Sunday, February 9, 2025

CURSED CALI





Once again......... california   gets  fucked in the  ass !!!!!!!!.......what did this place do wrong ..........to get butt fucked  so much .......   burned  down / earthquakes /sandstorms......etc ....etc .....i have no idea  and  the thing is  it is  so expensive  to live in  such a  fucking    cursed  shithole ........i will never  understand it look at lasades   burned  down  floods  and  whatever  else  comes in there  ......god  fucking hates  california /.........  maybe it is  because all the pedos live  there ........ i am not  sure  ....... i do'nt know......... and  do not  care!!!!!!! ,......make it a   parking lot.........as  far as  i am  concerned ...........

Major atmospheric river storm is barreling toward California: 'Prepare for the worst'

Rong-Gong Lin II, Hannah Fry
7 min read
Los Angeles, CA - February 05: A jogger and their dog are bundled up as they run in the rain downtown Los Angeles Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
A jogger and a dog are bundled up as they run in the rain in downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
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A major atmospheric river storm — strong enough to potentially rival some of the extreme storms that have walloped Southern California in recent winters — is barreling toward the coast, raising the specter of damaging landslides and flooding across the region.

This storm, forecast to reach Southern California shortly before Valentine's Day on Friday, is expected to be the strongest of the winter so far, according to the National Weather Service office in Oxnard.

It threatens to drop large amounts of rain — 2 to 4 inches or more along the coast and in valleys, 4 to 8 inches or more in the mountains and foothills — across a swath of the Southland. There's a 60% chance of rainfall of that magnitude in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties, and a 40% chance in Los Angeles and Ventura counties — chances that have increased in recent days.

There's also a small chance rainfall could be even more extreme for Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties.

Read more: A perilous paradise: In Montecito, fires, floods and mudflows leave wealthy town in fear

"Definitely, people should be prepared that this is going to be the wettest period that we've had so far this rain season — since the fires started," said Ryan Kittell, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Oxnard.

"People should prepare for really the worst-case scenario," Kittell said, where heavy rainfall could send mud and debris sliding off hillsides, mucking up roads and possibly colliding into homes and other structures.

For Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties, rain could start late Tuesday night and last through the evening of Friday — Valentine's Day, said Rose Schoenfeld, a weather service meteorologist. The biggest threat is expected to be on Thursday.

"Certainly, if you are in a vulnerable area around those burn scars, keep track of the weather each day and see how the projections trend and what seems to be the most likely outcome going forward," Kittell said. "Prepare for the worst and hope for the best."

Chart showing chances of precipitation for SLO and SB counties
There's a 60% chance of high amounts of rain falling in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties between Feb. 12 and Feb. 14, which raises the risk of debris flow and mudslides. (National Weather Service)

Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties could see 12 to 24 hours or more of rainfall, with precipitation coming down at rates between half an inch to an inch or more per hour. Rainfall rates of half an inch or more per hour are capable of causing significant debris flows, in which water can pick up mud, rocks, branches and sometimes massive boulders, traveling at speeds exceeding 35 mph.

A rainfall rate in that range "typically does lead to some flooding concerns, especially for the recent burn areas," Kittell said. That includes the burn area of the 2024 Lake fire, which scorched 38,664 acres in the Santa Barbara County mountains north of Los Olivos.

As rainfall rates approach 1 inch per hour, flooding can be triggered anywhere, especially on roads and in small creeks, Kittell said.

Previously, the weather service warned there was a 20% chance of an extreme rainfall scenario occurring in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties that would drop 4 to 8 inches of rain on the coast and in the valleys. That risk is now lower than 20%, and now has a "small chance" of occurring, Schoenfeld said.

Read more: Chance of strong atmospheric river storm grows, as does risk of mudslides in L.A. burn scars

This storm now looks like it will fall short of being as powerful as the historic Jan. 9, 2023 storm, one of the most powerful storms in recent memory for Southern California. That forced the mass evacuation of Montecito and other communities, caused significant flooding, and resulted in the deaths of two motorists — including a 5-year-old boy — who were caught in floodwaters in San Luis Obispo County.

The 2023 storm dumped 16 inches of rain on the Santa Ynez Mountains — the range that towers above Santa Barbara and Montecito. This week's storm likely won't produce as much rain. And another difference is the 2023 storm was one of a string of powerful systems that hammered California from late December 2022 through mid-January 2023. This season has been far drier — one of the driest starts to the rainy season in modern California history — "so the impacts will probably be less," Kittell said.

For Los Angeles and Ventura counties, besides the 40% chance of large amounts of rain, there's also a 60% chance of moderate amounts. Light rain could arrive starting early Wednesday, with the highest threat between Thursday morning and Friday morning, before lighter rain ends Friday night.

For all four counties, there is a 5% to 10% chance of thunderstorms Thursday and Friday, which could bring locally brief heavy rain, gusty winds and small hail.

Chart showing forecast for LA and Ventura counties
There's a 40% chance of high amounts of rain falling in Los Angeles and Ventura counties between Feb. 12 and Feb. 14, which raises the risk of debris flow and mudslides. There's also a 60% chance of moderate amounts of rainfall, which would likely result in localized road flooding and a low risk of debris flow. (National Weather Service)

A moderate event could cause some road flooding, but the risk of debris flow would be low, though still present, Kittell said.

Large amounts of rainfall would result in a "fairly high risk" of producing downpours so intense that all of the region's recent burn areas are at risk for debris flow, Kittell said.

Recently burned areas are at risk for landslides in heavy rain, as the soil is no longer anchored by healthy vegetation. Heat from fire makes it harder for soil to absorb water, and ash also tends to clog the soil, so water is more likely to flow along the surface rather than percolating down.

The storm is also expected to be strong in the San Joaquin Valley and Sierra foothills, potentially affecting travel along the mountain passes of Kern County, the weather service office in Hanford said.

The storm is expected to bring moderate effects to San Diego and Orange counties and the Inland Empire. That area is expected to see widespread rainfall Wednesday through Friday. There's an 80% to 95% chance this region will see 1 or more inches of rain from the coasts through the mountains. The coasts and valleys also have a 40% to 60% chance of seeing more than 2 inches of rain.

Palm Springs has a nearly 50% chance of 1 or more inches of rain, "as the moisture will be deep enough to stretch into the deserts," the weather service office in San Diego said.

The storm is expected to bring moderate to heavy rain and mountain snow to the Sacramento Valley. The Sierra Nevada could see 2 or more feet of snow, and areas around the elevation of Lake Tahoe could see "their largest snow event so far this season," according to the weather service office in Reno.

Read more: Record-breaking rain lashes California, with two people killed during storm in Sonoma County

The San Francisco Bay Area and Santa Cruz and Monterey counties can expect urban and small stream flooding, as well as the possibility of shallow landslides and a slight risk for flash flooding, the weather service said. The Bay Area is expected to get its heaviest rain Thursday.

The upcoming storm follows heavier than expected rainfall from a system that left Southern California on Friday. For the two-day period that ended at 5 p.m. Friday, Santa Monica got 1.26 inches of rain; Beverly Hills, 1.46 inches; Porter Ranch, 1.53 inches; Alhambra, 1.64 inches; downtown L.A., 1.71 inches; East Pasadena, 2.07 inches; and Malibu Hills, 2.5 inches. The mountains in L.A. County saw as much as 3.32 inches of rain.

That, combined with the rainfall leading up to Valentine's Day, may be enough for Southern California to end "high fire season" and transition to "low fire season," Kittell said, where vegetation is wet enough that "the risk for any large fires will be fairly small for the rest of the winter into the spring."

There will need to be conversations with a number of agencies, including firefighters, before making that determination, "but we're certainly trending in that direction."

Read more: California snowpack is below average, but winter storms could change that

Downtown L.A. has received about 2 inches of rain since the water year began Oct. 1, almost all of it since late January. The typical average at this point — roughly halfway through the traditional rainy season — is 7.93 inches. The annual average is 14.25 inches.

Meteorologists have said that the region needs 2 to 4 inches of rain, widespread, for high fire season to end.

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I WILL NEVER UNDERSTAND .....THIS .........

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