A heat wave arrives in southern California, especially in the valley

Meteorologists are planning unusually high temperatures in Southern California this week, the heat planned to climb over 100 degrees in the San Fernando Valley and reach the 90s elsewhere.
After a soft weekend, temperatures should start to increase on Monday. “We are considering 80 to 90 degrees widespread for summits” on Monday on the other side of the valley, said David Gomberg, a meteorologist of the National Weather Service in Oxnard, who covers the County of Los Angeles.
Temperatures will go up in the middle of the week, reaching 103 degrees in Woodland Hills on Wednesday and 101 degrees on Thursday, predicted the National Weather Service.
In downtown Los Angeles, during this time, temperatures should go from the bottom of the 80s from Monday to the mid-80s on Tuesday and finally to the 90s on Wednesday, before returning to the High-80 on Thursday.
“I would say that Wednesday and Thursday will be the hottest days,” said Gomberg. “Saturday is when things should come back to normal.”
People enjoy hot weather at Echo Park Lake.
(Juliana Yamada / Los Angeles Times)
The meteorological service plans to issue heat opinions, warning people to think twice if you consider an intense lunch activity such as hiking.
“In addition, very old and small children will always be vulnerable to these heat events,” said Gomberg.
Temperatures in the inner empire, on the other hand, should reach the mid -90s on Wednesday and Thursday. In the cities of the County of Orange Inland like Irvine and Anaheim, temperatures reached the 80s upper and the 1990s in the middle of the week.
“Our tops will return in the mid -1980s by Saturday, which is quite close to the climatological standard at the end of May,” said Dave Munyan, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service Office of San Diego, who covers Orange County and the Interior Empire. “It will not be as hot as the mini heat wave that we had two weeks ago.”
He described the coming week “abnormally hot warmth, no record, but certainly something that could take people out of the way because it’s May and they expect that it is cooler and more cloudy.”