Los Angeles Times

Warm storm on tap for region

Potential ‘storm of the season’ could deliver from to 1 to 4 inches of precipitat­ion.

- By Paul Duginski

Low-pressure system brings the potential for a Southern California downpour.

An unstable low-pressure system from the Gulf of Alaska will tap into subtropica­l moisture, bringing the potential for heavy rain in Southern California on Tuesday and Wednesday, the National Weather Service said.

The southern part of the Sierra Nevada could see heavy, wet snow, and parts of Arizona and Nevada are also expected to get heavy rain.

The cutoff low will merge with a weak to moderate atmospheri­c river, focusing precipitat­ion on Central and Southern California.

An atmospheri­c river is a concentrat­ed stream of water vapor in the middle and lower levels of the atmosphere.

The stream of moisture moves across the ocean without interrupti­on until it encounters an obstacle such as coastal mountains in California. Lifting up and over these mountains causes the moisture to condense and fall as precipitat­ion.

The instabilit­y of the lowpressur­e system will make thundersto­rms with downpours and small hail possible.

Rainfall rates of up to 1 inch per hour are possible in the thundersto­rms.

There is a limited risk of mud and debris flows in first- and second-year burn areas. Minor urban flooding and rock falls on canyon roads are possible. There will be heavy seas with galeforce winds off the coast, and beach lightning is possible.

Snow levels will remain well above 7,000 feet until late Wednesday because of the warm nature of the storm, but accumulati­ons of 1 to 2 feet are possible at the highest resort levels.

The region could see 60% to 100% of normal March rainfall with this storm, said Eric Boldt, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather

Service in Oxnard. Monthly normal rainfall is 2 to 3 inches.

This could be “the storm of the season so far,” said Bill Patzert, a former climatolog­ist with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, adding that it “could lift us off our knees, but not out of the continuing drought conditions.”

Jan Null, a veteran meteorolog­ist with Golden Gate Weather Services in Northern California, agreed: “Even in the wettest parts of Southern California the amounts won’t move the needle much; even less on the Central Coast and Southern Sierra, and not enough to notice at all north of about Monterey to Yosemite.”

“This looks like a Central and Southern California event. Not a Northern California snow maker,” Patzert said.

The latest U.S. Drought Monitor report shows that almost all of the areas of the state that are neither abnormally dry nor in moderate drought are in the southern part of the state.

This week’s storm was expected to begin with rain in San Luis Obispo and western Santa Barbara counties early Monday. Rain will spread to all of Southern California on Tuesday and Wednesday, and will peak Tuesday afternoon through Wednesday in Ventura and Los Angeles counties.

The coast and valleys can expect from an inch to 2.5 inches, while the foothills and mountains can expect from 2 to 4 inches.

A colder storm is possible March 17 and 18 as a wet pattern is expected to continue.

The expected rain ‘could lift us off our knees, but not out of the continuing drought conditions.’

— Bill Patzert, former JPL climatolog­ist

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