High Wind — Orange County Coastal, California
2023-02-21 to 2023-02-22 · Orange County Coastal, California
Event narrative
Anomalously strong winds impacted the Orange County coastline from the late evening hours on February 21 through the early morning on February 22.The following are the strongest wind reports from the coast:
Mesonet station SE024 Laguna Beach reported a peak wind gust of 65 mph.
San Clemente 3 reported a peak wind gust of 59 mph.
Huntington Beach Pier reported a peak wind gust of 57 mph.
Newport Pier reported a peak wind gust of 57 mph.
Huntington Beach reported a peak wind gust of 50 mph.
A trained spotter reported tree damage as well as shingles blown off of a structure.
Wider weather episode
An intense period of heavy snow and blizzard conditions, damaging winds, low-elevation snow and widespread flooding rainfall plagued Southern California February 21-27.
Very strong, and locally damaging, winds developed in the evening on February 21 and continued through February 22, especially impacting the coast and the mountains. Numerous trees were uprooted as a result of the strong winds. Temperatures plummeted on February 22 leading to low-elevation snow and cold-core thunderstorms.
The second, and highly impactful, next wave of the storm system enveloped Southern California starting on February 23. This is the period of heaviest snowfall, and a first-ever Blizzard Warning issued by NWS San Diego was in effect for the San Bernardino County Mountains. Heavy snowfall persisted through early morning on February 26, resulting in FEET of snowfall in the mountains, with many locations in the San Bernardino County Mountains seeing over 50 of snowfall. This resulted in hard closures of many highways in the San Bernardino County Mountains and left people trapped in their homes. Snow levels once again fell on February 25, with snow levels as low as 1000-2000 feet in the Inland Empire and inland Orange County. Widespread heavy thunderstorms occurred leading to local flooding, especially across San Diego County, inland Orange County and portions of the Inland Empire, as well as produced pea size hail.
The impacts of this system, especially in San Bernardino County, would be further exacerbated by an additional significant storm system that would hit only days later, leading to additional FEET of snow.
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1078920. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.