Weather
Southland Weather Heats up in Los Angeles County, Perfect Coastal Temps Expected
The weather in Arcadia, Claremont, Laverne, Glendora, Diamond Bar, Walnut and Baldwin Park will heat up today. Gorgeous at the coast.

Temperatures will again climb into triple-digit territory in some inland valleys today as the Southland remains in the grips of a heat wave.
"Very hot weather is expected across the mountains and interior areas of southwest California through Thursday, with the potential for heat-related (health) impacts,'' said a National Weather Service statement.
Highs in the low 100s were expected in the San Fernando, Santa Clarita and Antelope valleys today while the San Gabriel Valley and the San Gabriel Mountains were expected to experience temperatures in the high 90s.
Find out what's happening in Arcadiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
READ: High Temperatures Lead to 2nd Degree Burns on Toddler's Feet--What Parents Need to Know
The NWS forecast a mix of sunny and partly cloudy skies in Los Angeles County today and high temperatures of 91 in Arcadia; 92 in Baldwin Park and Walnut; 93 in Diamond Bar, Glendora and LaVerne; 94 in Claremont. The heat of the day will peak at 4 p.m.
Find out what's happening in Arcadiafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Highs of 75 in Avalon; 76 at LAX; 84 in Long Beach; 86 in downtown L.A.; 96 in San Gabriel; 97 in Pasadena; 98 on Mount Wilson; 100 in Woodland Hills; 101 in Saugus; and 106 in Palmdale and
Lancaster.
Highs were expected to drop around 5 degrees Thursday and remain in the 100s only in the Antelope Valley, then another few degrees on Friday. Antelope Valley highs will revert to the 90s only on Saturday.
Along the L.A. County coast, high surf and strong rip currents were forecast to continue through late Friday. A beach hazards statement -- one notch below a high surf advisory -- will go into effect this afternoon and
expire Friday night. In Orange County, a beach hazard statement will take effect at noon and also expire Friday night.
NWS forecasters said surf of 3 to 5 feet will pound the shore today and increase to between 4 and 6 feet Thursday as a result of a long-period swell in the Pacific Ocean. Beach goers were warned to guard against sneaker waves capable of sweeping them out to sea.
WATCH: Jet Ski Accident -- Rescue at Newport Beach's Wedge
Swimmers were urged never to swim alone, to remain near lifeguard towers, and, if snagged by a rip current, to swim parallel to shore until able to break free.
READ: ABC's of Drowning Prevention - Save Lives this Holiday Weekend
Also in effect was a small craft advisory, which serves to warn the operators of small vessels of hazardous conditions. It will expire at 3 a.m. Thursday.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.