Southern California Enjoys Warm Spring Weekend Before Pacific Storm Brings Gusty Winds and Showers Midweek as Arizona and New Mexico Eye Above Normal Monsoon Season

Southern California Enjoys Warm Spring Weekend Before Pacific Storm Brings Gusty Winds and Showers Midweek as Arizona and New Mexico Eye Above Normal Monsoon Season

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA — Southern California is basking in a pleasant spring weekend with above-normal temperatures running 10 to 15 degrees above average and dry conditions across the region. The warm stretch extends into Monday before a Pacific storm system moves inland to the north late Tuesday into Wednesday, bringing gusty west winds up to 30 mph and light showers to parts of the region. Meanwhile, an early monsoon-type moisture surge from Sonora, Mexico is already firing active convection across Southern Arizona — and long-range models are signaling a potentially wetter than normal monsoon season ahead for Arizona and New Mexico.

Areas in the Weather Zone

Weekend temps
10–15°F above
Southern California
Midweek wind gusts
30 mph
Pacific storm Tue–Wed
Rainfall expected
<0.10″
Under one-tenth inch
Monsoon outlook
Likely wetter
Arizona and New Mexico
This Weekend through MondayAbove-normal warmth
10 to 15 degrees above average — warm and dry across Southern California
Pleasant spring weekend with highs running 10 to 15 degrees above normal across Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange County and the Inland Empire. Dry conditions persist through Monday. Monday is the peak warmth day before the pattern changes heading into Tuesday.
Tap to collapse
Tuesday into WednesdayPacific storm
Gusty west winds to 30 mph and light showers — rainfall under one-tenth inch
A Pacific storm moves inland to the north late Tuesday into Wednesday. Gusty west winds up to 30 mph develop across Southern California. Mainly marine layer light rain and drizzle possible — bulk of moisture stays north. Rainfall totals generally under one-tenth of an inch. Snow level above 8,000 feet. Colorado River Valley could see isolated storm from Arizona monsoon moisture.
Tap to expand
Late Wednesday through next weekendWarming and dry
Temperatures creep back up — dry weather returns for Southern California
After the brief midweek Pacific storm, temperatures rebound across Southern California heading through the end of the week and next weekend. Dry weather returns and no significant storm systems are expected for the foreseeable future across the Los Angeles and San Diego metro areas.
Tap to expand
Today and summer 2026 outlookEarly monsoon signal
Arizona monsoon moisture surging from Sonora — long-range models signal wetter than normal summer
A large MCS turned MCV over Sonora, Mexico last night pushed a decent surge of moisture northward into Southern Arizona. Convection firing up again today — most activity east of Southern California. An isolated storm near the Colorado River Valley is possible. Long-range models hint at above-normal rainfall for the Desert Southwest. Arizona in the “Likely Wetter” monsoon category, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado in the “Leaning Wetter” zone — potentially a good sign for an active 2026 monsoon season.
Tap to expand
Likely wetter
Arizona
Highest confidence for above-normal monsoon rainfall
Likely wetter
New Mexico
Above-normal monsoon rainfall expected
Leaning wetter
Utah
Lower confidence — wetter trend possible
Leaning wetter
Colorado
Lower confidence — wetter trend possible
Sources: Local forecast, Long-range monsoon outlook models | WaldronNews.com

The weekend through midweek forecast affects a broad corridor of the Southwest United States:

Southern California — Above Normal Warmth:

  • Los Angeles metro — highs 10 to 15 degrees above average this weekend and Monday
  • San Diego and Orange County — warm and dry through the weekend
  • Inland Empire — peak warmth Monday before cooling begins Tuesday
  • Colorado River Valley — isolated storm possible from early monsoon moisture today

Midweek Storm — Tuesday Into Wednesday:

  • Northern Southern California — closest to the Pacific storm track moving inland to the north
  • Los Angeles and surrounding areas — mainly marine layer light rain and drizzle possible
  • Mountains above 8,000 feet — snow level rising, minimal accumulation expected
  • Rainfall totals — generally staying under one-tenth of an inch across most of the region

Arizona and New Mexico — Monsoon Signal:

  • Arizona — classified as “Likely Wetter” on long-range monsoon outlook maps
  • New Mexico — also in the “Likely Wetter” zone for the upcoming monsoon season
  • Southern Arizona — active convection firing today from large MCS turned MCV over Sonora
  • Colorado River Valley — isolated storm possible as this moisture pushes north
  • Utah and Colorado — in the “Leaning Wetter” zone on extended monsoon outlooks

Primary Weather Impacts — Weekend Through Next Weekend

The forecast covers several distinct weather phases across the Southwest:

  • This weekend10 to 15 degrees above normal across Southern California, dry and pleasant
  • Monday — highs remain well above average, warmest day of the stretch before the cool-down
  • Tuesday into WednesdayPacific storm moves inland to the north, gusty west winds to 30 mph, a few showers and marine layer drizzle possible across Southern California
  • Rainfall totalsunder one-tenth of an inch for most; bulk of moisture stays north of the area
  • Snow level — above 8,000 feet during the midweek storm
  • Late Wednesday onward — temperatures begin creeping back up, dry weather returns through next weekend
  • Today in Southern Arizona — active convection from early monsoon moisture surge, strongest storms east of SoCal, isolated storm near the Colorado River Valley possible

Why the Early Monsoon Signal Matters for Arizona and New Mexico

The early taste of monsoon-type moisture arriving from Sonora, Mexico this weekend is more than just a current weather story — it is a potentially significant signal for what the summer of 2026 could hold for Arizona and New Mexico. A large Mesoscale Convective System (MCS) that turned into a Mesoscale Convective Vortex (MCV) over Sonora last night has pushed a decent surge of moisture northward into Southern Arizona, with convection firing up again today.

Long-range models are already hinting that this early activity is consistent with a pattern that historically favors an above-normal monsoon season across the Desert Southwest. The monsoon outlook map shows Arizona in the “Likely Wetter” category and surrounding states including New Mexico, Utah and Colorado in the “Leaning Wetter” zone — potentially excellent news for drought-stressed communities across the region heading into summer.

Forecasters describe this as a potentially good sign for an active summer monsoon season — with above-normal rainfall for the Desert Southwest already hinted at by long-range modeling guidance.

Multi-Day Pattern: Warming Returns After Midweek Dip

After the Tuesday into Wednesday Pacific storm brushes through with limited rainfall and gusty winds, Southern California is expected to warm back up heading through next weekend with dry weather returning for the foreseeable future. The brief cool-down from the Pacific system will moderate the above-normal temperatures without delivering meaningful drought relief across the region.

The bigger weather story for the Southwest shifts to late spring and summer — where the early monsoon moisture signals and long-range model guidance point toward a potentially active and wetter than normal 2026 monsoon season for Arizona and New Mexico.

What to Watch Next

Key details to monitor across the Southwest in the days ahead:

  • Tuesday wind timing — when exactly gusty west winds to 30 mph arrive across Southern California
  • Rainfall totals Wednesday — whether any areas exceed the one-tenth of an inch threshold
  • Colorado River Valley storm activity — whether today’s isolated storm threat materializes from Arizona monsoon moisture
  • Southern Arizona convection — ongoing MCV moisture activity east of Southern California today
  • Long-range monsoon model trends — whether the wetter than normal signal for Arizona and New Mexico strengthens or weakens through April
  • Temperature rebound — how quickly Southern California warms back to above-normal levels after the midweek system

Residents across Los Angeles, San Diego, the Inland Empire and the Colorado River Valley should enjoy the warm weekend while preparing for the brief but windy midweek storm. Residents across Tucson, Phoenix, Flagstaff and Albuquerque should watch closely as early monsoon signals continue to develop this spring.

WaldronNews.com will continue tracking the midweek Pacific storm, ongoing Arizona monsoon moisture activity and the developing long-range monsoon outlook for Arizona and New Mexico as the pattern evolves heading into April.

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