Los Angeles Times

This storm season is off to a dry start

Downtown L.A. has seen 0.12 of an inch of rain since Oct. 1, among the lowest totals ever recorded.

- By Sarah Parvini

Southern California is seeing one of its driest starts to the water year in decades, the National Weather Service said Wednesday.

Since the start of the water year on Oct. 1 through Dec. 31, downtown Los Angeles received just 0.12 of an inch of rain. That is tied with 1962-63 for the fourth-driest start to a water year since record keeping began in 1877, the weather service said.

“The start of the storm season has been exceptiona­lly dry,” said Ryan Kittell, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in Oxnard. “It’s one of the driest in history.”

This year’s rainfall total is 3.91 inches below the normal 4.03 inches for the period in downtown L.A., making it just 3% of the typical rainfall. Forecaster­s said the driest first three months of a water year occurred during the 1903-04 season and the 192930 season, when just traces of rain were recorded.

It is also the 10th consecutiv­e month that rainfall totals did not reach half an inch in downtown Los Angeles.

Kittell said Southern California saw a similar dry start to the rainy season 15 years ago. Though the lack of rain is not unpreceden­ted, it is “fairly exceptiona­l,” he said.

“For downtown L.A., we have seven years where we have an exceptiona­lly dry November and December,” Kittell said. “It doesn’t mean there will be a dry rest of the winter. The past has shown that we’ve had anywhere from 16 inches after we had trace of rain in November, December and January.”

The paltry amount of rainfall is part of a larger weather trend for Southern California: Over the last seven years, maximum temperatur­es during the fall have gotten higher and there has been less rain.

October and November were the hottest in 122 years of record keeping for the region — a major turnaround from the previous water year, when Northern California was battered by a series of “atmospheri­c river” storms that helped end the state’s five-year drought. When it was over, California’s northern Sierra Nevada experience­d the wettest winter on record, with some ski resorts staying open through the summer.

“I think the moral of the story is that anything goes,” Kittell said. “Just because we have a dry November and December, it doesn’t mean we have a shutout for the rest of the winter.”

If the trend continues into spring, forecaster­s say California could see a light Sierra Nevada snowpack, a

key source of water for the state during the dry summer. The state Department of Water Resources conducted the first of five scheduled 2018 snow surveys at Phillips Station in the Sierra on Wednesday morning.

Measuremen­ts at Phillips Station revealed a snow water equivalent of 0.4 of an inch — 3% of the average 11.3 inches that have been measured there this time of year since 1964. Snow water equivalent is the depth of water that theoretica­lly would result if the entire snowpack melted.

“As we’re only a third of the way through California’s three wettest months, it’s far too early to draw any conclusion­s about what kind of season we’ll have this year,” Department of Water Resources Director Grant Davis said. “California’s great weather variabilit­y means we can go straight from a dry year to a wet year and back again to dry.”

Above-average temperatur­es are expected to continue this week in Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties, the weather service said, but next week a low-pressure trough over the Pacific will bring a gradually increasing chance of rain to those areas.

A cold front is also expected to bring rain to San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties Wednesday afternoon into early Thursday. The front will probably weaken as it moves south, bringing a chance of light rain to Ventura County on Wednesday night into Thursday morning, according to the weather service.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? A LIGHT RAIN that fell on Southern California in late November was a rarity so far this water year. Downtown Los Angeles has not had a monthly rain total of more than half an inch for 10 months in a row.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times A LIGHT RAIN that fell on Southern California in late November was a rarity so far this water year. Downtown Los Angeles has not had a monthly rain total of more than half an inch for 10 months in a row.
 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? STATE WATER official Frank Gehrke takes a Sierra snow survey Wednesday, which was 3% of average.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press STATE WATER official Frank Gehrke takes a Sierra snow survey Wednesday, which was 3% of average.

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