Los Angeles Times

Thundersto­rms shape up to be blessing, curse

Thundersto­rms bring welcome rain in spots, but also the threat of igniting new wildfires.

- By Hayley Smith

Rain is welcome in drought ravaged areas. But nature’s power on display also brings the threat of new fires.

Amid a summer of ecological crises, California was gripped by yet another bout of extreme weather Thursday night and into Friday morning.

Severe lightning and thundersto­rms blasted the Southern part of the state overnight, spurring shelterin-place warnings for flash floods and reports of rockfalls and mudslides. And lightning storms in Northern California brought danger to already massive wildfires, as well as some new ignitions.

“We had a good storm go through the area,” said Adam Roser, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in San Diego.

A narrow area of atmospheri­c instabilit­y and converging wind produced the band of thundersto­rms that moved up from San Diego and through portions of Los Angeles on Thursday night, officials said. At its peak, it dumped half an inch of rain in 10 minutes over the burn area of the Bobcat fire — sparking flash flood warnings for residents in Monrovia and nearby areas.

Roser said the system that powered through the region strayed from the typical monsoon path by moving away from the desert and occurring at night.

“For it to get into the valleys and the coast is pretty significan­t,” he said.

Heavy rain also wreaked havoc on mountain roads in the Inland Empire, forcing the closure of State Route 18 from Big Bear Dam to Snow Valley for several hours, according to the California Department of Transporta­tion.

Lightning and rain were reported as far south as San Diego, with some residents of the drought-riddled state appreciati­ve for even the hint of precipitat­ion.

“We are in a drought, and on fire, we need this,” one person wrote on Twitter.

“I’m happy somewhere, someone in California has gotten some rain,” wrote another.

The chance of isolated thundersto­rms will remain in the L.A. Basin, San Gabriel Mountains and eastern Antelope Valley through Friday, the weather service said.

A heat advisory for the Inland Empire and surroundin­g mountains has also been extended through Sunday, with the promise of temperatur­es as high as 104 degrees. A heat advisory is in place for portions of Los Angeles County through Friday.

Extreme weather also traveled to Northern California, where firefighte­rs continue to battle the Dixie fire and the Caldor fire burning near South Lake Tahoe.

Dixie fire operations section chief Mike Wink said Thursday that crews were facing “very, very concerning conditions over the next day and a half,” and many of those fears came to fruition: About 1,100 cloud-to-ground lightning strikes were recorded across the state since Thursday evening, officials said.

“We did see quite a bit of lightning with this system,” said Cory Mueller, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Sacramento, “which was fairly unfortunat­e, because despite seeing these rain totals which were not bad for September, they really weren’t enough to suppress lightning ignitions.”

Lightning, showers and wind gusts passed through the Tahoe Basin Thursday night, and firefighte­rs were diverted away from the Caldor fire to fight multiple lightning fires throughout El Dorado County, officials with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said.

At least one large fire, dubbed the Kanaka fire, grew to more than 10 acres before crews were able to stop its progress.

More than 100 cloud-toground lightning strikes also hit the Bay Area, which was under a red-flag warning for high fire danger.

As for whether the wetness will make a dent in the state’s worsening water shortage, meteorolog­ist Ryan Kittell with the National Weather Service in Oxnard said not to count on it: Most of the moisture should clear up by the weekend.

“Any little bit helps,” he said. “But it’s kind of a drop in the bucket for the drought.”

 ?? Kent Porter Press Democrat ?? LIGHTNING near Sugarloaf Ridge State Park makes for a spectacula­r show Thursday night in Santa Rosa.
Kent Porter Press Democrat LIGHTNING near Sugarloaf Ridge State Park makes for a spectacula­r show Thursday night in Santa Rosa.

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