Lodi News-Sentinel

Record-breaking heat scorches state

Southern California desert temperatur­es are highest ever seen

- By Paloma Esquivel

The heat wave hitting Southern California this week is one for the record books.

Temperatur­es topped 100 in the valleys and 120 in the low desert. Death Valley hit 127 — seven degrees shy of the hottest temperatur­e ever recorded on the planet.

The National Weather Service said temperatur­es in some low desert locations were “among the highest ever recorded.”

The temperatur­e hit 124 degrees on Tuesday in Ocotillo Wells — the highest reading ever recorded in San Diego County, according to the National Weather Service.

Forecaster­s said the reading was two degrees above the previous high of 122, which was recorded in Borrego Springs on June 20, 2016. That reading had tied the previous record high for the county, a figure also set in Borrego Springs.

"The desert has two seasons — hot and hotter,” said Mark Moede, a weather service forecaster. “But today, it was hottest.”

Palm Springs tied a record high of 122 degrees and Thermal broke the record for the day at 122 degrees.

Grape pickers in the Coachella Valley started before dawn, but by 9 a.m. the temperatur­e had topped 100 degrees.

Francis Resendiz, 36, wore a hat and handkerchi­efs over her neck and face. She had a duffel bag of frozen electrolyt­e drinks that would melt throughout her shift.

“Tomen agua,” shouted a forewoman. Drink water.

Resendiz found some shade under the canopies of grape vines, but the leaves trapped humidity.

“It starts to feel like you’re suffocatin­g,” she said.

Several daily records also fell in Northern California.

Then there was Death Valley, which hit 127.

At 7 a.m. in Death Valley, customers, short-order cooks and waitresses were already sweating inside the Wrangler Restaurant in Furnace Creek, where the air-conditioni­ng system had broken down.

With the heat from the ovens adding to the misery, they tried to cool down by wrapping wet towels around their necks and guzzling ice water. But a manager had to pull the plug on this mess and close.

“We can’t put customers through this — it’s just too hot,” John Kukreja said.

Facing a full week of temperatur­es above 120 degrees, officials at the national park’s headquarte­rs — 190 feet below sea level — are bracing for heat-related illness and injuries.

Earlier this month, a woman was transporte­d to the hospital with third-degree burns on her feet.

“She’d lost her sandals in Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes and walked about a half-mile on the hot sand,” Abby Wines, a spokeswoma­n for the park, said in a statement.

Ground temperatur­es exceeding 200 degrees have been measured in Death Valley. “To put that in perspectiv­e,” Wines said, “160 degrees is sufficient to cook meat.”

The intense heat is part of a system commonly referred to as the Four Corners High, a high-pressure system that settles over the desert Southwest near the Four Corners area, where Arizona, Utah, New Mexico and Colorado meet.

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