Another day under a Kryptonian style red sun. Smoky gloom and ashen haze hung over everything in sight. SoCal was cooked. In the midst of another historic heat wave, Los Angeles County recorded an all time high of 121 degrees in Woodland Hills. The National Weather Service declared it was the hottest temperature ever recorded at an official weather station throughout the greater Los Angeles basin, breaking the previous record of 119 degrees set in July of 2006. For any part of L.A., so close to the coast, to hit 120 degrees was a staggering mark.
Zombie Fires and Oregon Sleeper Cells
Zombie Fires and Oregon Sleeper Cells
Zombie Fires and Oregon Sleeper Cells
Another day under a Kryptonian style red sun. Smoky gloom and ashen haze hung over everything in sight. SoCal was cooked. In the midst of another historic heat wave, Los Angeles County recorded an all time high of 121 degrees in Woodland Hills. The National Weather Service declared it was the hottest temperature ever recorded at an official weather station throughout the greater Los Angeles basin, breaking the previous record of 119 degrees set in July of 2006. For any part of L.A., so close to the coast, to hit 120 degrees was a staggering mark.