2010: The Highway Patrol reported flooded lanes on I5 at Fort Tejon due to heavy rain and hail from thunderstorms.
2001: Thunderstorms developed in mountains and inland valleys (of SoCal) each day starting on 9.30 and ending on this day.
1981: Very heavy rain from a thunderstorm complex drops 1.92" of rain at Mojave.
Highway 58 was closed due to flooding.
Flooding was reported in Beaumont.
One was killed by lightning at Cuyamaca Rancho State Park.
1980: This was the start of a three days in a row when Mount Hamilton hit 93° F which happens to be its warmest temperature for October.
1980: Paso Robles hit 106° F establishing an all-time record high for the month.
1980: It was 109° F in Riverside and 105° F in Ramona, each the highest temperature on record for October.
It was 103° F in Alpine and 93° in Idyllwild, each tying the highest temperature on record for October.
This also occurred in Idyllwild on 10/12/1950 and in Alpine on several other October dates.
1980: 103° F at Bakersfield for a high temperature, sets a record high for the month of October (also set on the 4th and 5th of October that same year).
1980: The high temperature at Reno, NV was a warm 91° F.
1978: The high temperature of 103° F in Las Vegas, NV, set the all-time warmest reading for October.
1976: Heavy rain drenched parts of the central San Joaquin Valley.
Fresno received 1.46" of rain on this date, setting a daily precipitation record.
Several roads were heavily flooded in the city, temporarily stranding some motorists.
Los Banos received a half of an inch of rain in just 30 minutes.
Many roads in and fields in Mendota were flooded.
1971: Caribbean Sea Hurricane Irene crossed Nicaragua and reformed in the eastern Pacific as Hurricane Olivia.
Olivia recurved to the northeast and made landfall in central Baja California with rainfall of up to 1" in the southern deserts on 9.30 and on this day.
This occurred during the La Niña of 1970-71.
1946: A tropical storm moved northward into northern Baja California and dissipated with rainfall of up to 4" in the mountains on 9.30 and exceeding 4" in the mountains on this day.
This occurred during the El Niño of 1946-47.
1946: Woodfords (Alpine Co. near Markleeville) recorded 1.27" of precipitation.
1932: Heavy rains starting on 9/28 and ending on this day came from a dying tropical cyclone.
It brought flooding to parts of the mountains and deserts of Southern California.
4.38" of rain fell at Tehachapi in seven hours on 9/30, and the four day storm total was 7.10".
The resulting flash flooding in Tehachapi Creek caused widespread damage.
Multiple trains were caught in the flooding, including a Santa Fe steam engine that was buried under ten feet of mud and sand.
A gas station, café and several cabins were destroyed by a wall of water when a culvert clogged with debris suddenly gave way.
At least 15 people perished in floods and monetary damages exceeded $1 million dollars in 1932 dollars.
An exact death toll is unknown, as many people were "riding the rails" during the Great Depression.
1921: 1.5" fell (in SoCal) on 9.30 and on this day, the greatest 24-hour total on record for September.
Source: NWS San Francisco/Monterey, Hanford, Reno, Las Vegas, & San Diego
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