With our free press under threat and federal funding for public media gone, your support matters more than ever. Help keep the LAist newsroom strong, become a monthly member or increase your support today.
Before And After: Satellite Images Show Southern California's Massive Snowfall From Space
Record amounts of snowfall fell across the state this weekend, especially over here in Southern California where snow reached elevations as low as 1,000 feet in the San Gabriel Mountains.
"We had some snow totals as high as 93 inches at Mountain High," said Dave Bruno, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard. "A lot of places above 6,000 feet had 3 to 6 feet of snow. Again, this is fairly unusual to get such high snow amounts down here."
So what exactly does that unusual amount of snow look like — from space?
A satellite's perspective
NASA's Earth Observatory released images Monday taken from a satellite showing conditions in Southern California on Feb. 10 and again on Feb 26.
And well...
The aftermath
While some have delighted in so much snow, it hasn't all been fun.
Lake Arrowhead saw more than 7 feet of snow, stranding residents and visitors, including schoolchildren from Irvine away at camp.
"We've had enough snowfall that even finding street markers has been difficult in some of the communities," said Eric Sherwin with San Bernardino County Fire Dept.
Sherwin said calls for help have been in the dozens and with firetrucks and ambulances largely inoperable in the snow, authorities have been responding in snowcats.
What skiers should know
The snow was so heavy that roads to the resorts remained closed Monday.
More than 6 feet of snow has already fallen at Big Bear Mountain, roughly 75% of what the ski resort receives in a full season.
Josh Kanton, a spokesperson for Big Bear Mountain Resorts, said once skiers and riders return, they should watch out for a dangerous phenomenon called tree wells — cavities around the base of a tree hidden under the loosely packed snow.
"Tree wells can also be a factor when we have this much snow, which is the areas directly around any sort of trees, they get deeper snowpack," he said. Kanton said in order to stay safe it's important to stay inside the ski boundary area and to ski with a friend.
-
A new study finds promising early results from a program that tries to find and assist those most at risk of becoming unhoused.
-
The L.A. Fire Department said the tunnel workers had been isolated by a "collapse" in an industrial tunnel for a wastewater treatment facility in the Harbor-area neighborhood of Wilmington.
-
An analysis of videos capturing ICE enforcement across L.A.
-
The program started last year. It's one of the only treatment options available for unhoused Angelenos addicted to stimulants, including methamphetamine, experts say.
-
People living in the West L.A. community requested the cameras because of recent home burglaries and calls for more safety measures.
-
Local officials say the display was an overreach by the federal government.