Nothing noteworthy yet in San Luis Obispo. The rain overnight wasn’t very heavy and has actually stopped at the moment, replaced by some high winds (which we’re kinda used to here.).
Not bad here yet, but KCRA (most accurate TV weather, IMO) thinks the big wind should be here this afternoon. That’s my big worry after hours of rain, since a bit over a year ago, we had a series of these atmospheric rivers that had at one point about 1/3 of the city without power due to downed trees.
Over by the mission we had a significant problem with that last storm. It overwhelmed out gutters and that spillover created a several inch deep river that probably got into our crawl space. I sandbagged the hell out of the area Friday and then spent Saturday morning pressurizing our system of buried downspout drainage. The drain exits from a hole in the curb near the street storm drain. It was extremely satisfying when finally this several foot long turd of dirt and plant matter excreted itself into the street. That had to have helped.
I flew out of SBA last night. I was supposed to leave late this morning, but I moved my flight in case there was airport flooding like the last big storm. Well, that and the forecast 50mph winds. So I’m monitoring remotely. Good luck to all my neighbors!
I live in “flat as a billiard table” metro southeast Florida. When we get severe rain, we get massive flooding too.
Where you are (and I grew up near there and still have family there), the rain and mud comes coursing down the hillsides and fills the cities on its way to the sea. Where I am now, the rain falls and just sits there. The land is dead flat, so there’s no flow. And the sea is only a couple feet below local land level, so there’s no real head to provide any velocity that way. The flood water is as happy to meander away from the ocean as it is towards it.
My overall thrust being, there’s no good answer when Nature decides to prove a point. And each our communities has built inadequate defenses designed for a much smaller population and much less severely episodic weather.
Hope all goes well for all of you in my old stomping grounds of coastal California. I have friends in the region who are keeping me apprised. I’m sorry you’re all going to go through this. Fingers crossed for minimal damage and worry.
Here in the Coast Range of Oregon, we’re currently getting brisk, cold winds from the southeast (unusual), but nothing to bark about. Rain is forecast for the entire week – but no storm warnings. After our recent ice storm and being stuck in my house for 10 days due to it, I’m glad we’re not in the crosshairs of this storm. I’m sorry you all are.
Gorgeous day here in SoCal. Scattered clouds…for about another 4 hours. Then we get hammered. 6" predicted in the next 72 hours. The El Dorado burn scar is pretty well grown over, but there are a couple of canyon villages up in the San Gorgonio wilderness that are likely to get buried. They sandbagged and diked the shit out of Mill Creek, but it’s still going to flood hard.
It has been raining hard off and on since 2 a.m. here. The winds picked up about 6 a.m. or so and it has been blowing hard with occasional 40 mph gusts since then. We took a drive to a couple of places to look at the water levels of a couple of key creeks, and they’re all full and gushing. I looked at our weather app, and we’ve had 1.35 inches of rain in the last 12 hours.
Steady rain and windy this morning in San Jose, but nothing too severe. The worst storm activity here was on Friday afternoon, thunderstorm intensity with some hail.
East of Sacramento here. The breeze has picked up noticably in the last hour or so, after a still and drizzly morning. The rain has tapered off, for now.
With all the burn scars over the last few years it’s concerning to all that live near them. At least the Sierra from south to mid-range is expecting a pounding, which may help us catch-up to the averages for this time of year - as mentioned it’s been a mild season in the high country.
My daughter lives in Ventura County which appears to be in the crosshairs - we’ll be checking in with her in a little while.
Ok well now it’s coming down in Santa Barbara. It’s a steady rain but not a monster downpour. The worst of it is supposed to hit in two or three hours.
Gawd. I bet this system is on it’s way to Colorado.
This weekend, 2 feet of snow up at elevation in Colorado.
Plow truck chained up on all 4 with a 10,000 lb winch on the back… stuck. Got it out. Had to winch from two different places. When that truck gets stuck, you KNOW you are gonna have a bad day.
Plowed twice. Yesterday and today. Nearly got truck stuck again today. Just ripped of the side step on it though (fine don’t need it).
Quiet here in Rocklin/Roseville – TOO quiet, almost eye of hurricane calm. Winds are forecasted to be 30 mph in an hour or two, very rare around here. Also thunderstorms. I sure hope we don’t lose power; I don’t want to have to go out and try to start the generator.
I have 3 100 ft redwoods in the back yard. I hope they stay put!