A10 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, JULY 5, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY TUESDAY TONIGHT HIGH 95° LOW 59° Sunshine with near-record temperatures Mostly sunny and very hot ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 92° 78° 97° in 2017 47° 46° 29° in 1901 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.55" in 1992 Month to date (normal) 0.00" (0.07") Year to date (normal) 2.93" (5.79") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29.95" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Today Tue. 5:29am/8:51pm 5:29am/8:51pm 2:24am/5:16pm 2:52am/6:18pm 4:10am/7:06pm 4:09am/7:07pm 7:41am/10:25pm 7:43am/10:25pm 8:06am/10:35pm 8:05am/10:33pm 11:10pm/9:44am 11:06pm/9:40am 10:19pm/8:01am 10:15pm/7:57am 1:50am/4:03pm 1:46am/3:59pm First Full Last Jul 9 Jul 17 Jul 23 Jul 31 Tonight's sky: Earth is at Aphelion (farthest from the sun) at 15:27 PDT. The sun-Earth distance is 1.02 AU. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 9 9 5 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. POLLEN COUNT Grasses Moderate Trees Low Weeds Absent Source: Oregon Allergy Associates FRIDAY 87° 54° Very warm with plenty of sunshine Plenty of sunshine EAST: Sunny and warm again Monday. Mainly clear Monday night. Mostly sunny and still warm Tuesday. CENTRAL: Hot again on Monday with plenty of sunshine. Mainly clear Monday night. 96° 63° 95° 55° Sunshine with record-tying temperatures The temperature near the record of 98 Astoria 67/55 Hood River Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 67/58/0.00 67/55/c 69/57/c La Grande 95/62/0.00 95/56/s 99/62/s Portland 85/58/0.00 86/58/s 89/61/s Baker City 96/50/0.00 96/51/s 99/58/s La Pine 92/44/0.00 92/51/s 95/54/s Prineville 93/46/0.00 98/54/s 95/58/s Brookings 62/54/Tr 64/52/s 61/52/s Medford 99/67/0.00 99/65/s 101/61/s Redmond 96/50/0.00 97/52/s 100/55/s Burns 98/61/0.00 97/55/s 100/58/s Newport 64/55/0.01 63/52/pc 63/55/pc Roseburg 92/61/0.00 93/59/s 92/57/s Salem 89/58/0.00 89/57/s 94/57/s Eugene 91/56/Tr 91/54/s 93/57/s North Bend 67/56/Tr 66/55/s 66/56/pc Klamath Falls 94/53/0.00 95/55/s 96/51/s Ontario 104/72/Tr 104/67/s 107/69/s Sisters 90/46/0.00 95/55/s 98/62/s Lakeview 92/53/0.00 94/55/s 97/54/s Pendleton 96/57/0.00 96/61/s 100/68/s The Dalles 96/69/0.00 95/64/s 100/68/s Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday NATIONAL WEATHER As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 46827 85% Wickiup 33157 17% Crescent Lake 22684 26% Ochoco Reservoir 7030 16% Prineville 63835 43% River flow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 117 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 1120 Deschutes R. below Bend 142 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1440 Little Deschutes near La Pine 76 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 71 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 298 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 4 Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res. 9 -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the T-storms Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: USDA Forest Service Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 89/73/0.00 Akron 87/63/0.00 Albany 72/55/0.13 Albuquerque 92/67/0.28 Anchorage 62/53/0.00 Atlanta 87/65/0.00 Atlantic City 77/60/0.03 Austin 83/74/0.64 Baltimore 84/61/0.05 Billings 95/67/0.01 Birmingham 86/61/0.00 Bismarck 98/74/0.00 Boise 101/74/0.00 Boston 68/57/0.57 Bridgeport, CT 73/58/Tr Buffalo 84/62/0.00 Burlington, VT 71/59/Tr Caribou, ME 70/52/Tr Charleston, SC 87/63/0.00 Charlotte 87/58/0.00 Chattanooga 89/63/0.00 Cheyenne 88/59/Tr Chicago 89/70/0.00 Cincinnati 88/66/0.00 Cleveland 86/65/0.00 Colorado Springs 87/59/1.09 Columbia, MO 87/64/0.00 Columbia, SC 88/61/0.00 Columbus, GA 90/65/0.00 Columbus, OH 88/65/0.00 Concord, NH 72/54/0.66 Corpus Christi 93/74/Tr Dallas 89/76/0.00 Dayton 88/66/0.00 Denver 92/62/0.00 Des Moines 89/68/0.00 Detroit 90/66/0.00 Duluth 92/68/0.00 El Paso 96/70/0.82 Fairbanks 74/51/0.00 Fargo 93/73/0.00 Flagstaff 83/57/0.55 Grand Rapids 89/66/0.00 Green Bay 89/66/0.00 Greensboro 84/57/0.00 Harrisburg 85/62/0.00 Hartford, CT 76/56/0.17 Helena 95/64/Tr Honolulu 85/75/0.25 Houston 90/75/0.12 Huntsville 87/59/0.00 Indianapolis 86/64/0.00 Jackson, MS 90/70/0.00 Jacksonville 87/75/0.12 Today Hi/Lo/W 83/70/t 92/72/t 80/68/pc 91/69/t 58/53/c 90/71/c 80/74/s 85/72/t 89/69/s 84/60/pc 91/71/s 91/61/pc 101/70/s 74/67/pc 77/70/pc 87/73/pc 82/71/pc 80/56/c 89/73/c 92/70/pc 93/70/s 85/57/t 92/74/pc 91/71/c 92/73/pc 84/61/t 89/70/s 93/70/pc 88/71/c 94/72/pc 75/63/pc 90/77/t 90/76/pc 92/72/c 91/62/t 91/71/pc 92/74/pc 89/64/pc 93/73/c 80/57/pc 92/61/pc 78/55/pc 89/72/pc 91/68/t 90/68/s 88/70/pc 78/67/pc 87/59/s 87/75/sh 89/76/t 92/70/s 90/70/c 93/73/t 84/73/t Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 68/61/c 90/74/pc 57/51/s 109/79/pc 99/82/pc 86/69/t 85/77/s 74/61/t 66/47/pc 85/64/pc 56/50/s 88/77/s 95/72/s 63/54/r 89/78/t 65/50/c 64/50/c 82/59/pc 75/46/s 90/81/sh 83/73/s 82/64/s 66/44/s 66/61/pc 77/64/pc 68/57/c 95/65/s 89/80/t 72/61/0.67 89/75/0.00 54/37/0.00 111/86/0.00 100/84/0.00 89/67/0.00 88/77/0.00 80/60/0.04 63/46/0.04 84/55/0.00 57/45/0.00 88/74/0.00 97/75/0.00 64/59/0.49 90/80/0.02 68/55/0.28 68/57/0.50 70/59/0.17 74/43/0.00 91/84/0.02 79/68/0.00 85/68/0.00 69/47/0.00 65/60/0.00 79/63/0.00 68/61/0.38 91/70/0.00 91/77/0.27 The town’s location, author Joann Green Byrd pointed out in her book “Calamity: The Heppner Flood of 1903,” turned out to be “a natural bull’s-eye for flash floods.” Tuesday Hi/Lo/W 86/69/c 92/71/t 87/67/t 88/68/t 58/52/r 86/72/t 83/76/pc 87/71/t 97/73/pc 91/63/s 85/72/t 73/52/r 104/74/s 90/73/pc 89/72/c 84/69/t 87/64/t 76/53/t 87/75/t 91/72/c 92/72/pc 78/55/t 90/72/t 90/71/t 90/72/t 78/58/t 91/69/s 90/72/c 84/71/t 93/72/t 89/67/t 88/74/t 90/75/t 91/72/t 82/59/t 92/68/t 90/71/t 66/50/r 90/72/t 66/50/sh 67/54/r 85/55/c 88/69/t 86/58/t 90/70/c 97/71/pc 93/69/pc 95/62/s 88/74/pc 88/75/t 89/71/t 90/71/s 86/72/t 85/73/t City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 68/52/0.00 88/67/0.00 90/64/0.00 104/87/Tr 84/61/0.00 90/63/0.00 86/60/0.00 81/65/0.00 89/67/0.00 88/67/0.00 87/65/0.00 92/80/0.00 92/70/0.00 94/74/0.00 90/61/0.00 88/76/0.76 79/60/0.01 84/64/Tr 88/66/0.00 85/64/0.00 91/71/0.00 91/72/0.03 110/87/0.00 87/66/0.00 81/62/0.12 102/79/0.26 84/59/0.00 62/55/1.07 72/55/0.21 84/60/0.00 95/64/0.00 93/70/0.01 86/61/0.00 75/61/0.04 91/59/0.00 90/68/0.00 100/72/0.00 92/76/0.05 74/67/0.00 77/61/0.00 77/59/0.00 93/59/0.18 90/68/0.00 77/57/0.00 97/73/0.00 91/63/0.00 85/65/0.00 89/79/0.00 96/73/0.37 87/69/0.00 85/64/Tr 86/64/0.00 98/62/0.00 106/85/0.00 Today Tuesday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 69/51/pc 65/52/c 90/69/s 91/72/pc 91/73/pc 89/69/t 108/87/s 111/90/s 88/69/pc 88/70/s 94/69/s 93/65/t 91/70/pc 92/73/pc 83/63/pc 83/65/pc 93/74/pc 92/74/s 91/71/pc 89/66/t 92/73/s 91/74/t 87/80/t 87/80/r 92/75/pc 87/68/t 95/73/pc 79/56/r 94/72/s 93/72/pc 86/76/t 85/77/t 81/71/pc 94/76/pc 85/72/pc 98/76/pc 91/74/s 94/75/s 86/66/s 87/70/pc 94/72/pc 93/65/t 90/75/t 86/75/t 112/81/s 113/83/s 92/69/pc 91/71/t 87/71/pc 94/75/pc 106/89/s 109/87/s 90/71/t 90/70/t 72/62/pc 87/68/t 73/67/pc 89/71/pc 92/69/s 92/70/pc 92/63/t 76/56/pc 98/67/s 100/66/s 90/70/s 95/73/pc 89/75/pc 88/66/t 92/56/s 90/56/s 93/74/s 94/75/pc 95/71/s 99/75/s 86/76/t 86/74/t 75/65/pc 74/65/pc 72/58/pc 69/58/pc 77/57/pc 76/57/pc 87/60/t 85/60/t 88/74/c 87/74/t 78/58/pc 83/58/s 99/72/pc 83/57/t 92/64/s 95/66/s 88/67/s 90/69/s 92/77/t 85/77/r 97/81/pc 101/79/pc 90/68/s 92/71/pc 89/73/s 96/76/pc 89/66/pc 91/71/pc 98/63/s 99/69/s 108/78/s 110/80/s 68/56/t 92/76/s 61/53/c 112/81/pc 96/80/t 87/70/t 85/76/s 84/65/pc 65/48/pc 91/64/s 59/55/pc 88/76/pc 98/76/s 70/54/c 89/81/t 63/53/r 62/53/r 79/62/t 70/46/s 90/82/t 80/72/c 82/65/s 59/42/pc 66/61/pc 73/60/s 66/55/t 83/57/pc 87/79/t Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw 108/89/0.00 72/56/0.09 73/55/0.00 75/60/0.00 72/53/0.00 90/78/0.01 102/84/0.00 87/77/0.08 73/61/0.33 77/54/0.00 72/61/0.54 73/65/0.02 83/68/0.00 68/34/0.00 66/57/0.00 77/62/0.14 78/68/0.08 82/78/0.19 83/73/0.00 79/52/0.00 65/45/0.00 95/79/0.00 87/76/0.00 73/67/0.48 77/63/0.00 72/63/0.00 79/55/0.00 72/63/0.34 107/81/s 72/56/t 82/70/s 75/59/s 72/54/pc 88/79/t 103/88/pc 87/76/r 76/61/t 81/70/t 71/60/r 72/66/pc 85/66/s 69/38/s 68/55/c 66/64/r 82/72/c 93/79/t 86/77/t 76/60/pc 62/45/s 101/83/s 86/74/s 76/73/sh 90/74/c 73/59/s 81/60/t 80/62/pc 109/82/s 71/58/t 83/61/t 78/61/s 72/53/pc 89/79/pc 104/87/pc 86/76/r 70/60/t 84/57/t 70/56/pc 72/63/c 87/68/s 54/33/r 66/53/pc 68/62/r 88/72/c 94/81/pc 87/77/c 76/62/t 60/45/pc 99/83/t 87/75/s 81/75/t 89/68/t 73/60/s 91/67/s 83/64/s Northwest disasters The Pacific Northwest’s deadliest natural disasters, along with the just-ended heat wave, include a 1910 avalanche in Wellington, Washington, that killed 96 train passengers and rail workers, the 1980 Mount St. Helens eruption that took 57 lives, and the 1962 Columbus Day storm, which killed 46 in Oregon and Washington. Disaster Continued from A1 Heppner is proud of its proximity to the Blue Mountains, embracing the nickname “Gateway to the Blues.” In 1903, that gate swung the wrong way. Willow Creek emerges from the Blue Mountains southeast of Hep- pner. In the summer there’s usually not much water in the creek, which winds through the town. It trickles and meanders. Typically, notes The Oregon Encyclopedia, it “runs only ankle-deep by mid-June.” Spring had been particularly warm and dry in the region that year. So while “cloudbursts” were known to occur in the semi-arid area during the summer, no one on Sunday, June 14, 1903, expected the skies to sud- denly darken and then open up with rain and — despite 90-degree weather — hail over an area “of at least 40 square miles and continuing with the Very hot with blazing sunshine INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 119° at Death Valley, CA National low: 38° at Leadville, CO Precipitation: 2.43" at Spring, TX FIRE INDEX High Extreme Very high Extreme Very high 95° 56° NATIONAL Umatilla 100/64 Rufus Hermiston 87/61 100/64 95/65 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 99/65 85/53 86/58 93/49 Wasco 94/53 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles Tillamook 93/53 92/62 96/61 Sandy 95/64 McMinnville 69/52 Joseph Heppner La Grande 82/55 Maupin Government 88/53 95/56 93/55 Camp 94/61 Condon 93/64 Union Lincoln City 91/60 75/55 96/53 Salem 66/55 Spray Granite Warm Springs 89/57 Madras 98/62 Albany 87/52 Newport Baker City 96/55 98/55 Mitchell 63/52 88/56 96/51 WEST: Mostly Camp Sherman 94/60 Redmond Corvallis John Unity sunny and still warm Yachats 93/55 97/52 87/55 Day Prineville 94/53 Monday. Mainly clear 63/53 Ontario Sisters 98/54 Paulina 96/60 104/67 Monday night. Mostly Florence Eugene 95/55 Bend Brothers 94/55 Vale sunny Tuesday. 66/54 91/54 95/59 92/53 Sunriver 104/68 Nyssa 93/55 Hampton Cottage La Pine 104/67 Juntura Oakridge Grove 92/51 94/54 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 101/60 90/54 91/57 Fort Rock 67/54 97/55 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 95/52 95/53 High: 104° 91/49 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Ontario Beaver Frenchglen Silver 65/55 93/59 95/53 94/62 Low: 43° Marsh Lake 97/59 Port Orford 92/50 95/52 at Meacham Grants Burns Junction Paisley 68/56 Pass 99/64 Chiloquin 97/54 99/63 Rome Medford 92/54 Gold Beach 99/65 101/64 65/54 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 99/64 95/65 95/55 96/63 64/52 94/55 Seaside 67/55 Cannon Beach 67/56 SUNDAY TRAVEL WEATHER Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 541-683-1577 WATER REPORT Bend Redmond/Madras Sisters Prineville La Pine/Gilchrist SATURDAY OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Rise/Set Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus New THURSDAY 87° 51° 98° 61° Clear and warm Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low WEDNESDAY The Oregonian A dam now helps protect Heppner from flooding. The death toll from the 1903 disaster is somewhere between 238 and 251. utmost intensity for more than hour.” Water and debris roared down dry, overgrazed rangeland and poured into Willow Creek, speeding it toward Heppner. The result, the Heppner Ga- zette later reported, was a “foaming wall of water” hitting the prosperous county seat at 5 o’clock in the after- noon. The town’s location, author Joann Green Byrd pointed out in her book “Calamity: The Heppner Flood of 1903,” turned out to be “a natural bull’s-eye for flash floods.” (A dam to head off flooding was finally com- pleted in 1983.) Devastation from the flood on that broiling Sunday was apocalyptic. Trees and telegraph lines fell. Houses crumpled and floated away. All es- cape routes, survivors said, had disap- peared in an instant. The roar of the water and debris blotted out towns- people’s cries for help. The death toll from the disaster ranges in accounts between 238 and 251 — in a town of about 1,400 peo- ple. Three of the victims were former Morrow County sheriffs. The day after the Heppner flood, a correspondent for The Oregonian arrived to survey the scene. The re- sulting account called Heppner “a city of the dead” and described rotting corpses strewn about the town and washed miles away. “Meantime,” the reporter added, “Willow Creek, as if to mock the dead, has returned to a purling brooklet.” Tropical storm barrels toward Florida; Cuba evacuates 180,000 BY ANDREA RODRÍGUEZ Associated Press HAVANA — Cuba evacuated 180,000 people amid fears Sunday that Tropical Storm Elsa could un- leash heavy flooding after battering several Caribbean islands, killing at least three people. The Cuban government had opened shelters and moved to protect sugarcane and cocoa crops ahead of the storm. Most of those evacuated went to relatives’ homes, while some people sheltered at government facili- ties. Hundreds living in mountainous areas took refuge in natural caves that had been prepared for the emergency. The storm’s next target was Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency in 15 counties, including in Miami-Dade County where the high-rise condominium building collapsed last week. On Sunday afternoon, Elsa was lo- cated about 40 miles south-southeast of Cabo Cruz, Cuba and was heading northwest at 14 mph. It had maxi- Joseph Odelyn/AP Antony Exilien secures the roof of his house in response to Tropical Storm Elsa in Port- au-Prince, Haiti, on Saturday. Elsa brushed past Haiti and the Dominican Republic be- fore taking aim at Cuba and Florida. mum sustained winds of about 60 mph, according to the National Hur- ricane Center in Miami. The center said the storm is ex- pected to gradually weaken as it moves across Cuba on Monday. “After Elsa emerges over the Florida Straits and the southeastern Gulf of Mexico, some slight restrengthening is possible,’’ it said. The storm killed one person in St. Lucia, according to the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency. Meanwhile, a 15-year-old boy and a 75-year-old woman died Satur- day in separate events in the Domin- ican Republic after walls collapsed on them, according to a statement from the Emergency Operations Center. Elsa was a Category 1 hurricane up until Saturday morning, causing widespread damage in several eastern Caribbean islands on Friday as the first hurricane of the Atlantic season. Among the hardest hit was Barba- dos, where more than 1,100 people reported damaged houses, including 62 homes that completely collapsed as the government promised to find and fund temporary housing to avoid clustering people in shelters amid the pandemic. Downed trees also were reported in Haiti, which is especially vulnerable to floods and landslides because of wide- spread erosion and deforestation. A tropical storm warning was in ef- fect for Jamaica and from the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince to the south- ern border with the Dominican Re- public. A hurricane watch was issued for the Cuban provinces of Camaguey, Granma, Guantanamo, Holguin, Las Tunas, and Santiago de Cuba. Some of those provinces have reported a high number of COVID-19 infections, raising concerns that the storm could force large groups of people to seek shelter together. Elsa is the earliest fifth-named storm on record and also broke the record as the tropic’s fastest-moving hurricane, clocking in at 31 mph on Saturday morning, according to Brian McNoldy, a hurricane researcher at the University of Miami. It is forecast to drop 4 to 8 inches of rain with maximum totals of 15 inches across portions of southern Hispaniola and Jamaica.