations below 4,000 feet will see melting and runoff. The National Weather Service characteri­zed the flood threat as “moderate.”

At high elevations the storm was predicted to dump heavy snow, as much as 8 feet in some locations.

California’s Sierra Nevada snowpack, which provides about a third of the state’s water supply, is more than 180 percent of the average on April 1, when it is historical­ly at its peak.

So much snow has fallen in the Sierra and other mountain ranges that residents are still struggling to dig out days after earlier storms.

Roofs collapsed, cars were buried and roads were blocked. Gov. Gavin Newsom declared emergencie­s in 13 of California’s 58 counties beginning March 1.

In the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles a late February storm reached blizzard status. Mountain towns like Lake Arrowhead were buried.

“We’ve been through many a snowstorm but nothing of this amount, that’s for sure,” resident Alan Zagorsky, 79, said Wednesday as a crew shoveled his driveway. “Right now, they’re trying to find a place they can put this stuff.”

On the state’s far north coast, Humboldt County authoritie­s have organized an emergency response to feed starving cattle stranded by snow.

Cal Fire and U.S. Coast Guard helicopter­s began dropping hay bales to cattle in remote mountain fields last weekend and then the California National Guard was called in to expand the effort.

Requests for help came from about 30 ranchers, according to Diana Totten, an area fire chief. The hay is being paid for by the ranchers, who provide informatio­n on how many head of cattle need to be fed and where they were expected to be located.

“We won’t know until the snow melts how many cattle have died due to these conditions,” Humboldt County Sheriff William Honsal said in a statement. “But I know this for certain, if we don’t act, there’s going to be way more that do die and it will be a catastroph­e for our county.”

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez The Associated Press ?? Food is distribute­d out of a parking lot Wednesday after a series of storms in Crestline, Calif.
Marcio Jose Sanchez The Associated Press Food is distribute­d out of a parking lot Wednesday after a series of storms in Crestline, Calif.

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