Southern California in for 3 days of rain, snow
A significant storm is headed to Southern California, with rain, mountain snow and gusty winds expected to last through Wednesday.
Some light rain is possible after midnight Sunday, and most areas of Los Angeles and Orange County will experience substantial rainfall by Monday morning that will continue throughout the day and Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service. Showers are predicted to lighten on Wednesday, though they’ll still be intermittent.
Tuesday is expected to bring the heaviest rain for Riverside and San Bernardino counties, the NWS says.
The forecast remains locked in on significant rainfall across #SoCal with the heaviest occurring Tuesday morning-Tuesday night. It looks warmer, so snow totals were lowered quite a bit for the mountain communities. Winds will crank up with the windiest day being Tuesday. #CAwx pic.twitter.com/ast46mRzak
— NWS San Diego (@NWSSanDiego) November 6, 2022
A drying trend is expected for the latter half of the week.
In the mountains, snow accumulation is possible Monday night at 6,500 to 7,000 feet.
Wind gusts of 40 mph are expected Sunday night and Monday in the mountains and high desert, increasing to 55 mph Tuesday.
The wet weather will be accompanied by chillier days and nights. Daytime temperatures are expected to drop into the low 60s in the valleys and the downtown Los Angeles area Monday through Wednesday, with lows in the 50s Monday and Tuesday and the lower 40s Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.
Wednesday’s highs are only expected to reach 58 in Pasadena and Santa Clarita and 53 in Lancaster.
The Antelope Valley will see overnight temperatures below freezing level later this week, with lows of 33, 30 and 31 degrees expected Wednesday through Friday.
