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Winds delay LAX flights and cut power to more than 300,000

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Palm fronds line a street in the Los Feliz section of Los Angeles on Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011 after high winds flipped over trees and trucks and knocked out power to more than 300,000 California customers early Thursday before moving inland, where schools in a Utah town closed because of 100 mph wind gusts. (AP Photo/Alicia Chang)

LOS ANGELES >> High winds delayed flights, flipped over trees and trucks and knocked out power to more than 300,000 California customers before moving inland early Thursday,nd bringing hurricane-force gusts of more than 100 mph in the mountains.

“It was like being in a hurricane. I thought I was going to blow away,” said Bill Patzert of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who lives in the Southern California city of Sierra Madre.

Patzert, like hundreds of thousands of people across the region, lost power at his home. A heavy tree limb blocked his driveway. He estimated winds peaked between 80 to 90 mph in his neighborhood overnight.

“In terms of ferocity, we get something like this every 10 years or so,” he said.

On Wednesday, 23 flights were diverted and several delayed at Los Angeles International Airport because of severe crosswinds and debris on runways, officials said. Power was out for an hour at passenger terminals.

The winds had died down by Thursday morning but some delays were reported. Departures to Las Vegas McCarran International Airport were averaging an hour’s delay because of bad weather there.

In Nevada, weather officials warned that blowing dust was creating visibility problems on a highway that guides drivers between Reno and Las Vegas.

The windstorms were the result of a dramatic difference in pressure between a strong, high-pressure system and a cold, low-pressure system, meteorologists said. This funnels strong winds down mountain canyons and slopes.  

The winds reached 123 mph at a ski resort northwest of Denver and topped 102 mph in Utah.

The system was expected to bring similar, but less ferocious conditions as far away as Wyoming and New Mexico. The front will bring blustery weather to Oklahoma, Missouri and Indiana, meteorologists said.

California, however, was the hardest hit, with more than 200,000 utility customers without power after the winds swept through Wednesday. About 26,000 were without power in the Santa Cruz Mountains in the northern part of the state.

The winds downed trees and power lines and blew semi-trailers off the road. Residents traveling the roads encountered tree branches blocking streets and darkened traffic lights.

“It was a terrifying ride for me, coming here in pitch dark … and watching motorists take no notice of lights being out,” said Bob Spencer, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works.

Pasadena closed schools and libraries and declared a local emergency, the first since 2004. Fire officials said 40 people were evacuated from an apartment building after a tree collapsed, smashing part of the roof.

Two house fires, possibly caused by downed power lines, critically burned one person, seriously injured three others and forced seven others to flee, fire spokeswoman Lisa Derderian said

High winds ripped through Utah, overturning several semi-trucks on or near Interstate 15, and 54,000 customers were without power along the state’s 120-mile Wasatch Front as high winds took down power lines.

Police asked schools to close in Centerville, where the weather service reported a 102 mph gust. Mail delivery and trash pickup were cancelled.

In Steamboat Springs, Colo., the roof of a four-story condominium complex was blown off and about 100 trees were knocked over, some landing on homes. A ski area shut down its lifts for the day after reporting a gust of 123 mph.

The winds were colder but fiercer than the Santa Ana winds that often hit California in late fall, but they carried the same ability to dry out brush and push fires into conflagrations.

Even some weather experts were surprised by the wind’s force. “It’s one of the strongest events that I can remember,” said Brian Edwards, a meteorologist with Accuweather. “It’s rather rare.”
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Associated Press writer John Rogers and Alicia Chang in Los Angeles, Jennifer Dobner in Salt Lake City and Oskar Garcia in Las Vegas contributed to this report.
 

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