Los Angeles Times

By Jupiter, that was a lot of bolts over the Southland

A string of storms brought a rare display in March, along with hail and thunder.

- By Grace Toohey

Coastal Southern California, which rarely sees lightning, witnessed several hundred bolts Monday from a string of unusual thundersto­rms — a display not to be overshadow­ed by the day’s other overhead spectacle, the SpaceX rocket launch.

Orange and San Diego counties’ coasts and valleys in particular experience­d frequent bursts of lightning Monday afternoon, along with hail and loud thunder, as a low-pressure system moved in from the east, creating instabilit­y in the atmosphere that fueled the unusually strong thundersto­rms. Isolated storms, also with significan­t lightning, were recorded in Los Angeles County and the Inland Empire.

“They were more intense than your normal thundersto­rms, for sure,” said Alex Tardy, a National Weather Service meteorolog­ist in San Diego. “They didn’t have a lot of rain, but they certainly had a lot of lightning and a lot of ice, or hail .... The lightning and the hail [were] the dominant feature in these storms.”

The storms hit the San Diego area first, primarily between 1 and 3 p.m., then moved across Orange County through 6 p.m., Tardy said, as the low-pressure system tracked most directly over those areas.

Some residents reported hearing “constant” thunder and shared photos of some of the lightning and small hail on social media.

Tardy estimated that several hundred to a couple of thousand lightning discharges happened in the atmosphere over Southern California on Monday, though the majority — about 80% — remained in the clouds. About 120 strikes hit the ground, he said, based off initial analyses from ground-based instrument­s that record and track lightning.

Because the lightning was occurring over more populated areas, he said, many residents probably heard a lot of thunder and saw some hail.

All lightning is accompanie­d by thunder and hail, though the hail doesn’t usually reach the ground and sound travels slower than light, so it’s not always heard.

But the strength of the storms and frequency of the lightning made those two phenomena more prevalent Monday, Tardy said.

Lightning in Southern California remains rare, Tardy said, typically accompanyi­ng only a few winter storms and primarily occurring in July and August over the mountains and deserts. He said it’s rare year-round along the coasts and valleys, which makes it hard to compare Monday’s lightning with prior storms.

“It’s very unusual for the coast to have such widespread lightning,” Tardy said. “We had some on Friday too, and that was unusual.”

That instabilit­y on Friday, which dumped snow on the Southern California mountains and created some isolated thundersto­rms, came from the same low-pressure system that brought storms Monday. The system has lingered and shifted along the California­Arizona border for days, Tardy said, but it’s expected to move out of the area by early Wednesday.

There was a small chance for more thundersto­rms Tuesday, but the concern was significan­tly less widespread and focused on the mountains.

Lightning — which is hard to predict — is a concern only when it touches the ground, where it can have disastrous outcomes: setting vegetation or homes ablaze, interrupti­ng power and even killing people.

“I don’t know of anyone being injured or any wildfires right now,” Tardy said Tuesday, though he noted that reports can come in days after a weather event.

But Southern California isn’t out of the woods when it comes to storms. Another large system is expected to brush the area this weekend, this one coming down from the eastern Pacific off Oregon, weather officials said.

It could bring more precipitat­ion to the region Saturday and Sunday, but any rainfall is expected to be minor.

“It will be light if there is anything this weekend,” said Kristan Lund, a National Weather Service meteorolog­ist in Oxnard.

“If anything does fall, the majority of the area will get under a tenth of an inch.”

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? A LIGHTNING BOLT strikes the ocean off Huntington Beach on Monday. It’s very unusual for the coast to see widespread lightning, a meteorolog­ist says.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times A LIGHTNING BOLT strikes the ocean off Huntington Beach on Monday. It’s very unusual for the coast to see widespread lightning, a meteorolog­ist says.

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