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LIST: San Mateo County Rainfall Totals From Storm
In San Mateo County, Spring Valley has recorded the most rain in the current Bay Area storm.

Peninsula residents were doused with a healthy dose of rain this weekend, while the nearby Santa Cruz Mountains were soaked with more than 11 inches, the National Weather Service reports.
Since Thursday evening most places in the San Francisco Bay Area got more rain than in all of October of last year, a National Weather Service meteorologist said.
Monday morning, the weather service released rain totals for the Bay Area counties, revealing some of the largest amounts of rainfall over the region. In San Mateo County, Spring Valley saw the most amount of rain with 3.82 inches. In Marin County, 3.61 inches of rain were recorded at Mt. Tam. (See image above for all totals.)
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A gauge in the Santa Cruz Mountains off Ormsby Cutoff Road recorded 11.45 inches as of Monday morning.
Unofficial totals showed the 72-hour sums for San Mateo County as of Sunday night:
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- Spring Valley Raws: 3.31 in
- 1 SE Woodside: 2.98 in
- La Honda Raws: 2.78 in
- Emerald Lake Hills: 2.55 in
- Montara: 2.43 in
- 1 N Highlands: 2.40 in
- West Menlo Park: - Sw 2.38 in
- 1 E Emerald Lake Hills: 2.31 in
- 1 SW Colma: 2.11 in
- Half Moon Bay: 2.07 in
- Pulgas Raws: 2.00 in
- San Carlos: 1.99 in
- 1 ESE Atherton: 1.74 in
- 1 S San Mateo: 1.51 in
- 1 W El Granada: 1.49 in
- Pescadero Ck Nr Pescadero: 1.49 in
- Atherton: 1.45 in
- 8 WSW Woodside: 1.42 in
- Redwood City: 1.36 in
- Foster City: 1.20 in
- Belmont: 1.20 in
- 3 SSE El Granada: 1.19 in
- 5 SSE El Granada: 1.18 in
- 4 SSE El Granada: 1.10 in
- Belmont: 0.99 in
- 1 N San Mateo: 0.69 in
NWS officials say Redwood City has picked up 2.27 inches of rain since Oct. 1.
"Last year? We didn't have that much until December 3," the agency tweeted.

A coastal flood advisory for the entire California coast is in effect until 3 p.m. Monday, and high astronomical tides and large ocean swell will cause minor coastal flooding and beach erosion through Monday afternoon, according to the weather service.
Showers may linger Monday, but precipitation is expected to end by late afternoon, NWS officials said. No weather hazards are forecast after Monday.
– Bay City News Service contributed to this report / Image of Monday morning rainfall totals via NWS
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