San Diego County will experience some fog and likely rain throughout the region today and tomorrow.
The National Weather Service said coastal areas will experience mostly cloudy mornings Wednesday and Thursday with patches of fog, a chance of showers and a slight chance of thunderstorms. There will be minimum temperatures of 56 to 62 degrees overnight with light winds on Wednesday.
“Today we have a kind of unusual pattern with isolated showers and thunderstorms,” said Miguel Miller, a local meteorologist.
A tweet from the National Weather Service today read: “San Diego International Airport just tied its precipitation record for the day at 0.01” (inch) set in 1918, and tied for 1972! , that record could be broken ….. “
The rest of the week through Saturday, San Diegans will see “pretty typical late June weather,” Miller said. On Sunday, Monday and Tuesday there will be a warming trend that will be felt in most areas of the interior.
By contrast, on Wednesday there will be highs of 102-107 degrees in desert regions, with winds increasing to 15 miles per hour and gusts reaching 25 miles per hour in the afternoon. Thursday will be mostly sunny with additional highs of 104 to 109 degrees in the desert.
The mountainous region has a 50 percent chance of rain, with winds reaching 15 to 25 miles per hour on Wednesday. Temperatures will reach between 70 and 80 degrees on Thursday, with gusts of meteorological winds of about 50 kilometers per hour in the afternoon.
The swell will span a range of 3 to 4 feet in most areas from Wednesday through Sunday. Surfline meteorologists say the best swell will come in the next seven days, Friday through Sunday.
On Thursday, the county will experience a full moon.
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