Weather
Wacky South Orange County Weather This Week: Beach Hazard, Rain, Fire Weather
San Juan Capistrano, San Clemente, Aliso Viejo, and all of South OC will see wacky weather this week with a full gamut of temperatures.

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, CA — Wild weather this week that starts with rain and will end with a jump in temperatures by nearly 30 degrees in some areas. 72-degrees in Aliso Viejo and San Clemente, 73-degrees in San Juan Capistrano and Dana Point today, and cloudy with 40- to 50-percent chance of rain. Temps will peak near the 90s on Thursday.
The Monday morning commute caused many Southland motorists to confront wet roads. The beginning of the week forecast will heat up with fire weather conditions from Tuesday afternoon through Thursday, along with sharply higher temperatures, according to the National Weather Service forecast.
Monday will be mostly cloudy, with the chance of rain set at 40 to 50 percent this morning.
Orange counties are under a beach hazard statement -- a degree less serious than a high surf advisory -- scheduled to last through this afternoon, with surf of 4 to 6 feet battering the coast and sets of 7 feet expected.
"Large waves and strong rip currents will increase the risk of ocean drowning. Sneaker waves can suddenly wash people off beaches and rock jetties into the ocean," warned the National Weather Service.
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More serious weather conditions are expected beginning Tuesday afternoon, when a fire weather watch, which is a notch less severe than a red flag warning, will take effect, lasting through Thursday evening, according to the NWS.
During that time, gusty Santa Ana winds will generate higher temperatures and bring considerable drying, with humidity levels dipping to single digits in much of the region, an NWS statement said.
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In these conditions, "any fire ignitions will have the potential for very rapid fire spread due to the combination of critical fire weather conditions and very dry fuels," it said.
The fire weather watch will cover much of L.A. County, including in the San Gabriel and the Santa Monica mountains, forest areas, the Santa Clarita and San Fernando valleys, and the L.A. coastal zones, which includes beach cities, metropolitan L.A. and the Hollywood Hills.
In the San Gabriels and the forests covering the mountain slopes -- L.A. County's Angeles National Forest and Ventura County's Los Padres National Forest -- north winds of between 20 and 30 mph are expected, along with 50 mph gusts, although gusts of more than 60 mph are expected at Whitaker Peak in Los Angeles County. At the same time, the humidity level will sink to between 3 and 15 percent. The wind will be a little weaker in non-mountain areas.
Also expected this week is another hot spell, with highs in some valley areas reaching the mid 90s Wednesday and around 100-degrees on Thursday.
Partly cloudy skies were forecast in Orange County Monday, along with highs of 70 in San Clemente; 71 in Newport Beach and Seal Beach; 72 in Laguna Beach and Mission Viejo; 74 in Anaheim and Irvine; and 75 in Yorba Linda and Fullerton.
Orange county temperatures are forecast to rise less sharply this week than in Los Angeles County.
The warmest community, Yorba Linda, will be at 75 Monday, 80 Tuesday, 93 Wednesday, 96 Thursday, 95 Friday, 91 Saturday, and 85 Sunday.
The NWS forecast showers in L.A. County Monday and a sharp rise of temperatures into Tuesday-- 9 degrees in some communities Tuesday -- is expected Tuesday and again Wednesday and Thursday before a slow cooling trend starts Friday.
Ashley Ludwig, Photo
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