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Showers, cool temperatures linger in Southern California, but a warm-up is on the way

Showers, cool temperatures linger in Southern California, but a warm-up is on the way

Yahoo05-05-2025

Showers and cooler temperatures continue to linger across Southern California, but officials say a period of warm, dry weather is just around the corner.
'If you're sick of the cold weather, you'll like this week," said Ryan Kittell, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Oxnard. 'This week will definitely be transitioning."
A high-pressure system is building across the region, and by Wednesday and Thursday any chance of rain will be in the rear-view mirror, Kittell said. Temperatures will also dramatically climb.
'By the end of the week, we're actually looking at highs in the mid-80s to early 90s," he said. 'Thursday through Sunday, it looks warm."
Those highs are expected to be five to 10 degrees above average for this time of year, a flip from the start to the week — when highs are forecast to be several degrees below average.
In Los Angeles County, highs Monday and Tuesday are expected to be in the mid-60s to low-70s, Kittell said. On-and-off showers remain possible, following the wet and cold weekend, which brought significant rainfall — and some snow — across the Southland.
Rainfall amounts were highest in the Inland Empire, where up to 2 inches of rain fell in the foothills and valleys, according to the National Weather Service. Cal State San Bernardino recorded 1.57 inches, Yucaipa saw a little more than an inch and Riverside Airport got almost a half inch.
The San Diego and Orange counties' valleys saw a quarter-inch to three-quarters of an inch of rain. Amounts in most of L.A. County were under a half inch, with Lancaster and Sandberg recording about a tenth of an inch on Sunday, weather service data show.
In the mountains, rainfall amounts were slightly higher, while some of the region's highest peaks saw the precipitation turn to snow. The highest elevations in San Bernardino and Riverside counties' mountains saw around an inch of snow, including on Mt. San Jacinto and in the highest points of Big Bear.
Any further rainfall Monday and Tuesday is going to be relatively minimal.
'We still have a little bit of rain out there now so those totals could go up a bit,' Kittell said, but it won't be by much.
'Everything's pretty light as far as what we're seeing," Kittell said of the rain, expecting nothing more than a quarter-inch.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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