Mateo and santa cruz area. I dont think that was supposed to happen. 60s and 70s inland but it wont help it will be warm with 90s up to 100 as the warmup continues. Originally we were 72 in the city but now that there is fog i might make that 72 but inland warming up to the 90s near 100 for some. 75 in San Francisco. The record high 87 from 1943 so you will be near average today. Not a lot of fog north of Half Moon Bay but there is some. Again this will only be confined to parts of the coast but there is plenty in san mateo and santa cruz, 54, 56, 57 for water temperatures. Onshore and offshore most locations are shown easterly breeze but it is not that strong so it is a fight between the two. These and 60s for your temperatures, many 40s. Healdsburg at 50, winsor 49, these are very cool temperatures. 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s but inland they should be warming up near 100. 7 02 how about the traffic . It is slow on the sonoma grade. I hope it will clear up because normally we dont have slo
Temperatures will start to spike so enjoy the morning because it is somewhat cool for now. It is a spare the air dade. Day. Would you barbecue today if it wasnt a spare the air alert . May be. I like to barbecue. If you want to go outside right now is a good time. Get out there and go hiking. We have had 10 of these spare the air alerts. This is a live look to work mount diablo, the season typically goes from april through october. Today, according to Health Officials smog can be a pollution problem. We have a hot temperatures and when the wind is not around it lingers. We are talking about temperatures well above 100. Possibly 105 up to 110 in places like livermore brentwood antioch. I want to ask you something. Do you actually keep the windows open more or do you use the air conditioner . What do you do when it is so hot . In the morning and evening i leave the windows but in the middle of the day we are lucky that our home has air conditioning not by my choice we just inherited it.
Every summer, so we decided to sell our home at top dollar and we are moving to prescott, arizona. Reporter the Livermore Library daily grind cafi opens at 7 am and it has cooler air conditioning than the library itself. They dont have much downtime like days like today. In the east bay looking at four days of unhealthy air quality for the sensitive groups, and you are encouraged to cut back on driving, oilbased paint, and hairspray. They have other cooling centers that will be open including the wave. At the wave they told us they will have two Public Schools public pools open for free and open until 8 pm, and that is making up for not being open on the fridays and with how hot it is on the weekends. Certain libraries and cooling stations may not be open on monday since it is a holiday so you may want to check the websites to make sure you have a place to cool off. Thank you. And we have not seen forecasted temperatures like this. We have the five date coming up later with levels that
And good morning. Welcome to mornings on 2. Its saturday, november 16th. Good morning. Mark is in this morning for rosemary. Lets kick it off. Off to a very cold start. Want to bundle up. Temperatures in the 30s and 40s. As far as the forecast for today we have this, chilly start with fair skies into the afternoon. The forecast timeline for San Francisco throughout the day we should have at least partly sunny skies, temperatures on track to reach the 50s to low 60s. Tonight patchy fog, that timeline in a little bit. More clouds and the chance of a shower in the extended forecast. Look at these current numbers off to a very cold start in santa rosa and napa. San francisco 48 and san jose 45. Livermore in the 40s as well. Coming up in a few we will look at shower chances with the forecast model coming up in act five, six minutes. Thank you. New this morning the long awaited fourth bore of the tunnel is open to traffic. Cars started driving through less than three hours ago and we are liv
Robert Aquinas McNally will talk about his newly published book, “Cast Out of Eden: The Untold Story of John Muir, Indigenous Peoples, and the American Wilderness,” at 2 p.m., Sunday,