According to your article:
In Southern California, high winds blew scaffolding off buildings in San Francisco and temporarily shut down the city’s main highway. Alcatraz Island, the former prison, was closed to visitors and on the Golden Gate Bridge winds reached 55 mph, preventing safe passage for trucks. Feared mudslides in areas burned by the October fires did not materialize.
San Francisco and Alcatraz were in Northern California last time I checked and they were not the ones that suffered the fires, that was Southern California.
The distances are huge and SF is always considered Northern California. L.A. is in the south, along with San Diego (we get Santa Barbara also).
M
Actually, San Francisco and the Golden Gate Bridge are not in Southern California. They are in the northern part of the state.
According to your article:
In Southern California, high winds blew scaffolding off buildings in San Francisco and temporarily shut down the city’s main highway. Alcatraz Island, the former prison, was closed to visitors and on the Golden Gate Bridge winds reached 55 mph, preventing safe passage for trucks. Feared mudslides in areas burned by the October fires did not materialize.
San Francisco and Alcatraz were in Northern California last time I checked and they were not the ones that suffered the fires, that was Southern California.
The distances are huge and SF is always considered Northern California. L.A. is in the south, along with San Diego (we get Santa Barbara also).
M