'Pineapple Express' storm douses
California with rain, snow
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[February 13, 2019]
By Andrew Hay
(Reuters) - A Pacific storm system known as
the "Pineapple Express" threatened to dump up to 8 inches of rain and 8
feet of snow on areas of California, raising risks of flooding and
mudslides, meteorologists said on Wednesday.
"The (Pineapple) Express is no joke," said Bob Oravec, meteorologist
with the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center in College
Park, Maryland of the strongest weather system of the season.
The weather system, also known as an atmospheric river, gets its name
from the flow of moisture that periodically heads east from waters
adjacent to the Hawaiian Islands to soak the U.S. West Coast. It
blanketed parts of Hawaii with snow over the weekend and is expected to
drench California.
The San Francisco Bay area could be hit by flash flooding and falling
trees as saturated ground gets up to 8 inches more rain and strong winds
blow in, the weather service said.
"We're talking 3 to 5 inches of rain in San Francisco and coastal areas
in just the next 24 hours, and more on into Friday," Oravec said.
To the northeast in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, passes could see
between 80 and 100 inches (approximately 7 to 8 feet) of snow through
Friday.
Valley areas face flood watches over fears the relatively warm Pineapple
Express system could initially drench areas as high as Lake Tahoe with
rain, melting snow and swelling rivers.
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Snow capped mountains are seen behind the downtown Los Angeles
skyline, California, U.S., February 12, 2019. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
WILDFIRE BURN AREAS
The Central and Southern California coast can expect flash flooding
and possible mudslides near recent wildfire burn areas, the NWS
reported.
Oravec said that the problem is not just the amount of rain, but the
fact that it will hit in a short amount of time.
"It's going to be heavy and fast," he said. "Debris flows and mud
slides are a risk in any area scorched by the wildfires. There's
little to no vegetation to slow that water down."
Up to 2 inches of rain was expected in the Los Angeles area between
Tuesday evening and Thursday morning, the weather service said.
A string of winter storms has swelled snowpack in California to
above-average levels, delighting farmers in need of water and skiers
in search of powder.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay, additional reporting by Rich McKay,
editing by Louise Heavens)
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