Los Angeles Times

Storms bring muddy messes

- BY ERIN B. LOGAN

Weather pounds Southern California, causing car accidents, road closures and lightning f lashes.

A winter storm system packing heavy rain pounded Southern California on Friday, triggering car accidents, road closures, mudslides and lightning flashes that temporaril­y closed L.A. County beaches.

There were moderate mud and debris flows near the area burned last year by the Bond fire, which scorched over 6,000 acres in Orange County, destroying vegetation and destabiliz­ing the soil.

As of late Friday, there were no reports of damage to homes or any related injuries, said Carrie Braun, a spokeswoma­n for the Orange County Sheriff’s Department.

Authoritie­s issued voluntary evacuation warnings for those living in Silverado, Williams and Modjeska canyons that were still in place Friday evening. The National Weather Service had broadcast a flash flood watch for those areas through Friday afternoon but said the threat of flooding had diminished with the storm moving toward San Diego.

San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties bore the brunt of the atmospheri­c river system, receiving between 6 and 12 inches of rain Wednesday and Thursday, said Curt Kaplan, a meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service office in Oxnard. “Once the atmospheri­c river started moving south, it lost a little bit of its punch,” he said.

Thirty miles north of the San Luis Obispo County line, the atmospheri­c river stalled Thursday afternoon, causing a section of Highway 1 near Big Sur to collapse. It was unclear how long it would take to fix the roadway. Repairs are expected to cost $5 million.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department had issued an evacuation order Thursday for people who lived in northeast Yucaipa and the communitie­s of Oak Glen and Mountain Home Village, areas near where the El Dorado and Apple fires burned last year. Authoritie­s downgraded those evacuation orders to warnings Friday.

Riverside County had also issued an evacuation order Thursday, anticipati­ng the threat of mudslides in burn areas. The order extended to people who lived in parts of Beaumont and Cherry Valley. The county lifted the evacuation order at 5 p.m. Friday.

Hail was reported near Azusa along the 210 Freeway and near the Ranch 2 fire burn area, the weather service said. The mountains in Los Angeles County were expected to get between 1 and 2 feet of snow above 6,000 feet Friday by the time the storm finally moved out.

“We initially thought we would see three feet of snow but didn’t get as much rain in the mountains as we expected,” Kaplan said.

The Los Angeles County Fire Department temporaril­y closed beaches from Marina del Rey to Zuma Beach on Friday afternoon because of the threat of lightning. In Orange County, Huntington Beach issued a voluntary evacuation order of all beaches in the city through 5 p.m. because of lightning.

About 11 a.m., a strong storm cell produced heavy rain and some hail over East Los Angeles, the weather service wrote on Twitter. There was also hail in parts of Manhattan Beach.

Orange County received around an inch of rain, with up to 1.5 inches in the hills, between 10 p.m. Thursday and 1 a.m. Friday, said Bruno Rodriguez, a meteorolog­ist for the weather service in San Diego.

The Inland Empire received between 0.75 and 1.25 inches of rain in urban areas. Nearby mountains got about a foot of snow above 4,000 feet, Rodriguez said.

The rain also triggered mud and debris flows near the Bobcat burn scar in the Angeles National Forest, Kaplan said.

Much of that area was warned of possible evacuation Thursday by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Though the 5 Freeway through the Grapevine was open Thursday, snow flurries sticking to the roadway prompted California Highway Patrol to escort traffic Friday morning.

In Los Angeles, an overturned big rig and a fire prompted the closure of three lanes of the eastbound 10 Freeway at Santa Fe Avenue to allow crews to repair the bridge railing. Lanes reopened about 11 a.m. Friday.

State Route 39 at Old San Gabriel Canyon Road was temporaril­y closed because of mudslides nearby, authoritie­s said. A portion of Route 33 remained closed late Friday after a foot of snow fell in Lockwood Valley.

Rainfall Sunday night caused mud to slide onto Ambrose Jimenez’s property in Silverado Canyon. Jimenez, 63, didn’t realize what had happened until Monday morning, when he tried opening his screen door only to find a foot of mud trapping it.

“I had no idea the mud was creeping in all night long,” he said. “Mud just came down toward our kitchen wall, around the house and on the sides.”

Jimenez worked with a friend to clear his property.

They used a wheelbarro­w to move the mud and installed 35 bales of hay and 755 sandbags to create a barrier to guide the mud away from the house into an empty lot next door, he said.

They worked from Monday through Thursday, wrapping up at 5 p.m., just hours before the new storm arrived.

About 9:20 p.m., Jimenez first heard the rainfall. By 1 a.m. Friday, the storm intensifie­d. “I heard rocks coming down and I thought to myself, oh no, we’re in trouble,” he said.

Jimenez saw 3 to 5 feet of mud accumulati­ng within five minutes on the hill behind his house. Then, “instantly, it was like someone uncorked a champagne bottle,” he said.

The mud turned to water and flushed through his property.

“All we have to deal with was water,” he said. “We can deal with that. It’s the mud and the debris that’s a problem.”

“We are lucky,” Jimenez said. “We have neighbors who are not so lucky.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? MUD PRODUCED by heavy rain strands motorists along Highway 39 in Azusa.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times MUD PRODUCED by heavy rain strands motorists along Highway 39 in Azusa.
 ?? JAY L. CLENDENIN Los Angeles Times ?? THIS BEACH BLANKET in Manhattan Beach on Friday morning was left by a hailstorm. Graham Johnson, 3, looks at grains of sand and ice from a swing. Some Southland beaches were later closed because of lightning.
JAY L. CLENDENIN Los Angeles Times THIS BEACH BLANKET in Manhattan Beach on Friday morning was left by a hailstorm. Graham Johnson, 3, looks at grains of sand and ice from a swing. Some Southland beaches were later closed because of lightning.

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