The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Snowfall making California­ns giddy

- By Shawn Hubler The New York Times

SACRAMENTO >> Stay in, the meteorolog­ists had said. Historic blizzards are coming to California. There will be snowplows.

And yet some must be seen to

In Silicon Valley, in the hills above Los Gatos, Bart Giordano awoke at midnight Friday to watch the snowfall piling up on the pine limbs and blanketing his patio lounge chairs, drifts like nothing he had seen in the area in his 46 years.

To the north, Danny Cullenward, an energy economist up with a fussy 4-year-old, looked out the window and saw lightning and heard a rumble and then glimpsed a distinct kind of falling slush that he recalled from his childhood in the Midwest. Snow is so rare in most of California that residents went deep into the weather glossary to describe it.

“Thundergra­upel in San Francisco!” he joyfully tweeted, playing on a suddenly buzzy word for precipitat­ion that is not quite hail or snowflakes.

“I was like a giddy kid before Christmas,” he later confessed.

California is a big place, and its high elevations and ski slopes are as snowprone as those in the next state. Even the warmer parts of Southern California get an occasional dusting.

But snow is not the Golden State’s claim to fame, generally speaking. The storm is so extraordin­ary that it came with an almost unpreceden­ted blizzard warning in Southern California for Friday and today. State and local officials warned residents to stay off the roads and avoid the mountains, things be believed. out of concern that many could be stranded in frigid conditions they had never faced before.

Already on Friday, the storm had forced the closure of the main northsouth route, the 5 Freeway, at the Grapevine between Los Angeles and the Central Valley. At various times, it shut down the 80 Freeway over the Sierra Nevada and caused vehicles of all sizes to spin out on various roadways.

Still, amid dangerous conditions and serious threats to motorists, many California­ns emerged to see what fresh novelty the sky had dropped — and to take selfies, naturally.

Social media generated its own blizzard: snow days in Yucaipa, snow on the Bakersfiel­d Cemetery

tombstones, snow in the mountains in San Luis Obispo, snow on the Victorian homes of Eureka.

In the Santa Cruz Mountains, Melissa Leib was so struck by the winter wonderland outside her house that instead of her normal Friday posts about feng shui, she paid tribute to the “Freaky Friday” weather in her backyard.

Darshan Gooch, a wellknown Santa Cruz surfer, had laughed out loud as snow fell on Twin Lakes State Beach, an “epic” moment he had pulled over to capture as he headed across town Thursday morning to pick up some wetsuits.

“I knew we had an unusual storm system coming through, but I was a little shocked when it actually happened,” he said Friday. “It didn’t stick, but just to see it was beautiful.”

In Los Angeles, residents became obsessed with determinin­g whether snow actually had fallen on the Hollywood sign. Some believed it had to be snow, but others said it was hail or even a more exotic form of precipitat­ion.

The National Weather Service was on the case. “After a little investigat­ing and with the help of the ALERT CA cameras, we are confident in saying snow or graupel fell on Mount Lee (where the Hollywood sign sits),” the service tweeted Thursday evening.

By Friday morning, Eric Boldt, the warning coordinati­on meteorolog­ist for the National Weather

Service in Los Angeles, could confirm it had been graupel, which he defined as “basically snowflakes wrapped in ice.”

At that point, a brief flurry again was swirling around the Hollywood sign. Watching it through his window, Craig Robert Young, an English-born actor who has lived for 22 years in Los Angeles, three of them in the Hollywood Hills, said that the familiar sign had been coated in white the day before, as had his patio chairs and table.

“It was kind of bizarre,” Young, 49, said. “I wanted my husband to have a snowball fight.”

Kaan Ulupiner, 21, a University of California, Berkeley, student, had rented skis for a weekend trip to Tahoe. But the main highway, the 80 Freeway, was closed in the Sierra Nevada because drivers were spinning out and blinded by snow.

What else to do but trudge up the Berkeley Hills behind campus and turn it into a most unusual ski run?

“I was feeling quite down this morning until kind of a miracle happened,” he said. “I was like, all right, guess I’m skiing one way or another.”

In the Central Valley community of Patterson, known for its apricots and its huge Amazon warehouse, the hills to the west were coated in white. Chuck Marble, 64, a retiree whose pastimes include following the weather on radar, said he had noticed Friday morning that snow had fallen nearby and drove through a torrential rain to bear witness: “I said, ‘I’m not going to miss this!’ ”

By midday Friday, the thrill was fading. In the lower elevations, snow had turned to rain, and in the higher ones, the heavy amount was starting to become worrisome. In Southern California, Boldt, the meteorolog­ist, warned of winds of up to 80 mph and white-out visibility in elevations higher than 4,500 feet.

In Northern California, Giordano, a father of three, said his family’s power had gone out as “at least a foot” of snow had accumulate­d, snapping off tree limbs and blocking ingress and egress.

“We’re on generator power with backup internet,” he said. “We’re stocked up with food, and the kids are out on their sled having a good old time. But what started as a very charming snowstorm is turning into, you know, how are we going to get out of our house?”

 ?? JENNIFER WHITNEY — THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
JENNIFER WHITNEY — THE NEW YORK TIMES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States