SoCal Folks - How are you preparing for the great Tropical Storm of 2023? | Page 2 | The Boneyard

SoCal Folks - How are you preparing for the great Tropical Storm of 2023?

Moved my daughter in to her apartment @ CSU-Long Beach over the weekend. Initially LBC was considered a prime storm target, the heavy stuff shifted eastward toward Vegas so we only experienced heavy rain, and that didn't begin until Sunday. We drove back to the Bay just before things began to get nasty for SoCal. Another fun fact we received cell notification of an 5.1 earthquake (epicenter somewhere in Ventura Cty) as we were on I-5 N just outside of Grapevine. Someone mentioned the Lancaster/Palmdale exit off of I-5. We pulled off of that exit around 1:30 or so for gas. Blessed to have moved my daughter in and set her up and to have made it home safely.
 
Last edited:
Phoenix has a monsoon season?
Yup...it's pretty wild...visiting a friend years ago...torrential downpour for 15-30 min...golf course behind his house was under 4 ft of water....ground is clay so nothing absorbs...just runs off
 
This might be a good time to remind everyone that UConn is the safest place in the country. We should make it part of our recruiting.
 
My currwnt project is south of SD on the Bay. We prepped as best we could and had moderate winds along with 2" of rain. No damage to the tower cranes and some moderately muddied areas onsite. All and all a normal type storm, mainly because the storm traveled east of the SD area.
 
My currwnt project is south of SD on the Bay. We prepped as best we could and had moderate winds along with 2" of rain. No damage to the tower cranes and some moderately muddied areas onsite. All and all a normal type storm, mainly because the storm traveled east of the SD area.
Glad all is ok...but just curious (other than the time of year) how this storm is any different than a winter storm that dumps 3-6 ft of snow in Mammoth...those storms have a ton of moisture
 
Glad all is ok...but just curious (other than the time of year) how this storm is any different than a winter storm that dumps 3-6 ft of snow in Mammoth...those storms have a ton of moisture
I think that most of those storms come in from the northwest (NE Pacific)
 
.-.
Yup...it's pretty wild...visiting a friend years ago...torrential downpour for 15-30 min...golf course behind his house was under 4 ft of water....ground is clay so nothing absorbs...just runs off
That was probably just a one off occurrence since Phoenix gets an annual average of 8 inches of rain and the wettest month is March with just over an inch. That's like one day of half way decent rain around here.

 

Forum statistics

Threads
168,259
Messages
4,560,187
Members
10,448
Latest member
MillerLitEd


Top Bottom