A modest storm brought light showers in the Los Angeles area on the early Saturday, which caused a landslide that closed a section of the Pacific coast road, with some expected rain until Sunday morning, according to the National Meteorological Service.
Saturday’s rain should dissipate around noon, and the “evil and scarce” showers will continue during the day, said Meteorologist of the National Meteorological Service Bryan Lewis.
The slight soaking was still enough to create a problem in a section of the coast affected by the fire of Palisades: the rain sent mud that flowed through the hills on the road of the Pacific coast in Malibu, which led to the closing of the road from the terrace of the carbon beach to the sunset Boulevard in Pacific Palisades, the Department of Transportation of California said on Saturday night.
The closed section of the PCH is expected to approach at 6 in the morning on Sunday to residents with burning scars, contractors, emergency responders and designated school buses, agreed to Cottrans. The teams are making good progress, but they still have to clear the mud in Peña Road in Malibu, Caltrans said.
With the rain, it will be experienced a cold climate without season: temperatures will fall at 50 years on Saturday. And in the Antelope Valley, they will descend to 50 of the 50.
“Today, maximum temperatures are quite cold, especially for this time of year,” Lewis said.
On Sunday, the rain will give way to partially cloudy skies, with temperatures in Los Angeles to heating up to 60 bass.
In total, the storm could produce a quarter of rain in low areas, and even half an inch in the foothills, Lewis said.
But the total rains follow the typical amount of the receiver in Los Angeles by a wide margin. Excluding the drizzles on Saturday, the center of the had seen 7.88 inches of rain since October 1. On average, the thought, the area receives 13.63 inches during the same period of time, Lewis said.
And the rain on that stretch of approximately seven months is well below the amount that resorts the same section a year ago, when I had one leg flooded with 22.02 inches, he said.