From May through October, only 9 percent of the year's average rain fell in Los Angeles. “We probably won’t see a lot of rainfall, but temperatures will stay about the same.”Get up to speed with our Essential California newsletter, sent six days a week. Thus, mainly the pavement was wet.Numerous temperature records will be broken today, both warm minimums as well as warm maximums.Sorry, the location you searched for was not found. In May, that monthly average was a mere 0.26 inches of rain as the dry season started to set in.

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So you would have concluded that it rained last night. This meant that the pavement was cooler than the dew point, so dew formed. Temperatures overnight were near record levels and the dew point was only about 5 degrees cooler. Newsom hopes the Omaha investor will support demolishing four hydroelectric dams owned by a Berkshire Hathaway subsidiary along the Oregon-California border to save dwindling salmon populations.On the same day California broke a new daily record for COVID-19 deaths, a teenager in the Central Valley has died of causes related to the disease, becoming the first such juvenile death in California.Sign up for the latest news, best stories and what they mean for you, plus answers to your questions. She joined Times Community News in Orange County in 2013 where she covered education, Newport Beach city hall, crime and courts. However, if you had a rain gage, you would have seen that it was bone dry. Pedestrians cross 1st Street in Boyle Heights as clouds obscure the Los Angeles skyline on Wednesday.A pedestrian walks along 1st Street in Boyle Heights.A street vendor sells umbrellas along Figueroa Street in downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday.People walk outside the rain-stained Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown L.A.Undeterred by rain visitors cover up at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles.A couple take cover at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles.A view of Los Angeles skyline shrouded in fog and rain clouds.A couple has the Huntington Beach pier all to themselves amid rain showers and cool temperatures Wednesday.Flor Armada’s spirits aren’t dampened by the rain during her morning run on Reseda Boulevard in Tarzana.A jackknifed big rig on the 101 Freeway in Woodland Hills had traffic backed up for miles Wednesday morning.A pedestrian with umbrella crosses Palm Avenue in Huntington Beach.Erika Ginter of Portland, Ore., is silhouetted by stormy skies approaching the Venice Pier.Downtown L.A. received at least 1.24 inches Wednesday, breaking the record for that date of 0.88 inches, set in 1884. Photo courtesy of Delia Thornton. A cold rain storm that pummeled Los Angeles this week dumped more than 3 inches of rain on some parts of LA and shattered a record in Downtown Los Angeles. However, if you had a rain gage, you would have seen that it was bone dry.