Rain Making a Comeback To The Southland This Week

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - Rain will make a comeback in the Southland this week, with two storm systems out of the Pacific Northwest headed for the region, the National Weather Service said today.

Light rain may fall tonight followed by showers Tuesday, producing a quarter-inch of rain at the start of what promises to be an ``unsettled week,'' said NWS meteorologist Rich Thompson from his monitoring station in Oxnard.

But a ``much stronger'' storm is expected to douse the region Thursday and Friday, generating rain and snow in the San Gabriel Mountains, he said. Predictions regarding that system are still being developed, but the NWS said it could trigger mud slides and debris flows down slopes previously stripped of vegetation by wildfires, along with treacherous mountain driving conditions. Precipitation could be heavy at times Friday or Saturday, according to the weather Service.

The system that went through the region over the weekend, producing hours of light, steady rain on Saturday, generated between a half-inch and an inch of rain, Thompson said, adding that it came out of the northwest but was augmented by an infusion off moisture from the southwest.

Cloudy skies are expected in L.A. County today, along with highs mostly in the low 70s, followed by precipitation every day from Tuesday through Sunday. Tuesday's temperatures will be several degrees lower than today's.

Cloudy skies are expected in Orange County today, along with highs ranging from the low 60s to the low 70s. As of early this morning, partly cloudy skies are expected in Orange County through Wednesday, followed by precipitation Thursday through Sunday.


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