Los Angeles may still be iced coffee weather, but due to temperatures starting Monday night, most of California along the coast may see thick fog, cold breezes, and even scattered showers.
Angelenos may be relieved after a continuous late summer heat wave drop. but Bay Area Residents may disappoint after they have shivered during the coldest summers for decades.
“We are looking for temperatures that are 5 to 15 degrees below normal levels,” said Karleisa Rogacheski, a meteorologist at the National Meteorological Service.
This prediction is unusual for coastal California, and it usually sees its hottest weather in the weeks after Labor Day.
In Los Angeles, in Los Angeles, βthe average in August is warmer than 0.3 degrees in September,β said meteorologist Devin Black, who is also a meteorologist at the institution. βIn October, you got off the car. β
Cold temperatures in Southern California are expected to drop over the weekend and may increase over the weekend.
“The temperature will be very cool,” Black said. “The highs may be 15 degrees below average.”
Angelenos can expect thick ocean layers in the area, with drizzling on Tuesday and Wednesday, Black said. Thanks to the high-rise low-voltage system migrating from the Pacific Ocean, the showers can be seen from Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo.
The same phenomenon will cause temperatures to drop across the Bay Area, at 60s highs in parts of San Francisco and hovering in the mid-70s in much of the rest of the region. Sonoma and Napa counties can also see showers, although rainfall is unlikely elsewhere, Rogacheski said.
Due to the warm and humid air, the coastal weather is extremely cool due to the warm and humid air.
This combination reduces a lot of lightning, especially in Northern California near the Oregon and Nevada border.
On September 2, a series of electric storms triggered the TCU’s September lightning compound fire that destroyed nearly 100 structures and burned nearly 14,000 acres.
“The whole sky is illuminated,” said Rich Martin, a public information officer for the California Forestry and Fire Department. “It’s an unusual event of lightning.”
Experts say that even elsewhere in California, these conditions may continue in the far north of the state.
“With the hot temperature and moisture and increased instability, this helps bring lightning,” said Meteorologist: Zahaira Velez.
Still, Bay Area residents who hope to spend the final season beach day on the coast may be lucky Sunday when the weather should be warming up, meteorologists say.
But the probation may be brief.
“We still have the rest of September and October where we can see the temperature of the summer-type,” Rogacheski said. “But now…the forecast is more regional flow, which could mean more status quo.”