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Maisie Russo, of Felton, pushes a wheelbarrow to a home as she helps a resident dig out their driveway and garage after heavy rains swelled the San Lorenzo River, flooding nearby homes in Felton, Calif., on Monday,  Jan. 9, 2023. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group)
Maisie Russo, of Felton, pushes a wheelbarrow to a home as she helps a resident dig out their driveway and garage after heavy rains swelled the San Lorenzo River, flooding nearby homes in Felton, Calif., on Monday, Jan. 9, 2023. (Doug Duran/Bay Area News Group)
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We needed the rain, but now we need to know: When will we get a break?

The powerful train of Pacific storms battering California with record rainfall and major flooding will slow, perhaps even stop, meteorologists say — but not until the second half of January.

In the meantime, expect the weather drama to continue. At least three more storms – ranging from moderate to significant — are predicted over the next seven to 10 days, flooding more landscapes that are already saturated with rainwater.

On the distant horizon is a ridge of high-pressure air that may help block incoming storms — and weaken those that do get through, according to state climatologist Michael Anderson. High-pressure ridges deflect storms north toward British Columbia, away from California.

“After January 19th, the storms die down and we see that high pressure resuming its ‘blocking stance’ of shunting storms back to the north,” said Anderson, although there’s uncertainty in such a long-term forecast.

VIDEO: Rescues on Highway 101, Flooding across the Bay Area

It came as flood waters from Uvas Creek spilled their banks, flooding houses on the 4000 block of Monterey Road, near Highway 101. The occupants of the houses had already left their residences by the time emergency crews arrived, according to Josh Shifrin, a Cal Fire battalion chief in Santa Clara County.

Monday’s storm was the sixth in a series of atmospheric rivers, plumes of tropical moisture that are responsible for much of California’s precipitation.

The seventh storm is expected on Tuesday, with at least two others likely to follow starting Wednesday and again Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Tuesday’s cloudburst is likely to produce brief spiraling bands of strong coastal thunderstorms from the San Francisco Bay Area to Los Angeles County, with brief and intense rain, wind gusts over 60 miles per hour and potential ‘’waterspouts,’’ or weak coastal tornados.

These are the kinds of conditions that set the stage for significant flash flooding and debris flows, especially along the Big Sur coast and the steep Transverse Ranges of Santa Barbara, Ventura, and some other southern California counties.

A part of Christine Lynn Drive in Morgan Hill remains flooded late afternoon as the latest series of atmospheric rivers hit the Bay Area on Monday, Jan. 9, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
A part of Christine Lynn Drive in Morgan Hill remains flooded late afternoon as the latest series of atmospheric rivers hit the Bay Area on Monday, Jan. 9, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

After that, the incoming sequence is likely to be cooler, with accumulations of drier mountain snowfall, according to UC Los Angeles climate scientist Daniel Swain. This is good news because it reduces the amount of runoff coming from the mountains, where California’s frozen reservoir of snowpack accounts for about one-third of the state’s water supply.

While no single storm in January’s nine-storm sequence has proven catastrophic, the relentless pattern has left little time for drainage, recovery and drying out.

Flooding concerns will likely persist all week, although they do not appear as threatening as Monday’s and Tuesday’s events, said Swain.

Then “we will start to get a break,” he said. “It will give the rivers in Northern California and in central California a chance to come down.”

“We still do have significant events to get through between now and then,” he added, “but there is some ‘cool down’ of this active pattern on the horizon.”

The steady downpours are unsettling to Californians in part because we’ve become accustomed to dry conditions, say climate scientists. Over the past decade, our winters haven’t felt much like winter.

The late 1990s were the last times that we saw a sustained wet period and regionally devastating events, with many storm cycles like the current one, said Swain.

In an aerial view, damage is visible on the Capitola Wharf following a powerful winter storm on January 06, 2023 in Capitola, California. A powerful storm pounded the West Coast this weeks that uprooted trees and cut power for tens of thousands on the heels of record rainfall over the weekend. Another powerful storm is set to hit Northern California over the weekend and is expected to bring flooding rains. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
In an aerial view, damage is visible on the Capitola Wharf following a powerful winter storm on January 06, 2023 in Capitola, California. A powerful storm pounded the West Coast this weeks that uprooted trees and cut power for tens of thousands on the heels of record rainfall over the weekend. Another powerful storm is set to hit Northern California over the weekend and is expected to bring flooding rains. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) 

Those storms were associated with strong El Niño events. But, interestingly, El Niño — when ocean waters warm, often causing wet winters to California — isn’t behind the current pattern. We are in our third year of La Niña — and it is weakening, exerting a waning influence..

“We really can’t attribute this current cycle either to La Niña or El Niño, because neither of them are particularly strong right now,” said Swain.

“So there’s something else going on this year,” he said. “It could just be random luck, or it could be something that’s a little more traceable that we’ll find out about later. It’s almost impossible to see in the moment.”

Delving back farther into the historical and geophysical record shows that the Golden State is a landscape that has long experienced swings in precipitation.

“California is intrinsically a place that has a lot of variability…with extreme swings between extreme dry and extreme wet conditions,” he said. Climate scientists call that “precipitation whiplash.”

Extraordinary megaflood events are rare. The most recent one occurred in 1861-1862, when a multi-week super-soaker storm sequence — dubbed “The Great Flood of 1862” — inundated vast swaths of young California, including a 300-mile long stretch of the Central Valley, large portions of the modern-day Los Angeles metro area, and virtually every narrow river valley throughout the state, according to Swain.

That storm started on Christmas Eve — and continued until early February.

When UC Berkeley geologist B. Lynn Ingram looked back even further in time into the historic record  —  using sediment cores from flood plains, bays or the ocean coasts  —  she found thick flood layers produced by other big storms, with an 1861-type flood, or larger, occurring about every 200 years.

A car is submerged in floodwater after heavy rain moved through the area on January 09, 2023 in Windsor, California. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
A car is submerged in floodwater after heavy rain moved through the area on January 09, 2023 in Windsor, California. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) 

With climate change, California will face more profound floods, according to models. It will experience overall drying, but also larger and more frequent atmospheric river storms fueled by increasing evaporation in the tropics.

Last year, Swain’s ARkStorm [Atmospheric River 1,000 Storm] scenario modeled the impacts of an 1861-type storm and calculated potential losses of more than $700 billion.

“We strongly believe that someday — and perhaps sooner rather than later, although we don’t know when — we will see a truly catastrophic storm sequence in California,” said Swain.

“We should get used to storms cycles like this one.”

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