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Dry start to San Diego’s rainy season stokes worries about wildfires

Forecasters say that an emerging La Niña in the Pacific could bring drier-than-normal conditions to the region.

Water-dropping helicopters on the scene  of the Garden Fire in Fallbrook earlier this month. (John Gastaldo/For the San Diego Union Tribune)
Water-dropping helicopters on the scene of the Garden Fire in Fallbrook earlier this month. (John Gastaldo/For the San Diego Union Tribune)
UPDATED:

San Diego received only a trace of rain in October, just 0.13 inches in November, and there’s no significant precipitation in sight through Dec. 11.

Is this the prelude to an abnormally dry winter that will bring drought and the prospect of widespread wildfires?

Forecaster’s aren’t sure, but they don’t like the way things are unfolding.

“We’re off to a dry start and as the weeks go by you begin to think uh-oh are we going to have a dry winter,” said Brandt Maxwell, a forecaster at the National Weather Service.

The worry is running a little deeper than usual because the Pacific is giving birth to La Niña, a natural, periodic climate phenomenon that’s associated with dry winters in Southern California.

That’s not a guarantee that things will stay dry locally. Two years ago, San Diego experienced a very wet winter in the presence of La Niña. But the combination of La Niña and Santa Ana winds have sparked horrific fires in the past, which sticks in the mind of forecasters and first responders.

San Diego’s weather is expected to remain calm and dry into Thursday, when weak Santa Ana winds begin popping through inland canyons. The winds might intensify on Friday, forecasters said. At the moment, it does not appear that a red flag fire warning will be issued.

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