
"Basically, over the past five days, it has slowed down probably by about 18 hours,"
"And some of the feed has been taken away from it, too."
"It would've been a conveyor belt of storms but that path is farther north and we're going to get only a fraction of it."
"The farther south you go, Murdock said, the less you'll get."
The incoming Bay Area storm has slowed by about 18 hours and lost significant moisture feed from a southern Pacific low. The low-pressure system shifted south, diverting the main moisture corridor farther north and preventing an atmospheric-river–like event. Light rain is expected to begin later Monday in the North Bay and spread across the region overnight into Tuesday, with steady but not heavy precipitation on Tuesday and tapering Wednesday afternoon. Forecast totals vary: roughly 0.75 inch for parts of the East Bay, Peninsula, and Santa Cruz Mountains, about 0.25 inch for San Jose and Santa Clara County. Sierra precipitation and some snowmelt are likely Tuesday–Wednesday.
Read at www.mercurynews.com
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