Thanks to an atmospheric river known as the Pineapple Express, more
soaking rain and mountain snow is on the way for California, the
epicenter of the nation's most widespread exceptional drought.
Last week, Los Angeles County dams and spreading ground captured 1.8 billion gallons of water, enough to meet the needs of 44,000 people in one year. That's a relative drop in the multi-year drought bucket, but a start.
While
this all sounds like good news, more flooding, rock/mudslides, debris
flows and even damaging winds are possible with this upcoming storm. The
National Weather Service in Monterey, California, said Monday that this
storm is "expected to be one of the strongest storms in terms of wind
and rain intensity" since storms in October 2009 and January 2008.
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