Los Angeles Times

Still hot, but cooling is near

Southland broils through another day with record high temperatur­es

- By Andrew J. Campa

Four Los Angeles County cities had record high temperatur­es Sunday, but cooler days are expected beginning Monday.

Woodlands Hills topped out at 96 degrees, breaking the record of 93 set in 2016. Burbank and Lancaster hit 93 and 83, respective­ly, and the mercury leaped to 79 in the hilly hamlet of Sandberg in the Antelope Valley, another record.

Sunday’s four records followed three new county highs and soaring temperatur­es Saturday. Burbank, Lancaster, Long Beach, Palmdale and the UCLA campus also establishe­d daily records on a blistering Friday.

Outside Los Angeles County, Palm Springs reached a record high of 93 degrees, while Big Bear registered a high of 74 on Sunday.

Earlier in the weekend, Santa Barbara had a high of 86 degrees Saturday, while Camarillo and Oxnard both reached a record 95 on Friday. Santa Ana also saw a record high of 96 on Friday.

The National Weather Service did offer some relief, tweeting Sunday that this was the “last really hot day across [southwest] California” during this recent Santa Ana wind event.

“Tomorrow will still be quite warm, but you can take about five degrees off the temperatur­es,” said Ryan Kittell, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard. “We’re going to be firmly in the mid-80s starting Monday rather than ranging from the mid-80s to the 90s as was the case this weekend.”

Kittell said that on Monday and Tuesday, low clouds and fog will return to the coastal areas as temperatur­es continue to drop into the high 70s.

Temperatur­es should remain cool from Tuesday into Friday.

Santa Ana winds calmed and should remain so for the coming week, Kittell said.

On Sunday, the winds ranged from 15 to 30 mph. Kittell said the range continued to dip from 20 to 40 mph on Saturday, with the peak of 30 to 50 mph on Friday. The dying winds meant no red flag fire warning.

“We reserve those notices for extreme events, and we didn’t have the right combinatio­n to need to issue a warning,” Kittell said. Winds generally must gust at 35 mph or higher, while humidity needs to dip to 15% or lower, he said.

The cooler forecast was welcomed by Woodland Hills resident Jim Anderson, 85. His town took center stage throughout the weekend as Sunday’s 96-degree temperatur­e tied with Porter Ranch for highest in the county.

On Saturday, Woodland Hills tied Fillmore and Chino “as the hottest spot in the nation” with a high of 95 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.

Besides a whitefish run to Frank’s Weiler’s Deli in Canoga Park, Anderson said he mainly stayed indoors with the windows shut.

Though Anderson said he was slightly uncomforta­ble at times, the temperatur­es were nowhere near those of the Midwest native’s first November in California in 1983. He said the high back then reached 115 degrees.

Anderson even joked about the “cooling” this year in comparison with 2020. Woodland Hills set the Los Angeles record for hottest temperatur­e Sept. 6 of that year with an all-time high of 121 degrees. That mark

eclipsed the previous best of 119 degrees, also set in Woodland Hills in July 2006.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? VISITORS to Venice Beach watch the setting sun at the end of another record hot day across the region. Cooler days are expected beginning Monday.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times VISITORS to Venice Beach watch the setting sun at the end of another record hot day across the region. Cooler days are expected beginning Monday.

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