This Weather Report Sponsored:
| Today | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday | Monday |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clear 59°/41° | Clear 64°/37° | Clear 63°/39° | Clear 52°/34° | Clear 46°/30° | Clear 48°/28° |
Current Radar Image Satellite Visible Image
Satellite Water Vapor Image Satellite IR Image
The following forecast is brought to you by SoCalWeather.net
Detailed Forecast
Today, February 21st:
Look for a beautiful day today with warming temperatures as a ridge of
high pressure begins to build over the area. Highs may actually creep to
above normal levels today for the first time in about 10 days with highs
in the upper 40s and 50s across the RIM and into Big Bear. It will be a
chilly night as always with 10s and 20s for lows.
Wednesday through Friday, February 24th:
High pressure really kicks in to gear Wednesday through Friday with some
offshore winds developing. Expect highs t jump to a good 6-12 degrees
above normal with 50s and 60s across the RIM, with maybe some slight
cooling Friday as the ridge begins to break down. Dry air will continue to
keep nights cold in the 10a and 20s.
The Weekend:
Our warm weather will be short lives as a deep and cold trough of low
pressure will begin to drop down the coast and towards our area this
weekend. Look for several degrees of cooling Saturday with developing
onshore winds, becoming strong Saturday evening. Highs Saturday dip back
down into the upper 40s and 50s. Things get a little hazy Sunday into
Monday next week as computer runs have been rending stronger and further
west with the trough of low pressure and its cold front. If this trend
continues which i believe it will, a chance of snowfall may come into play
by sometime Sunday. Of course this is a long ways out so a lot can change,
but cold windy weather looks like almost a certainty with highs Sunday
dipping to well below normal levels in the 30s and 40s.
Long Range:
Cold weather looks to be the story next week and their are signs of a wet
pattern taking hold of our area during the first wee of march spinning
some storms down into our area. Lets hope so as we can use the moisture,
although an interesting side note, areas from about Green Valley lake
eastward to Big bear are actually running above normal when it comes to
snowfall wise this seaosn due to frequent potent storms we saw back in
November and December, as well as our 1 footer last week. If trends
continue, that area may be one of the only ones in California that ends up
with above normal snowfall this season. Oh how big of a difference a few
miles and geography can make.
Mountain Meteorologist
Michael Mojarro
SoCalWeather.net













