Thursday, December 30, 2010

[californiadisasters] On This Date In CA Weather History (December 30)



On This Date In California Weather History....

2004: 16.4 inches of snow fell at Reno, NV.

1988: This day ended a week of subfreezing temperatures in Southern California that started on 12.24.
Five died as a result of the cold.

1985: Dense fog observed in Fresno and Bakersfield on this date set records for the most days with dense fog ever in the month of December at both locations.
There were 23 days that December with dense fog here, a record for not only the month of December but any month of the year.
Bakersfield had 21 days with dense fog, tying an all-time record for the most days in a month also set in January 1985.

1965: A warm storm of torrential rains also melted mountain snow from 12.29 to 12.31.
One report said more than 13 inches fell in 24 hours at Mt. Baldy. Nearly 9 inches did fall in Lake Arrowhead, and 1.5 to three inches in the coastal lowlands.
One drowned in Lytle Creek.
Disastrous flooding and debris flows occurred in the Lytle Creek and Scotland communities, Baldy Village, and in Waterman Canyon.
Two boys were rescued from the Santa Ana River in Colton.
Numerous roads were washed out in the high desert and the mountains.

1951:
A heavy rain storm gave record daily rainfall to most stations in Southern California.

1947: It was 8° in Palomar Mountain, the lowest temperature on record.
This also occurred on 1.4.1949.

1933: A major storm hit Southern California starting on this day and ending on 1.1.1934.
7.36 inches fell in 24 hours at LA, a 24 hour record for the city.
8.26 inches fell as a storm total.
Storm totals in the southern slopes of mountains topped 12 inches (heaviest: 16.29 inches in Azusa).
45 died all over Southern California in floods.
Walls of water and debris up to ten feet high were noted in some canyon areas.

1915: An extremely cold air mass brought extremely low temperatures.
The high temperature of 45° in Escondido was the second lowest high temperature on record.

1911: The morning low at Truckee was -22.

1907: 24.0 inches of snow fell at Truckee.

1891: A period of very cold weather started on 12.23 and ended on this day.
San Diego pools had ice 0.5 inch thick on the surface and ice one inch thick formed on oranges on trees in Mission Valley.

1879: 4.23 inches of rain fell in San Diego in 48 hours starting on 12.29 and ending on this day, the heaviest storm in 30 years.

Source: NWS Hanford, Reno, & San Diego

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