Home
Weather New York
WeatherRadar
RainRadar
TemperatureRadar
WindRadar
LightningRadar
Weather News
Editor's Pick
Discover the app
Weather widget
Contact us
Apps
Career
Home / Editor's Pick /

Storm totals & what's next: Almost 7 ft of snow & SoCal flooding

07:25 PM
February 26, 2023

What's next?
Almost 7 ft of snow & SoCal flooding

Weather is slowly starting to improve across Southern California. Storm totals are impressive. So, let’s review everything that happened overnight and see what’s expected this Sunday and start the week. (hint, hint.. more storms are on the way).

Blizzard warnings continue to be in effect across the Sierra Nevada, and Southern California awaits a series of weaker storms that will continue to bring mountain snow and heavy rains which will keep the flooding risk latent. The risk for active weather increases starting Sunday evening for many across Southern California.

Frazier Park is under snow. I-5 is closed and residents and visitors are stuck on the mountains. Luckily no reports of power outages. © Lynda Sandoval

Over 20,000 customers continue to be without electricity in Los Angeles County.

Southwest California woke up to frost as temperatures dropped close to 32 degrees overnight. Temperatures are forecast to stay above freezing across coast areas for this upcoming week, but the rain will stay put. Highs will not have many variations ranging between 55 and 58 in areas like Santa Monica and very similar to Los Angeles. Low maximum temperatures will come close to records on Sunday afternoon in Oxnard where the record high is 55 (1996) and the forecast is 56 F. In Riverside, the high is forecast to reach 51 coming close to the record of 50 F established in 1937.

Storm totals

Some roads, especially along mountains continue to be closed on Sunday. The rain came hard on Friday and Saturday and the snow has closed many roads which are still in the process of being cleaned.

In the last 5 days, storm totals have been impressive! In Mountain High, at an elevation between 6600 and 8,000 feet, a total of 6.75 feet of snow fell. Bear Mountain summit, 7,100 feet high, a total of 4.75 feet of snow was recorded. Another popular ski destination for many, Big Bear City, recorded between 26 and 38 inches of snow. (12 inches is 1 foot!)

The Inland Empire region near Fontana, Rialto, and Devore picked up more snow than NYC and Philadelphia. For context, Fontana recorded 1 inch of snow, while Devore picked up 2 inches.

Santa Ana registered a new record of 2.25 inches of rain fell from Friday afternoon to Saturday afternoon. During the same time frame, Newport Beach also hit a new record 2 inches of rain and Anaheim hit 2.39 inches beating the old record of 1.17 inches from 2003.

Irene Sans
More on the topic
Weather radar with tornado symbol over Michigan next to photo of a destroyed building with collapsed roof and scattered debris.
Extreme WeatherSaturday, March 7, 2026

Deaths, extensive damage

Tornado in Michigan, severe outbreak continues
Chicago temperature drop
Tuesday, March 31, 2026

From 70s to 40s

Midwest Roller Coaster
The image shows the central Pacific in a computer model. A striking feature is the ocean coloured red, which indicates very warm seawater.
Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Global consequences

El Niño is back
All weather news
This might also interest you
Friday, April 3, 2026

Lasting overnight

Round two for Midwest, Plains severe storms
Saturday, March 28, 2026

Winter to spring

Transition season: What it means for you
Midwest storm threat
Monday, March 30, 2026

Lingers into Tuesday

Upper Midwest severe threat
All articles
Weather & Radar

Weather & Radar is also available on

Google Play StoreApp Store

Company

Contact us Privacy policy Legal info Accessibility statement

Services

Uploader

Socials

instagramfacebookthreadslinkList