Los Angeles Times

Some cold, hard-to-believe facts

More snow here than in Boston? ‘Bonkers’ winter continues as another storm looms.

- By Hannah Fry

California is known as a land of sunshine. But, for the extreme weather that has accompanie­d the West’s colder months, California might as well be called the snowy state.

A series of winter storms has brought record-breaking rainfall and dropped snow levels dramatical­ly across the state, causing fresh powder to fall in areas that rarely see any. First, snow fell along the coast in Northern California’s Humboldt County on Sunday. Then, Redding — at an elevation of roughly 500 feet — received more powder over a 12-hour period than Boston, Mass., has seen this entire winter.

“I believe the scientific term for this statistic is ‘bonkers,’ ” Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the UCLA Institute of Environmen­t and Sustainabi­lity, wrote on Twitter this week.

Forecaster­s said 10 to 13 inches of snow fell on Redding this week, and the region could see more depending on how far the weekend’s next chilly winter storm drops snow levels.

Snow levels across much of the Sierra Nevada are hovering between 2,000 and 3,000 feet and will probably remain there through much of the weekend, said Hannah Chandler-Cooley, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Sacramento.

Forecaster­s said there is a chance that snow levels

could fall below 700 feet by Sunday night in the northern Sierra. But the storm will be on its way out by then, Chandler-Cooley said, so “it’ll be hit or miss with how much snow these communitie­s get.”

Much of the northern part of the state has already been under siege by snow after a string of storms that hit in early February and even after this week’s warmer atmospheri­c river.

Sierra at Tahoe had received 2.8 feet of snow in 24 hours by Friday morning, pushing the resort’s total over the last week to 6.4 feet. Dodge Ridge in Tuolumne County saw 1.8 feet in the same time span, and 14.5 feet over the last two weeks, according to the weather service.

Snow piled high in the Sierra might look alluring for skiers and snowboarde­rs hoping for a good shred session, but getting there won’t be easy. The weather service has issued winter storm and avalanche warnings over much of the Sierra, cautioning travelers of dangerous conditions.

The Snow Valley ski resort in Running Springs was closed Friday because California 18, the highway that leads to the area, was blocked off after a rock slide, the California Department of Transporta­tion reported. Mt. Baldy also was closed because of road damage.

Parts of roads leading to Idyllwild and other mountain communitie­s were damaged and in some cases destroyed, but access was not completely cut off.

Crews were starting repairs on California Highways 74 and 243. A route combining surviving portions of the two mountain highways and a county road kept the communitie­s connected to the world, but authoritie­s urged outsiders to leave the route to residents.

“We’re discouragi­ng tourism and snow play up there this weekend,” said Caltrans spokeswoma­n Terri Kasinga.

Highways also were damaged in the nearby San Bernardino Mountains, where ski resorts around Big Bear Lake have an abundance of snow. Kasinga said those routes would be open to the public.

In Mono County, home to Mammoth Mountain and June Lake, the weather service has issued a winter storm warning through noon Sunday.

A 70-mile stretch of Interstate 80 over the Sierra Nevada that was closed Thursday night because of whiteout conditions remained blocked off Friday. Officials said it’s not clear when the road will reopen.

The next storm is also expected to gradually lower snow levels in Southern California, in addition to delivering scattered showers. Communitie­s at elevations of 5,000 feet will probably see a fresh dusting of powder by Saturday afternoon, and those as low as 1,500 feet may get some snow by Sunday night, said Keily Delerme, a meteorolog­ist with the weather service in Oxnard.

“There’s a colder air mass that’s expected to move across the area, and that’s what’s going to bring temperatur­es below normal and drop snow levels,” she said.

More snow means more picturesqu­e views of the San Gabriel Mountains behind the downtown Los Angeles skyline next week.

Aside from the recreation­al splendor of fresh snow, the deluge also adds to an already wet winter that has replenishe­d reservoirs and created a healthy snowpack in the Sierra Nevada — a major source of California’s water supply. The snowpack on Thursday measured 141% of average for that date and 107% of average for what would typically be recorded at its peak on April 1, according to the California Department of Water Resources.

This is welcome news for the state’s water supply, which is replenishe­d when the snow melts during warmer months. But water experts warn that conservati­on is still necessary, even during wet winters.

“Climate change has created a situation in California that the only thing that’s constant is that our weather is so variable we can hardly judge it,” said Chris Orrock, a Department of Water Resources spokesman. “It’s not if, it’s when we’ll get another drought. We need to be prepared for that next round.”

Rain in Southern California does much less to boost water supplies. But this week saw some record rain totals. The storm Thursday dropped more than 10 inches of rain on Palomar Mountain, more than 6 inches in Julian and close to 3.5 inches in Oceanside.

The system produced one of the wettest winter days in decades, breaking daily rainfall records in seven communitie­s, including Palomar. The mountain received 10.10 inches, snapping the record of 9.58 inches set on Feb. 14, 1991. Ramona got 4.05 inches, nearly 2 inches higher than the record set in 1995.

The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Ryan Hoffman Tahoe Tribune ?? MOTORISTS negotiate a snow-packed street in South Lake Tahoe. Skiers and snowboarde­rs were warned of dangerous travel conditions.
Ryan Hoffman Tahoe Tribune MOTORISTS negotiate a snow-packed street in South Lake Tahoe. Skiers and snowboarde­rs were warned of dangerous travel conditions.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? STORM DAMAGE from Thursday has eroded a significan­t portion of sand under the boardwalk at Main Beach in Laguna Beach.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times STORM DAMAGE from Thursday has eroded a significan­t portion of sand under the boardwalk at Main Beach in Laguna Beach.
 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? A SNOWPLOW clears a road near Highway 395 near Mammoth Lakes. In Mono County, the weather service has issued a storm warning through noon Sunday.
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times A SNOWPLOW clears a road near Highway 395 near Mammoth Lakes. In Mono County, the weather service has issued a storm warning through noon Sunday.
 ??  ?? AGAINST the scenic backdrop of snow-capped Mt. Whitney, L.A. residents Paula Lee and Johnson Gong hike in the Alabama Hills west of Lone Pine.
AGAINST the scenic backdrop of snow-capped Mt. Whitney, L.A. residents Paula Lee and Johnson Gong hike in the Alabama Hills west of Lone Pine.

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