Rain and wind make for soggy shoppers
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Marisa O’Neil
Cold, rainy weather hit Southern California for the second weekend in
a row, making holiday shopping a potentially soggy experience.
Grey skies started dropping drizzly rain Saturday afternoon and
temperatures hovered in the mid-50s.
The rain was expected to continue overnight and drop one-quarter
to one-half inch of the wet stuff before moving on today, National
Weather Service forecaster Brad Doyle said.
But the inclement weather did little to dampen the holiday spirits
of most shoppers.
Even though the rain sent many folks at the outdoor Orange County
Marketplace scurrying to their cars, most had armfuls of bags to show
for their excursion.
Some, like Long Beach resident Jessica Benman, improvised a way to
stay relatively dry. Her friend, Angela Slack, laughed hysterically
as she watched Benman, pregnant with her third child, fashion a rain
bonnet out of a plastic shopping bag.
“I’m a married woman,” Benman laughed. “I don’t have to impress
nobody.”
The shopping day had started out cold, but the rain caught them
off-guard, Slack said.
“But it was worth it,” she said as she toted her purchases to the
car.
Saturday’s storm dipped in from the northwest, dropping more than
a foot of snow in the Sierra Nevada and delaying thousands of
travelers at the Reno-Tahoe International Airport.
Newport-Mesa will get off easier, but still faces atypically
chilly overnight lows in the 30s and 40s, Doyle said. Highs will make
it up to the upper 50s to mid 60s today and Monday, according to the
National Weather Service.
Winds will be slightly breezy today with some gusts up to 35 miles
per hour, Doyle said. Higher gusts on Monday may blow up to 40 miles
per hour.
It’s the second weekend in a row that cold temperatures have
settled in the area. Last weekend’s storm brought a record low
temperature of 57 degrees to Newport Beach. This storm should be a
little weaker than that one, Doyle said.
Temperatures will start edging up into the mid to upper 60s later
this week, according to the National Weather Service.
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