Weather

Pass Area Rainfall Totals, Lightning Strikes Recorded Across RivCo

Thunderbolts and lightning to start 2024! Wednesday's rain storm gave way to multiple lightning strikes across Riverside County. See where.

Cloud to ground lightning strikes were recorded in some parts of Riverside County early Wednesday.
Cloud to ground lightning strikes were recorded in some parts of Riverside County early Wednesday. (Photo Credit: Ashley Ludwig)

PASS AREA, CA — A cold weather storm swept into Riverside County Wednesday, leaving rain, hail, and snow in its wake.

The National Weather Service shared its 24-hour rain and snowfall totals. Inland Empire's San Bernardino Mountains saw the most snow, while the foothills and the San Jacinto Mountain towns saw more in the way of hail and thunderstorms, according to reports.

In the San Bernardino Mountains, Snow Valley saw the most snow, with 4 inches at an elevation of 7,100 feet.

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Next in line for snow was Bear Mountain and Snow Summit, which saw 3 to 4 inches of natural snow also at 7,100 feet. Mountain High, with elevations from 6,600 to 8,000 feet, saw an average of 3 inches of snow.

Meanwhile, Big Bear Lake, Wrightwood, and Idyllwild saw between 1 and 2 inches of snow due to this storm. Those mountains average between 6,500 and 5,500 feet in elevation.

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Southwest Riverside County towns of Lake Elsinore, Murrieta, and Temecula saw in the neighborhood of .25 inches of rain in the one-day period. Areas north, such as Beaumont and Banning, received just under .75 inches of rain, according to the National Weather Service. Cherry Valley, Redlands, Yucaipa and the like saw extreme weather from the storm, meteorologists say.

Lightning struck across Mount San Jacinto, bringing with it hail in a dramatic early morning display.

Residents from Banning, Cabazon, and Hemet to the mountain areas of Idyllwild and Pine Cove had most of those verified lightning strikes in the Wednesday storm.

Cherry Valley residents reported seeing hail and lightning, as did those from Redlands to Yucaipa, with more than a few bolts hitting from clouds to ground. In the image below, provided by the National Weather Service, the purple bolts were in the sky, while the yellow bolts were verified lightning strikes.

Elsewhere in the Coachella Valley, the deserts merely saw trace amounts of rain due to the most recent storm, according to the NWS.


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