rain la / redondo beach
Rain in LA / Redondo Beach - Photo courtesy of OnScene

Dry weather is expected to move into Southern California Tuesday after a series of storms drenched the area and created slippery conditions on freeways.

A dense fog advisory has been issued for parts of the San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys until 9 a.m. Tuesday.

Visibility is a quarter mile or less in the dense fog areas in Northridge, Woodland Hills, Van Nuys, Chatsworth, Burbank, Universal City, Glendale, Sunland, La Canada Flintridge, East Los Angeles, El Monte, Pasadena, Pomona and San Gabriel.

The NWS recommends to reduce speed when driving, use headlights and leave plenty of distance for cars sharing roads and freeways in dense fog areas.

A dense fog advisory is also in effect for Los Angeles County coastal areas, and LAX, Long Beach, Redondo Beach, Santa Monica, Torrance, Beverly Hills, Compton, Culver City, Downey, Hollywood and Norwalk.

Rain doused the Southland Monday as strongest in a series of storms moved across the region, leading to flooding on some freeways that left many commuters stuck in a worse-than-usual morning drive.

The latest burst of rain moved more quickly through the area than anticipated Monday night, but it still packed a punch, with reports of heavy downpours that flooded parts of some freeways around the area, including on the San Diego (405) Freeway in the Carson area and on the Harbor (110) Freeway in the San Pedro area.

The National Weather Service did not issue any flood warnings or advisories in Los Angeles County, but the county Office of Emergency Management issued an evacuation warning for residents in the Topanga Canyon area, affecting the area along Santa Maria Road north of Topanga Canyon Boulevard. The warning took effect at 9 p.m. Sunday and will remain in force until 6 a.m. Tuesday.

The warning urged residents to prepare for possible evacuations.

“Gather loved ones, pets and supplies,” the warning stated. “Monitor local weather, news and alertla.org for more information.”

Forecasters said that scattered showers, “some briefly heavy,” would continue into early evening hours Tuesday.

“Still expecting scattered showers in all areas through this evening with an isolated thunderstorm possible,” according to the NWS. “Individual cells are moving quite rapidly so while heavy rain is still possible it shouldn’t linger over any one area for very long. Showers will be tapering off overnight, except lingering over the northern mountains in the Grapevine area well into Tuesday as winds veer more to the northwest. Those winds will be gusty at times up to 45 mph.”

A wind advisory had been issued for parts of Los Angeles County, with particularly strong gusts initially anticipated in the mountains and Antelope Valley foothills. But the NWS canceled the advisory early Monday morning, with forecasters saying the winds were expected to remain below 35 mph in most areas.

Over the 24 hour period that ended at 4 p.m. Monday, Culver City received an inch of rain, according to the NWS, while downtown received 1.2 inches, and Redondo Beach was hit with 1.4 inches. At UCLA, 1.2 inches fell. Roughly 1.5 inches were recorded in San Gabriel, but most valley areas had received less than an inch.

The rain affected some Southland amusement parks. Six Flags Magic Mountain was closed Saturday and remained closed Sunday and Monday, with tickets purchased for those days honored through Dec. 29.

Knott’s Berry Farm announced the park closed early at 6 p.m. Saturday due to inclement weather. Unused tickets purchased will be valid until Feb. 25.

Due to the rainfall, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health advised beach users to avoid all water contact, especially near discharging storm drains, creeks and rivers due to potentially higher bacteria levels in those areas.

The advisory will be in effect until at least 11 a.m. Tuesday.

The rain is expected to largely exit the region by Tuesday, when temperatures are also expected to begin warming. Additional warming is expected by next weekend.

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