Blistering rays should wane today
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Luis Pena
Unseasonably scorching temperatures continued Monday as the 2004 fire
season kicked off earlier than normal.
Newport Beach had a high of 81 degrees, said Noel Isla, forecaster
for the National Weather Service. Sunday’s temperature topped out at
an even higher 86.
Unofficially, Costa Mesa was a little bit hotter than its
neighbor. The Orange County Fairgrounds was a blistering 95 degrees,
said Danielle Antrim, events services and sales assistant.
Plenty of people were escaping the even worse-hit inland by
high-tailing it to the beach.
“It’s better than staying in Upland and frying and not doing
anything,” Darren Paul said.
Brooke Heisinger of Walnut said she decided to get in her truck,
listen to some good music with four of her friends and head off to
the beach.
“It’s really hot and I wanted to get a tan, and I like that I can
go to the beach in May,” said Jennifer Welty, who escaped the hot
weather of San Dimas by laying on the sands of Newport Beach.
The hot temperatures are expected to go down 10 degrees today as a
cooling trend starts, said Stan Wasowski, forecaster for the National
Weather Service. The familiar marine layer of clouds should return
tonight.
While some may be glad they can get a tan in May, others had a
more serious take on the early hot weather, among them Craig
Chastain, division chief for the Newport Beach Fire Department.
Monday marked for him the start of the fire season, a full month
earlier than last year because of the hot, dry weather. The scorching
heat and no rain causes moisture in grasses and shrubs to dry out,
which makes them easier to catch fire and fuel flames, Chastain said.
Because of the danger of wildfires, several areas in and around
Newport Beach will be closed to the public: south of Bonita Canyon
Drive and Sand Canyon Avenue; from the San Diego Freeway to Coast
Highway; and west of Laguna Canyon Road to Buck Gully.
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