It's sprinkling in Disneyland right now. I felt maybe 8 drops fall on me.
First time I've seen rain in June in Southern California.
First time I've seen rain in June in Southern California.
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It's the fault lines shifting. The friction causes static electricity resulting in a very strong inland flow of negatively charged water particles from off shore. It never happened before man made global climate change because excessive amounts of carbon in the air now cause the negatively charged particles to invert polarity. When the inversion occurs the moisture from localized hydro domes scatters causing water droplets to fall to the ground.
We got a good round of sprinkles here in Villa Park, too. First time I've ever seen rain in June in decades.
It's the remnants of Hurricane Blanca that spun up the coast of Baja California. Santa Barbara got actual, real rain today from it. There's now quite a bit of rain tonight in Northern California. This is another good sign that the El Nino building in the eastern Pacific is a very healthy one with warming ocean temps. It's very rare for Mexico to have a major hurricane like Blanca this early, much less it spin showers up into California.
I have a habit of doing a lot of sea kayaking off La Jolla in summer. The ocean water temp is already almost warm in San Diego, and should be quite pleasant this July and August. And then this winter we should see lots of rain. Big droughts like this are always broken by really wet and wild winters, often via an El Nino. This exact same thing happened in the 1970's - a severe drought with water rationing, followed by several very wet winters that changed everything very quickly.
It's the fault lines shifting. The friction causes static electricity resulting in a very strong inland flow of negatively charged water particles from off shore. It never happened before man made global climate change because excessive amounts of carbon in the air now cause the negatively charged particles to invert polarity. When the inversion occurs the moisture from localized hydro domes scatters causing water droplets to fall to the ground.
This is much more widespread than we originally thought. This could end up being a world wide event.It's RAINING at my house!!
It could. Or it might just be raining.Thunderstorm with lightning and humidity here in La Jolla (northern suburb of San Diego). We never used to get rain in summer. We used to get a lot more rain in winter and it was of the chilly and damp nature rather than the humid, sticky nature. Could global warming be transforming our Southern California climate? Warmer and drier winters and more humid summers with rain at times?
Thunderstorm with lightning and humidity here in La Jolla (suburb of San Diego). We never used to get rain in summer. We used to get a lot more rain in winter and it was of the chilly and damp nature rather than the humid, sticky nature. Could global warming be transforming our Southern California climate? Warmer and drier winters and more humid summers with rain at times?
I love how this warrants its own thread. LOLOL
NiceRaining again today.
I wonder if it will keep the 60 year anniversary crowds down?
Raining again today.
I wonder if it will keep the 60 year anniversary crowds down?
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