The biggest storm ever
- Share via
DENNIS McTIGHE
Sorry ‘bout last week.
My dog ate my homework. Wait, I don’t have a dog. Actually I had
cerebral cramps.
This column is dedicated to Roger Vega, who is now in heaven,
looking down on me to see if my spelling and grammar are correct.
Nov. 10, 4:30 p.m. was a first for Southern California.
The Doppler Radar revealed a solid block of deep red over all of
South Central Los Angeles -- that means the tops of the supercells
were in excess of 40,000 feet.
It was the most intense thunderstorm ever recorded anywhere in
California, ever. Winter or summer, I don’t care where, coast,
mountains, deserts, monsoon, El Nino, blah, blah, blah -- the
strongest ever.
It was as strong as a tornado alley supercell in May in Oklahoma.
I mean 5.36 inches in two hours in Compton! That’s an inch more than
we got in the whole season two years ago! Golf ball-size hail that
piled up into 3-foot drifts that were still being shoveled up the day
after!
The gang down at Scripps tabbed it as a 500-year event. This storm
of Wed., Nov. 10 will surely be the heavyweight king for possibly
centuries to come!
Now, in second place -- Dec. 6-7, 1997 (Laguna exclusively)
In third -- March 1, 1983
In fourth -- Aug. 22, 2003 (Joshua Tree)
In fifth -- Sept. 30 -- Oct. 1, 1981
In sixth -- Nov. 8-9, 1967
In seventh -- Aug. 6, 1984 (Julian)
In eighth -- Aug. 4, 1972 (29 Palms)
In ninth -- July 26, 1996 (Laguna exclusively)
Had enough of my data base, walking dot com babble? Me too!
God bless you Roger!
* DENNIS McTIGHE is a Laguna Beach resident. He earned a
bachelor’s in earth sciences from UC San Diego and was a U.S. Air
Force weather forecaster at Hickman Air Force Base, Hawaii.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.