-
Byron Donalds’ Chances Against Casey DeSantis in Potential Primary: Poll - 11 mins ago
-
Paul Pierce has no concerns about LeBron's injury | Speak - 16 mins ago
-
Man accused of abusing and killing girlfriend’s 5-year-old son - 42 mins ago
-
Four deputies hospitalized after attack by inmates at L.A. jail - 46 mins ago
-
Yankees Trade For $7.5 Million Former 1st-Round Pick Urged for Pitching Help - 50 mins ago
-
College basketball conference tournament preview: Bubble teams, players to watch, picks - 60 mins ago
-
‘Young Sheldon’ star files for divorce after five months of marriage - about 1 hour ago
-
How to Watch Big East Tournament Final: UConn vs Creighton: Live Stream Women’s College Basketball, TV Channel - about 1 hour ago
-
Mother vanishes into hot, humid air on the eve of major hurricane and turns up dead - 2 hours ago
-
What will New York Jets get in Justin Fields? | Speak - 2 hours ago
Unusual winter heat spike breaks L.A. temperature records
Southern California’s unusually warm winter weather this week broke five temperature records Thursday as a strong high pressure system pushed the thermometer to around 15 degrees above normal across the region.
Downtown Los Angeles and Long Beach both hit a toasty 88 degrees Thursday, breaking the respective 86- and 84-degree records set in 2020, according to the National Weather Service.
Los Angeles International Airport saw a record high of 86 degrees, while UCLA broke its record with 85 degrees and Paso Robles with 82 degrees.
Much cooler temps are expected Friday, with highs in the upper 60s and 70s, according to the weather service.
Although this week’s hot weather may have prompted an early appearance of flip-flops and sundresses, forecasters warn this stretch of heat isn’t indicative of an early start to springtime.
Several cold, wet storms are expected to dramatically flip the forecast by the weekend, pulling the Southland back into the throes of winter, with below-average temperatures likely to linger into mid-March, according to the national Climate Prediction Center’s latest outlooks.
“We’re going to be really right back in winter here the next couple of days with two or three pretty cold low-pressure systems coming,” said Mike Wofford, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Oxnard. “It’s going to be a pretty dramatic change.”
The upcoming cold front is but the latest example of weather whiplash the Southland has been experiencing this winter.
The new year began with critically dry and hot conditions alongside fierce Santa Ana winds that fueled one of the costliest firestorms in modern history. Residents then dealt with a deluge of rain, mudslides and freezing overnight temperatures.
Times staff writer Grace Toohey contributed to this report.
Source link