The Oklahoman

Calif. storm winds down after deluge of rain and snow

- By John Antczak and Scott Sonner

LOS ANGELES — A drenching storm that brought California muchneeded rain in what had been a dry winter wound down Friday after washing out Highway 1 near Big Sur, burying the Sierra Nevada in snow that left a skier dead and causing muddy flows from slopes burned bare by wildfires.

The atmospheri­c river weather system that barreled ashore in Northern California early in the week swept through Southern California overnight, followed by remnants that unleashed downpours and hail. The threat of lightning forced some beaches to close.

There were no immediate reports of large-scale debris flows in the region, but mud slid off burned slopes in Orange County's Silverado Canyon and from a fire-scorched hillside onto State Route 39 on the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains.

About 8,200 residents had been ordered in advance to evacuate from areas near fire scars east of Los Angeles in San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

Avalanche concerns continued in the Eastern Sierra. But most weather warnings were expiring, and the state was able to turn to cleanup, damage assessment­s and tallying astonishin­g rain and snowfall.

Along the scenic central coast, Highway 1 was closed near Big Sur after a section of the roadway collapsed when the cliffside below gave way amid torrential rain.

There was no estimate on when the popular driving route would reopen, the California Department of Transporta­tion said.

Central coast rainfall topped 15 inches when the storm stalled there at midweek, triggering mud flows that damaged about two dozen homes. Firefighte­rs used earth-moving equipment Thursday to rescue a horse and pony from deep mud near Salinas.

Down the coast, a water rescue team helped a woman to safety after she became trapped on a road between two rain-swollen creeks in Santa Barbara County on Thursday.

The storm also unleashed a huge amount of snow in the Sierra, where the annual snowpack normally provides about a third of the state's water supply.

On Thursday, a skier was found upside down in deep snow near a chairlift and intersecti­ng trails at Mammoth Mountain, the resort said. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.

The resort reported the storm had dropped more than 9 feet of snow as of Friday afternoon, with more falling.

California Department of Transporta­tion plows worked to clear some mountain highways, and others were open with strict chain requiremen­ts.

Yosemite National Park officials said the snowstorm would force it to remain closed until at least Feb. 1.

The park has been closed since a huge windstorm hit early last week, knocking down 15 giant sequoias and slamming trees onto trucks and buildings. Damage has been estimated as high as $200 million.

Atmospheri­c rivers are l ong, narrow bands of water vapor that form over an ocean and flow through the sky. They occur globally, but they are especially significan­t on the West Coast of the United States, where they create 30% to 50% of annual precipitat­ion and are linked to water supply and problems such as flooding and mudslides, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

The atmospheri­c river was part of a major change in weather for California, which had s i gnifi cant drought conditions for months. The dryness contribute­d to wildfires that scorched more than 6,562 square miles in 2020, the most in recorded modern history.

 ?? REGISTER/SCNG VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? In this Friday photos, the California Department of Transporta­tion clears a mudslide where a vehicle was trapped on Highway 39 in the San Gabriel Mountains above Azusa, Calif. [SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z/ THE ORANGE COUNTY
REGISTER/SCNG VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] In this Friday photos, the California Department of Transporta­tion clears a mudslide where a vehicle was trapped on Highway 39 in the San Gabriel Mountains above Azusa, Calif. [SARAH REINGEWIRT­Z/ THE ORANGE COUNTY

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