Weather Warning: Tornado and Severe Thunderstorm Watch for Inland Southern California

Weather Warning Tornado and Severe Thunderstorm Watch for Inland Southern California

A Tornado Watch and a Severe Thunderstorm Watch have been issued for the following zones by the Southern California Weather Force:

The following areas are under tornado watch: Banning, Perris, Hemet, and Lake Elsinore, which is known as the Elsinore Convergence Zone.

San Diego, Riverside, San Bernardino, and the Los Angeles Mountains are among the areas that have been issued a Severe Thunderstorm Watch. High Desert Metro, Antelope Valley, Morongo Basin, etc. Going over Cajon Pass…

The discussion will center on the upper divergence, also known as lift, that exists within the high-pressure ridge. Because of the Line Fire, this is already causing storms to form around the San Bernardino Mountain. But things will just become worse as the day progresses. Debris clouds won’t cause instability if you go from west to east at 30,000 feet. From 1 to 3 in the afternoon, according to my calculations, the Elsinore Convergence Zone will relight. Tornadoes, flooding, and severe winds are all on the horizon. The Southern California Weather Force is set to perform live at the In N Out in Menifee at 1 pm.

Weather Warning Tornado and Severe Thunderstorm Watch for Inland Southern California (1)

The Antelope Valley is within the range of this flow and divergence, according to the extent. Unfortunately, the Severe Thunderstorm Watch applies to the area between Hesperia Metro and Victor Valley because it will be directly in the path of the storm.

Yes, that is all.

According to the Southern California Weather Force, there is a Raiden Storm.

SEE MORE – 

Northern California’s Top 6 Cities to Live in for Your Next Big Move

An MGM consults as a meteorologist for more than 50 businesses in a wide variety of industries, including energy, agriculture, aviation, marine, leisure, and many more. He was largely self-taught before getting his meteorology certifications from Penn State (MET101, 241, 341, and 361) and Mississippi State (broadcast meteorology), and he learned almost nothing new from his formal education.

If you want to wager on accuracy in those tasks, you need to know both short- and long-range. With over 25 years of experience, he out-forecasts all other weather services with lead time and precision, prompting envy and ridicule.

His expertise covers a wide range of topics, including Western USA, tornadoes, floods, hurricanes, high winds, fire behavior, snow and blizzards, short-range, long-range, seasonal, and decisions involving life-threatening situations.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *