Los Angeles Times

Wetter weather forecast for state

- By Paul Duginski

A wetter-than-average forecast for late October could dampen wildfires burning in Northern California and help ease drought conditions, according to the National Weather Service.

The latest weather outlook for the latter part of this month calls for above-normal precipitat­ion in California, with possible high-elevation heavy snow in the Sierra Nevada and the Cascades. There is also potential for an atmospheri­c river between Oct. 21 to Oct. 27.

The increase in moisture is anticipate­d to quell ongoing wildfire activity and help to improve drought conditions, said the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center.

There is a moderate risk of heavy precipitat­ion from southern Oregon to Central California.

Although the outlook, issued Wednesday, peers fairly far into the future in weather terms, the models have been consistent in recent days about developmen­t of this weather pattern over the northeaste­rn Pacific, according to forecaster­s.

“We are monitoring this, and it looks like it could be something above normal, but nothing earth-shattering,” said David King, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service’s Bay Area office in Monterey. King pointed out that October is not normally a very wet month, so it wouldn’t take a lot to lift it above normal.

Climate scientist Daniel Swain tweeted Tuesday that there are strengthen­ing signs that a wet pattern may develop in about 10 days and encouraged his Twitter followers to “stay tuned.”

The pattern change would follow a week of dry, windy conditions with high wildfire risk continuing throughout California.

It also follows an October outlook that showed California with equal chances of above-average, near-average or below-average precipitat­ion and temperatur­es. The eight- to 12-day temperatur­e outlook issued Wednesday shows most of California with a probabilit­y of normal or slightly belownorma­l readings.

The conditions would come as a welcome change after California was one of several Western states that endured their hottest summers on record in 2021.

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