So Cal Lightning Reports

Lots of downstrikes all morning long in SD County out to Joshua Tree and other areas. For our area, NOAA has this to say:

AS OF 9:30 AM PDT THURSDAY…FORECAST HIGHLIGHT FOR THE DAY WILL BE A NOTED COOLING TREND FOR MOST LOCATIONS. WEATHER ITEM OF INTEREST THAT WE WILL BE WATCHING CLOSELY IS ONGOING CONVECTION OVER SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA…AND TRACKING THE OUTSIDE CHANCE THAT CELLS MOVE TOWARDS MONTEREY/SAN BENITO COUNTY.

San Diego NOAA published this: The national weather service in san diego has issued a red flagwarning…which is in effect until 11 pm pdt this evening.
* frequent dry lightning likely to accompany thunderstorms
* thunderstorms: Widespread from the coasts to the deserts moving
towards the northwest
* outflow winds: Between 35 and 45 mph
* timing: Until late evening hours

Photos for Heat Relief

The first photograph below is one of the ones I took day before yesterday, during the record-breaking heat. Nothing like the sight or sound of the waves to cool one down. Of course, yesterday, it was even hotter in many places. I am hoping today brings us all relief. My favorite weather person wrote that it was 102 in Carmel, and 71 in Monterey. Go figure!

Sand Dollar and Cone Peak, 9/27/10

And last night, what I hope is the sunset on the hottest days of the year!

Sunset, 9/28/10

Wildfire in Big Sur – 1 and Old Coast Rd.

Incident contained to less than 5 acres on Andrew Molera State Park at 2243 hours. This is as it is being reported. I have not, nor will I at this late hour, confirm if it is on AMSP, El Sur Ranch, or Old Coast Rd. I am too hot and too tired to care. it is contained, and that is all I care about.

Incident is being called “Coast Fire” as with the earlier one. Should be Coast 2, based on prior namings. Per a reliable source, Kimball, CalFire will duplicate USFS will not.

Trey is right, it is called Old Coast Rd. I merely repeated what LPF and CALFIRE were saying without thinking. I am tired, still working, and hot as hell. 88 degrees at 11 pm.

WildCAD reported:
09/28/2010 21:03 LPF-3072 (New) Wildfire Hwy 1 and Coast Ridge Road.

LPF also has units onscene at Hwy 1 and Coast Ridge Rd.

Incident: 0647 Type: Report of Fire Location: SR1 AT ANDREW MOLERA ThomasBrothers: 1262 7B info as of: 9/28/2010 10:05:31 PM
ADDITIONAL DETAILS
10:05PM ANOTHER RP REPORTING FIRE N/W OF VENTANA RIDGE RD ** ATT TO XFER TO CDF AND CALL DISC (NA ON CB) ** PER CDF WILL BE THE SAME FIRE
9:34PM 27-S7 L/L ROLL 1ST DBLD UP GRAVEYARD UNIT
9:25PM NO TRAFF EXCEPT FIRE EQUIP
9:25PM FIRE COMM REQ CHP TO SHUTDOWN COAST RIDGE RD @ SR1
9:06PM ANOTHER RP REPORTING THE FIRE // XFER TO CDF // SED THEY HAVE MULT CALLS // RP DISC
8:59PM XFER TO CDF-MONT

False Alarm at Garrapatta

Reports of fire at Garrapatta (excuse me, but I can never remember which consonants are doubled in this word) brought a full response, but initial AA could find nothing from Carmel all the way down to Big Sur, so response was cancelled. I am reporting this to help avoid confusion if you heard the sirens about 1/2 hour ago.

Heat Wave Continues … still

Update: High clouds have moved into the area, and the light has changed. One friend in Carmel Valley reports outside temperatures at his house reached 116.6. That’s just too hot by anyone’s standards!

11 am update: “WARM START TO THE DAY ACROSS THE CWA WITH MANY LOCATIONS RUNNING 4 TO 7 DEGREES AHEAD OF VALUES YESTERDAY….COOLER WEATHER WILL RETURN STARTING ON WEDNESDAY… HIGHS ON WEDNESDAY COULD BE UP TO 25 DEGREES COOLER THAN TODAY FOR COASTAL SPOTS AND LOCATIONS AROUND THE BAY. WESTERLY WINDS WILL ALSO PICK UP AND BE LOCALLY BREEZY….NEXT ITEM OF CONCERN IS THE POTENTIAL FOR CONVECTIVE ACTIVITY STARTING ON THURSDAY AS A LOW MOVES TOWARD THE SOCAL COAST WHILE THE RIDGE OVERHEAD MOVES OFF TO THE EAST…. CURRENT MODEL OUTPUT INDICATES THAT THE MOST SIGNIFICANT MOISTURE AND INSTABILITY WILL REMAIN TO OUR SOUTH AND EAST. HOWEVER…THERE IS AN OUTSIDE CHANCE OF ELEVATED CONVECTION ACROSS OUR SOUTHERN COUNTIES FROM THURSDAY NIGHT INTO FRIDAY NIGHT.

There is a weather watch for a chance of lightning in SoCal during this same period, but not probable.

I did not want to see this NOAA report this morning. It was too hot to sleep. Too hot to work, play, or do anything but sit under the garden hose, which is on today’s agenda. Here’s the report:

ONE MORE HOT DAY TODAY…
…COOLING TREND BEGINNING ON WEDNESDAY…

.DISCUSSION…AS OF 3:40 AM PDT TUESDAY…CONDITIONS EARLY THIS MORNING ARE SIMILAR TO WHAT THEY WERE 24 HOURS AGO. SURFACE PRESSURE GRADIENTS ACROSS NORTHERN CALIFORNIA ARE MOSTLY WEAK OFFSHORE. TEMPERATURES THIS MORNING ARE WARMER IN MOST LOCATIONS AND THE FORT ORD PROFILER INDICATES THE AIRMASS ABOVE THE SHALLOW MARINE LAYER IS A FEW DEGREES C WARMER. THESE FACTORS SUGGEST TODAY WILL BE AS WARM AS YESTERDAY FOR INLAND AREAS…OR EVEN A FEW DEGREES WARMER.

Oh, joy!

September 27, 2008 – the beginnings of a fire

Two years ago tonight, I wrote the following:

“At 10 pm tonight, I had a report from Betty Withrow of a fire on the Mill Creek drainage area. Early reports are sketchy, and may not be accurate. One report is that it is at the 6 mile marker of N-F Rd. Another report is that it is closer to Apple Camp. Yet another report has it on both sides of the road. about 20-25 acres. USFS Fire Engines are on scene, per my local sources. Follow the chronology of reports below:

Alicia Lutz just came through on her way home, so we know Peter, Merritt, and Katie will be notified. Serge is on his way down from Monterey and will be coming through. Also my gates are open, and my Jeep out of the way. Kerri is on her way, also. Rocky and Geri know about the fire.

I can see the glow, but no flames.

11:15 report from keith harlan: “just got a call from warren and he reports that 30 min. ago the battalion chief was reporting 15 acres for the “Chalk Peak Fire” backing down Mill Creek Drainage and east from the ridge road.”

11:25 report from Big Sur, sirens going by in Valley.
11:25 report from Betty, “reports are that there are planes and dozers on the way.” (In the morning.)

12:00 – drove to front gate, quite a glow from that perspective. Going to be a long night.

12:30 am – This from Geri: “it is on So coast rdge between apple camp and chalk peak both sides of road can be seen from our house.”

12:45 am- Keith reports that he & Mary on their way up to help Rocky & Geri, Monte on his way from Paso.

1:00 am – Serge came through on his way to his mom’s and has two friends coming up to help tomorrow. Gotta love the way the South Coast mobilizes to help one another. I certainly do.

1:15 am- Kerri came through on her way to help Rocky & Geri.

1:45 am- Keith & Mary came through. I also just checked the glow from the perspective of my front gate, and it seems to have lessened. I’ll see what the morrow brings.

2:00 am- hopefully this is the last person to come through until dawn, so I can grab a couple hours before I begin a long day.

I will continue to add information as reports come in. For those of you not quite familiar with the area, Kimball has posted two topo maps on his website, Coast Communication, linked in my blogroll to the right.”
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And then it took off, taking over my life for several weeks.

And today? Today yielded record-breaking temperatures in many parts of the state, including one of 127 degrees in the back country behind Salmon Creek. See the post below for more details on today’s heat wave. But amazingly, no fires. One long time firefighter says he has noticed this phenomena in the past, and feels that it is too hot for people, and they stay home, rather than go out into the wilderness.

Heat Wave Continues

5:00 pm – It is 100 degrees here at the moment. Have no idea what the hottest temps were. I drove down to Cambria to escape the heat, or so I thought. There was no escaping. But I did notice an interesting phenomena. In the areas of Highway One that are pretty much at ocean level (ok, maybe 100 ft. or so) like Villa Creek, Shale Point, Willow Creek. It was relatively cool – you know like in the high 80s. But areas at higher elevation, and particularly if the road is weaving inland, such as at Salmon Creek and Redwood Gulch, it was a furnace. I mean a furnace.

Today is the hottest day on record in Los Angeles, where records go back to 1877. weather news

here are some temps and relative humidity for Monterey County inland areas:
Bradley T 107 RH 10 Arroyo Seco 109 RH 8 Pinnacles 111 RH 5

But look at some of these SoCal temps! Calienté!!
Malibu Canyon at 114:
Downey at 110: f
Corona at 114:
Oceanside north at 115:
Long Beach north at 109:
Hottest location? Monrovia, CA at 121.

But look at the Central Coast!! 121 in Hollister, and 127 back behind Salmon Creek somewhere. My heavens!

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Earlier predictions were that this would be the hottest day of the heat wave. Friends on the Coast and in the Valley have been noting the exceptional heat, also, and last night’s weather report said it was 107 in both LA and Paso Robles, so it is hot throughout most of the state. One report extends this out until Thursday. It is making up for the summer we never had.

For the last several mornings I have awakened to quite a bit of wind. So fire danger is significant.

Stay cool (cold showers help) and take care. It is an iced cappuccino for me this morning. Too hot for coffee.

Bodega Wildfire

6:45 pm – Shaky containment. S/T forming up for this evening, but bigsurkate is taking the evening off. If you have something to report that is local, please call rather than email. Check in on all in the morning.

Highway One closed this afternoon at Bay Hill Rd. due to a wildfire. The winds have shifted, and the fire is being pushed toward Bodega Bay. Law Enforcement has been asked to prepare for a possible evacuation. Per IC fire is around 75 acres with 0% containment will go extended. Highway One is closed from the Bodega Highway to Harbour Way.

Everyone, PLEASE be very careful and very aware. RH is getting into the single digits with little recovery overnight. Fuels are already exceedingly dry, and this weather event is affecting most of the State of California.

Patterns & Light, 6



Patterns & Light, 6, originally uploaded by wind_dancer.

I skipped #5. I figured we need a photo to change the pace a bit, but will be sticking with reporting for the few days.

I will be keeping a close eye on this weather event and concentrating on reporting anything of interest. NOAA is predicting temps of 108 in the inland areas of Monterey County on Monday and there are red flag alerts for LA and Ventura Co. Some of our local CALFIRE crews headed down south for staging in anticipation of the conditions.