![]() “It’s really bad up here,” said Brooke Cutler, who is staying at a friend’s house in Lake Arrowhead. In the Lake Arrowhead area, which got more than 5 feet of snow, the situation is serious. The snowfall has stranded some residents in the San Bernardino Mountains. Wilson, towering above Pasadena at 5,700 feet, saw 40 inches of snow. The mountain is more than 8,500 feet high. Pinos, near Frazier Park in the Los Padres National Forest, saw up to 72 inches of snow, or 6 feet. Mountain High Resort, sitting at a 7,000-foot elevation in the San Gabriel Mountains, had 93 inches of snow, or nearly 8 feet. "This is a big deal.”ĭata from the National Weather Service describe the incredible amounts of snow at various peaks as of 9 a.m. "This well may be the largest single-event snowfall in some parts of Southern California since the 1980s," Swain told The Times before the storm hit. UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain said we could see "a historically significant snowfall for parts of the Southern California mountains." ![]() (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)Īfter last week's epic winter storm hit Southern California, new satellite photos from NASA Earth Observatory show snow covering the region's mountains. ![]() ![]() Clouds partially obscure mountains covered in snow north of Los Angeles on Sunday.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |