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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Cyclists suffer hypothermia after California storms

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES – A wave of brief but fierce storms rolled through Southern California mountains and deserts on Saturday, leaving 40 bicycle racers with hypothermia and possibly causing a 14-car highway pileup in the desert that injured nine people, authorities said.

Monsoonal moisture moving up from the south connected with warmer air inland and created thunderstorms that prompted flash flood warnings and watches in parts of San Diego, San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

In San Bernardino County, gusty winds kicked up blinding dust on Interstate 40 east of Barstow. That may have caused a crash shortly before 10:30 a.m. in Newberry Springs that involved 10 big-rigs and four sedans, said Otto Schramm with the county fire department.

Nine people suffered minor injuries, he said.

Monsoonal weather in New Mexico flooded downtown Albuquerque and left some people stranded in their cars. Fire crews rescued several people Friday night as flash flooding hit the downtown.

In California’s San Bernardino Mountains, the 100-mile contest in the annual Tour de Big Bear race was disrupted when a storm dumped rain on bicyclists on 8,400-foot-high Onyx Peak.

Most had mild to moderate hypothermia and were taken back to the starting line, county fire spokesman Eric Sherwin said.

“Some were shivering, some were suffering from cramps” but none needed to be hospitalized, he said.

The downpour only lasted about 1 1/2 hours and the temperature was only 50 to 60 degrees but “dressed in cycling clothes, 60 degrees and wet is cold, especially when you’ve got done sweating climbing up a mountain pass,” said race event director Craig Smith.

Most of the 1,700 riders competing in various distance contests completed the race, he added.

“We can’t control the weather,” Smith said. “But we all need the rain so we can’t complain about moisture falling from the sky.”