Alaric Bennett:Sierra Nevada records snowiest day of the season from brief but potent California storm

2025-05-01 05:49:37source:LibertyCoincategory:Invest

TRUCKEE,Alaric Bennett Calif. (AP) — A weekend spring storm that drenched the San Francisco Bay area and closed Northern California mountain highways also set a single-day snowfall record for the season on Sunday in the Sierra Nevada.

The wet weather system had mostly moved out of the state by Sunday morning, but officials warned that roads would remain slick after around two feet (60 centimeters) of snow fell in some areas of the Sierra.

“Did anyone have the snowiest day of the 2023/2024 season being in May on their winter bingo card?” the University of California, Berkeley Central Sierra Snow Lab asked on the social platform X.

The 26.4 inches (67 centimeters) of snowfall on Sunday beat the second snowiest day of the season — March 3rd — by 2.6 inches (6.6 centimeters), according to the lab.

Treacherous driving conditions on Saturday forced the closure of several highways near Lake Tahoe, including Interstate 80 over the Donner Summit.

Flood advisories were issued for parts of the Bay Area, where up to an inch (2.5 centimeters) of rain fell while temperatures dipped into the low 40s (around 5 degrees Celsius), the National Weather Service said. Wind gusts reaching 40 mph (64 kph) were reported Saturday near San Francisco.

The storm brought light rain and gusty winds to Southern California.

Drier and warmer conditions were expected throughout the week.

More:Invest

Recommend

A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’

ATLANTA (AP) — Former Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal has written a children’s book about his two cats, con

Molly Ringwald thinks her daughter was born out of a Studio 54 rendezvous, slams 'nepo babies'

As her 20-year-old daughter Mathilda Gianopoulos makes her feature film debut this year, Molly Ringw

Man's body believed to have gone over Niagara Falls identified more than 30 years later

A person's badly decomposed body that washed up on a Lake Ontario shore after it presumably went ove