track hillary | California radar maps show storm impacts
CALIFORNIA, USA – The main impacts of Tropical Storm Hillary move into Northern California on Monday, generally consisting of light rain, cloud cover and high humidity.
Tropical Storm Hillary flooded barren parts of Mexico and then ravaged Southern California from the coast to the desert resort of Palm Springs and the mountains inland, forcing rescuers to pull several people from swollen rivers.
Hillary was the first tropical storm to hit Southern California in 84 years and dropped more than half the average year’s worth of rain on some areas, including the desert resort of Palm Springs.
Intermittent rain will continue across Northern California on Monday. As of 9 a.m., downtown Sacramento averaged 0.03 inches of rainfall, which is 150% of the city’s average August rainfall. The tropical moisture brought by Hillary will produce very humid conditions across the region to go along with high temperatures in the upper 80s to low 90s.
Unstable air and abundant moisture will increase the chances of afternoon thunderstorms across the interior of Northern California before the remnants of the storm leave the state by Tuesday.
Dive deeper: California is bracing for more flooding as post-tropical storm Hillary brings more rain
Live Radar: Track the effects of Hillary and the storm
ABC10 meteorologists prepared the following graphics showing the impacts of Tropical Storm Hillary. Watch the live broadcast below.
Storm Resources:
► Climate prediction Details | Verify Hourly forecast And radar Pages
► Get weather alerts on your phone | Download ABC10 Mobile app
► Dig deeper | Stream in-depth weather forecasts On ABC+
► Weather in your email | Register with us Daily newsletter
Live radar
to Just Live radar images, see map from the National Weather Service below.
See also:
Tropical Storm Hillary update: Flooding, rockslides and residual rain as the storm heads north
ABC10: Watch, download, read