Parties of the counties of Los Angeles and Ventura can expect April showers Thursday before temperatures warm up for a sunny weekend.
The spotted showers began to fall on Wednesday afternoon in the eastern regions of the county of Ventura, and there is a 50% of rain Thursday afternoon in the valleys and mountains of the county of Los Angeles, according to the meteorologist of the National Weather Service Bryan Lewis.
The storm clouds bring a slight chance of thunderstorms in the region, he said.
Precipitation will be light, with no more than a quarter of an inch that should fall on Thursday, Lewis said.
For other parts of the Los Angeles Basin, including downtown Los Angeles, Inglewood and Downey, the risk of rain will be much lower, around 10% to 20%, Lewis said, with lower temperatures in the mid-1960s.
Precipitation should not threaten the landslide problems in areas burned by January palisades and Eaton fires.
Lewis predicted that storm clouds will dissipate Saturday to make way for a “good tendency to dry warming”, with temperatures climbing in the mid -70s and 80s in the valleys. Temperatures should remain colder on the beaches in the 1960s.
But the thermometer will continue to go up on Sunday, when most regions of the County Los Angeles could reach the 1980s, he said.
The brief storm of rain only occurs a few days after state officials announced that the state’s snowpack had reached 96% of the average on April 1, when the snow season generally reaches its peak.
The almost Middle Snow Coat means that the state should record a third consecutive year of many water supplies in the mountains – something that has not happened for a quarter of a century.
California Daily Newspapers