San Diego Union-Tribune

HEAVY SURF TO LAST THROUGH TUESDAY

- BY GARY ROBBINS gary.robbins@sduniontri­bune.com

The big surf that county beaches have been getting for nearly two weeks will last at least into Tuesday due to a new series of storms that are rolling across the North Pacific like box cars, according to the National Weather Service.

“There’s a storm in the Gulf of Alaska, another south of the Aleutians and more beyond that,” said Phil Gonsalves, a weather service forecaster. “They’re lined up and are going to send waves to Southern California.”

It’s common for San Diego to get powerful waves in the winter. But the persistenc­e of the surf is a bit unusual. Some spots have gotten waves measuring 4 feet or higher almost every day since Jan. 1. And there has been a lot of surf in the 6- to 10-foot range.

A high-surf advisory will be in effect until 2 p.m. Tuesday.

The weather pattern has given surfers a reason to rejoice. But it isn’t making firefighte­rs happy. The storms have largely been tracking into Oregon and Washington, rather than dropping south. San Diego Internatio­nal Airport has recorded only 0.98 inches of rain since Oct. 1, which is about 3 inches below average.

The lack of rain has caused vegetation to wither, feeding the sort of wildfire that broke out Thursday on the grounds of Palomar College in San Marcos. The weather also has been warmer than normal. Three communitie­s set or tied new records Thursday, including Vista, where it hit 89, 1 degree above the record for Jan. 14, set in 2014. El Cajon also reached 89, beating the record set in 2009 by 1 degree. And Chula Vista got to 83, tying the record set in 2009.

San Diego Internatio­nal Airport topped out at 81, 16 degrees above normal. National City, Miramar and Montgomery Field reached 86, and Brown Field hit 87.

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