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Tropical System Brings a Messy Forecast to Much of California

September 17, 2025
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Tropical System Brings a Messy Forecast to Much of California
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Moisture from the remnants of Tropical Storm Mario is bringing a risk of thunderstorms, heavy rain, flooding and strong winds across the Southwestern United States this week, forecasters warned.

The weather pattern could also bring dry lightning across Northern California, heightening the risk of wildfires at a time of year when the vegetation is especially flammable after drying out over the summer.

Here are the key things to know:

  • Because of the complex meteorological setup, much of the forecast remained uncertain on Wednesday. Pinning down exactly where thunderstorms will occur and how severe they will be is one of the most difficult things for meteorologists to do.

  • Heavy rain is unusual in Southern California at this time of year, and forecasters said anywhere from 0.1 inch to over 2 inches could fall through Friday. The heaviest rain is likely to be on Thursday.

  • Thunderstorms are more likely to occur in Southern California than Northern California. In the south, the storms are likely to be wet, while there’s a risk for dry lightning in Central and Northern California.

  • Muggy weather is expected across all of California. “This air is very juicy,” said Ryan Kittell, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s office in Los Angeles.

“This is a tough forecast,” said Brent Wachter, a fire weather meteorologist with the U.S. Forest Service in Redding, Calif. “There are things involved that the models are not resolving as well.”

The moisture is a result of Tropical Storm Mario, which formed last Friday, deteriorated on Saturday, and reformed on Sunday before deteriorating again on Tuesday evening. Tropical storms in the eastern Pacific typically head west away from land, but occasionally they or their remnants send moisture to the Southwest or Hawaii, as when Tropical Storm Hilary brought devastating flooding to California in 2023.

On Wednesday morning, moisture moved into coastal Central California and thunderstorms were reported off the coast and over San Luis Obispo County.

The moisture is expected to expand across the Southwest through Friday, bringing a chance of rain and thunderstorms in Arizona and New Mexico, where rain is not unusual in the summer.

But Southern California, where storm activity is less typical this time of year, will also see a chance of thunderstorms and rain. The highest chance of storm activity and heavy rain there is Wednesday night into Thursday.

Meteorologists said the heaviest rain in Southern California is likely to occur on Thursday and estimated that totals from Wednesday to Friday could range from 0.1 inch to over 2 inches, with higher totals possible in the coastal mountains. Mr. Kittell said some projections showed Los Angeles International Airport receiving very little rain, while others had over 2 inches. “The most likely outcome is around a half an inch,” he said.

Flood watches warned that isolated instances of excessive rainfall could lead to flooding across a large portion of Southern and Central California from Wednesday night into Thursday night.

Rainfall is also expected across the Sierra Nevada Range with 0.25 inch to 1 inch possible in the Tahoe Basin and north and higher amounts, up to 2 inches, likely in the southern Sierra.

Isolated instances of flash flooding and debris flows over burn scars from wildfires are possible, but meteorologists said they couldn’t identify exactly where these hazards are most likely to occur.

“There’s a lot that could happen and there’s a lot that could not happen at all,” Mr. Kittell said.

In the north, dry lightning could ignite wildfires.

Thunderstorms are also expected in Northern California on Thursday and Friday, with dry lightning — strikes that occur without rain — more likely on Thursday. By Thursday night into Friday, some additional moisture may move into the region and bring a chance for scattered light rain.

“Northern California looks to stay pretty dry with this one,” said Jennifer Tate, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center. “A lot of the moisture appears to be south of the Bay Area.”

California gets relatively little lightning compared with states in the Midwest and along the Gulf Coast, where thunderstorms commonly form in hot, humid weather. The state’s vegetation dries out all summer long, and even a single strike could ignite into a wildfire.

In Northern California, Mr. Wachter said the best chance for dry lightning was likely in the coastal ranges, from the Bay Area to the California-Oregon border, though lightning could occur anywhere in the region and questions still remained around how much dry lighting was likely. .

“It could be a minimal amount of strikes, with 100 or less, or it could go up to as many as several thousand,” Mr. Wachter said.

More tropical moisture could bring an additional chance of thunderstorm and rain to the Southwest including California as early as Sunday.

Amy Graff is a Times reporter covering weather, wildfires and earthquakes.

The post Tropical System Brings a Messy Forecast to Much of California appeared first on New York Times.

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