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  • Southern California Weather Force

    Final Forecast: Tropical Storm Hilary Will Hit Southern California and Vegas Starting This Weekend; Details and Maps

    2023-08-18

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=33pyas_0o1kdjr500
    Photo bySouthern California Weather Force

    The zoom-in rainfall forecast maps will not fit on this platform, please visit this link and check the bottom for your area of Southern California's forecast - https://www.southerncaliforniaweatherforce.com/2023/08/18/final-forecast-tropical-storm-hilary-will-hit-southern-california-and-vegas-starting-this-weekend-details-and-maps/

    Major Hurricane Hilary will hit Southern California as a Tropical Storm starting tomorrow (Saturday) east of Los Angeles and then affecting everyone equally with Sunday into Monday morning being the main part so read on for details along with me upgrading the Low Desert, including the Coachella Valley from Extreme into the rare Emergency Risk per the Southern California Weather Force Risk Assessment Model.  Please note that although this is a long forecast, the details are to be read word for word as locations will matter.

    Hurricane Hilary is a category four system.  This system has finally made the northwest turn and will solidify hitting Southern California and Las Vegas head on.  The confidence has been extremely high for this to happen due to the left over upper-level low of Eugene, which affected us well over a week ago.  This upper-level low retrograded west of Vandenberg and is the one fully responsible for pulling and maintaining a south to north flow from the tropics to the Desert Southwest.  

    THUNDERSTORMS:  Storm activity will start in the low deserts (Imperial/Desert Center/Needles/Las Vegas as early as today.  Increasing tropical moisture will move into the areas west of Los Angeles' latitude on Saturday.  This will bring some instability with it, so I do think we have the chance of thunderstorms ahead of the main system from the Inland Empire, High/Low Desert, and San Bernardino, Riverside, and San Diego County Mountains.  I will consider updating everyone on those thunderstorms I expect with a Thunderstorm Watch, which will label the focus areas when the time comes.  You can expect that this this evening (Friday).

    As Sunday rolls around, more tropical moisture will be introduced along with upper-level divergence on the north side of Hilary's broad circulation.  This is when Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and Kern County see the swath of precipitation, lasting into Sunday night, and moving out over the day on Monday.

    Now, understand something.  This system will have what I call whiners of weather forecasts where you will be in a dryslot on Saturday and wonder "Where the heck is this system?"  You will say that only to understand that the main event for the majority of the Southern California Metro Population Zones will be Sunday into Monday.

    Because of the prolonged rainfall across the Low Deserts, the upgrade via the Southern California Weather Force Risk Assessment Model is at Emergency Risk, the dark blue shade on the article image within this write-up.   

    Use the zoom-in images below for your sector of Southern California to know what rainfall amount is forecast.  Remember, this is in a short period of time, and anything in the magenta or dark blue would be considered a major flood and erosion event, especially in the local mountains and all desert zones where I think the Coachella Valley will see anywhere from 7 to 10" of rain.

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    - Raiden Storm -

    Master General Meteorologist – is a consulting meteorologist for over 50 companies, including energy, agriculture, aviation, marine, leisure, and many more areas. He has certs from Mississippi State for broadcast met and Penn State forecasting certs MET 101, 241, 341 and 361 as a meteorologist, but before then was completely self-taught, barely learning a thing from the schools that he did not already know.

    Both short and long-range is very important to know in those jobs so you can bet on accuracy here. He is versed in fields like Western USA, Tornadoes, Floods, Hurricanes, High Winds, Fire Behavior, Snow and Blizzards, Short Range, Long Range, Seasonal, and Life-Threatening decisions with over 25 years' experience, out forecasting all weather services available today with lead-time and precision, which makes him a focus of ridicule and envy.

    NOTE: Alerts are posted on here, be it a tornado watch, etc, and these alerts are issued from this office and nowhere else. At times, which is often, you will see an alert forecast posted on here that you do not see elsewhere.

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    Comments / 111
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    Bobby Moyer
    2023-08-21
    it is a tropical storm,, by the time it got to la a rain maker..
    Just saying
    2023-08-21
    Never take Mother Nature for granted, when she changes and ur in the middle it want be a joke. maybe not this time just stay aware the meteorologist gets things wrong sometimes
    View all comments
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