Rain showers are expected throughout San Diego County Tuesday and thunderstorms are possible this evening in coastal and inland valley areas.
A slow-moving Pacific storm system is behind the heavy rainfall, which is expected to continue until Wednesday afternoon and be followed by lighter rainfall through Saturday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
The heaviest showers are expected Tuesday morning, forecasters said.
Rainfall totals through Saturday afternoon are expected to reach 1.5 inches in coastal and inland valley areas, while up to 3.5 inches are expected in the mountains and around 1 inch is expected in the deserts.
#SoCal radar loop as of 3AM PDT. Widespread light to moderate rain continues. Rainfall amounts are averaging one tenth to one quarter inch per hour. Snow is occurring only at the highest elevations, mainly above 8000 feet. #cawx pic.twitter.com/kTk1Dr0XPG
— NWS San Diego (@NWSSanDiego) March 10, 2020
Snow levels won't drop below 7,000 feet for the duration of the storm, meaning no snow is expected in the county.
There will also be a chance of thunderstorms in the mountains and deserts on Thursday afternoon, forecasters said.
High temperatures Tuesday could reach 70 degrees near the coast, 68 in the western valleys, 59 in the mountains and 65 in the deserts.
The storm system is expected to move east out of the region by Saturday afternoon, then another storm system will bring a chance of light rain from Saturday night through Monday night, forecasters said.