Travel

The 3 places where travelers are overwhelmed

California’s fog problem is rarely one problem. This morning there are three: coastal fog in the marine layer in Southern California, valley fog in the interior areas of the Bay Area, and Tule fog style visibility collapses in the Central Valley and adjacent foothills. Together they create a trap for travelers who assume that “sunny later” means “safe now.”

1) Southern California Coast and Inland Coastal Areas (Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo Counties)

The National Weather Service in Los Angeles/Oxnard reported “persistent dense fog affecting virtually all coasts and some inland coastal areas” in the forecast area, adding that a Advice on dense fog was issued until mid-morning.

The surprise here is psychological: Motorists see clear skies inland and then hit a gray wall near the coastline, where pools of moisture and visibility can drop precipitously on short stretches of US-101, surface streets near the beaches and the mouths of canyons.

2) Bay Area interior valleys and coastal approaches

The National Weather Service The San Francisco and Monterey Bay office warned that “dense fog effects are expected throughout the morning” in the Interior North Bay and East Bay Valleys, as well as coastal areas.

This is where travelers get caught in transitions: descending from clearer ridges to valleys, or going from inland highways to coastal bridges and waterfront interchanges. The risk is increased for early flights and trips to airports where poor visibility and low ceilings can slow down work, even when there is no rain.

3) The Central Valley and nearby foothills, including the San Joaquin Valley.

The National Weather Service The Central California office noted that a Dense Fog Advisory was in effect until late this morning and that this “now includes the San Joaquin Valley, as well as the surrounding foothills.”

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The catch here is speed: long, straight highways invite faster driving until the headlights light up just a few car lengths away. In Tule fog, visibility can decrease from kilometers to meters in a matter of seconds, especially near river corridors, low fields and highway depressions.

Practical tips to stay safe

In all three regions, the safest strategy is the same and the details differ. Give yourself extra time, plan for sudden falls, and make sure your headlights don’t “overshoot.” When traveling between climate zones – from coast to valley, from ridge to basin – assume that the worst visibility will be at the lowest point of your route, not the highest point. And if you’re pairing an overland trip with an early departure, check airport status before you go: fog is one of the fastest ways to turn an on-time itinerary into a missed boarding period.

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