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Surf Pounds Shore, Piers in Wake of Rainstorms

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Times Staff Writers

The rain stopped and skies cleared, but the remnants of two storms pounded Southland beaches Saturday with waves 12 to 20 feet high.

Piers in Ocean Beach, Santa Monica, Venice, Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach, Seal Beach, Huntington Beach and South Laguna were battered by the waves and were closed to the public.

But by nightfall there were no reports of serious damage to any of the structures.

The swells breaking across Mission Bay Channel in San Diego, forced the harbor patrol to close the only entrance to Mission Bay at 10:15 a.m. Saturday. The channel is expected to remain closed through this morning, said Mike McCullough, a spokesman for the Mission Bay Harbor Patrol.

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“The swells were breaking across the channel,” McCullough said. “We are letting no boats out of the bay until it calms down.”

A small-craft and heavy-surf advisory will remain in effect at least through Sunday, the Weather Service said.

The battering was one of the worst to hit the area since late January, 1983, when ocean storms ripped away large portions of piers and ocean-front homes between Santa Barbara and the Mexican border.

While beaches were eroded and several piers were slightly damaged by Saturday’s waves, no major damage or flooding was reported, and there were only minor injuries.

Fishermen in Trouble

In Seal Beach, shortly before authorities cleared an estimated 1,500 people from the municipal pier, lifeguards and police rescued three fishermen who had motored their inflatable boat past the bay entrance and into the mammoth waves.

Seal Beach Lifeguard Lt. Dan Dorsey said waves hurled the three men out of the 15-foot boat and all three started swimming toward the jetty. The frantic swimmers were spotted by a patrolling Huntington Beach police helicopter, which picked up three lifeguards and dropped them near the boaters. The helicopter, timing its descent during the seconds between big waves, descended to the surface of the water, where the boaters and lifeguards grabbed the helicopter skids and were finally ferried back to the shore, Dorsey said. “They could easily have been killed,” one lifeguard said after the rescue, but none of the boaters was injured.

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At the other end of San Pedro Bay, three people were picked up by a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter after their 40-foot fishing boat capsized about a half mile from Los Angeles Harbor. They were clinging to their capsized boat, which later washed ashore near Point Fermin.

Anthony Louros, 25, of San Pedro, was taken to Torrance Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for a cut on the head and then released. The other two people were not injured, a spokeswoman said.

The Coast Guard offered no details as to the cause of the accident, but a meteorologist for the National Weather Service said waves all along the coast were large enough “to be of interest to even the larger ships.”

National Weather Service spokesman Stan Massey said the high waves were caused by massive wind patterns that also caused last week’s rainstorms. He said the swells are expected to subside today but will remain higher than normal.

Surf Was Up

On Saturday, lifeguards all along the coast reported waves up to 20 feet, with hundreds of surfers rushing to the beach to take advantage of the good surf. The waves hit hardest at west-facing beaches and piers, the Weather Service reported, because the swells were generated directly west of the Southern California coastline.

San Diego lifeguards rescued 45 surfers from the giant swells at Ocean Beach and Sunset Cliffs, both popular surfing spots.

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“We’ve got some of the largest waves we’ve had in three years,” said Norton Wisdom, a lifeguard at Santa Monica beach.

The huge waves began tearing at some piers in Los Angeles and Orange counties that had only recently been rebuilt after they were damaged by storms three years ago.

Pilings Were Loose

Lifeguards in Huntington Beach, where 30 pilings, about 500 square feet of decking and a restaurant were torn away or damaged three years ago, evacuated and closed the pier at mid-afternoon Saturday when loose pilings were discovered.

Waves occasionally scraped the deck of the Seal Beach pier, dislodging several cross members there, lifeguards reported. The pier, nearly wrecked in 1983, reopened just a year ago.

And the 72-year-old Manhattan Beach pier was shut down shortly before noon by lifeguards and police after high waves posed safety problems, police said. The weather-ravaged landmark has been falling apart for years, and officials have already placed a chain-link fence under the pier to collect falling concrete.

In Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and San Clemente, waves were smaller--topping at eight feet or so--and hundreds of surfers took to the water. “They have been putting on quite a show for bystanders,” a lifeguard in San Clemente said.

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Stayed Out of Water

A spokesman at Huntington State Beach in Orange County said that while the surf was very big, there was almost no rescues, “because everyone’s too scared to go in.”

The wintry storms that caused the high surf dumped more than two inches of rain on downtown Los Angeles last week and caused traffic accidents, mud slides and street flooding throughout Southern California. But, ironically, the dreary weather was just a footnote to a month that was highlighted by sunny skies, record-breaking temperatures and unusual dryness.

Southern Californians enjoyed beach-going temperatures in January that on the average were nearly nine degrees above normal at the Los Angeles Civic Center, the National Weather Service reported Saturday. The average temperature for the month was 61.0 degrees at Lindbergh Field--4.2 degrees agove the normal average temperature for January.

Rainy in Mountains

Mt. Wilson, in Los Angeles County, was hardest hit by the storms, with a total of 7.05 inches of rain falling in two days, according to the Weather Service. The storms dropped 2.45 inches in Northridge, 2.03 inches at the Los Angeles Civic Center and 1.94 inches in Santa Monica.

The rain and accompanying wind caused mud slides and street flooding and have been blamed for at least five traffic fatalities.

January’s high of 87 was recorded Jan. 10 at the Civic Center in Los Angeles. Temperatures rose to 80 degrees or higher seven other days during the month.

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Even with this last storm, San Diego has received only 0.75 of an inch of rain for the entire month of January, which is 1.36 inches below the 2.11 inches the Weather Service considers normal for the month, said Harvey Hastrup, a spokesman.

However, rainfall in November and December has kept San Diego 1.95 inches above the season normal of 5.27, which statisically begins July 1.

To start February, cloudy, mild weather moved into the area Saturday, with a third storm lingering off the Pacific Coast. That front is not expected to bring any more rain to the Los Angeles area.

February is typically considered to be in the middle of the rainy part of the year, with coastal and mountain areas averaging four to 10 days of rain, according to David Cooper of the Weather Service. The coastal and valley areas get about two to five inches of rain, he said, with high temperatures in the mid-60s. Early morning frost is common in the valleys and other inland areas at the beginning of the month, and several days and nights of fog can be expected near the coast, he said.

The forecast for today is for partly cloudy skies and local fog in the morning, with highs in the mid-60s. The afternoon should be fair, with a few high clouds.

Times staff writer Kathleen H. Cooley contributed to this story.

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