Dec 16, 2025
You may look out the window early Wednesday and think, “The fog has swallowed my car. Again.” San Diego has resembled London lately, shrouded in some areas by countless droplets of moisture, each thinner than a human hair. Collectively, they can briefly blind you. The gray veil, as some describ e it, will be here through Friday due to a phenomenon that’s occurring 1,500 miles southwest of San Diego. A massive high-pressure system has spread across the ocean, trapping cool water vapor at the surface, below much warmer air above. The trapped moisture turns into droplets that form fog of varying density. Coastal temperatures were in the 50s early Tuesday, more than 20 degrees cooler than they were 1,000 feet in the sky. The resulting fog was as thick as pea soup in some parts of the city, barely visible in others. In most places, it could be felt on exposed skin. Similar weather was rolling ashore early Tuesday night. It’s a fleeting thing in which people are struck by the beauty and eeriness of fog, which rarely lasts long in Southern California. Far to the north, at Point Reyes, the fog is persistent, occurring about 200 days a year. And it’s much, much thicker. “The fog here isn’t unusual for December,” said Adam Roser, a forecaster at the National Weather Service. “Now’s usually the time.” Change may be coming. A few days ago, forecasters determined that a major storm is likely to hit Northern California on Christmas Eve, or thereabouts. It did not appear that the system would later plunge south into San Diego. But they’re now thinking otherwise, saying that air currents could carry part of it to the region, which hasn’t had any rainfall so far this month. “It’s definitely something we’re looking at,” Roser said Tuesday, as fog doubled back into San Diego, La Jolla and Oceanside. ...read more read less
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