Fog Can Form Within Central Valley, Mountain Valleys and at Highest Peaks
MARYSVILLE – Caltrans is reminding motorists to plan for extra travel time and remember safe driving tips for foggy conditions this holiday season.
Throughout the fall, winter and early spring, the Central Valley often finds itself shrouded in thick ground fog, better known as Tule fog, which emerges after rains saturate the soil.
Foggy conditions can form along the Sierra Nevada within mountain valleys in a similar fashion. At the higher peaks, fog can also form when moist winds blow toward a mountain and cause the air to rise and cool.
The National Weather Service forecast includes the potential for valley fog Saturday morning but less extensive than this morning due to increasing northly winds.
Nearly three in four fog-related traffic collisions are connected to motorists driving too fast, statistics indicate. These collisions also result in the highest fatality rates.
To help motorists navigate safely through foggy conditions, Caltrans offers these driving tips:
- Reduce your speed to ensure a safe stopping distance.
- Drive with headlights on low beam. Never drive with only the parking lights or fog lights on and avoid using high beams in fog.
- Use extra caution when crossing traffic or busy intersections, especially in dense fog. Lower your window and listen for traffic you can't see.
- Use windshield wipers and your defroster to improve visibility.
- Be patient and don't pass long lines of traffic.
- Use the “fog line” on your right shoulder as a guide.
- Avoid stopping along the freeway or highway shoulders.
- When looking to exit, the solid white line on the shoulder will veer to the right, breaks for a few feet, and then resumes along the ramp. Also, highways prone to fog will have markers that follow a 3-2-1 dot countdown pattern to let motorists know there is an exit ahead. On the right shoulder, drivers will see three reflective markers 2,100 feet before the exit, two markers at 1,400 feet and one marker at 700 feet.
Caltrans District 3 is responsible for maintaining and operating 4,385 lane miles in 11 Sacramento Valley and Northern Sierra counties. Caltrans reminds motorists to “Be Work Zone Alert” and slow in construction zones for the safety of travelers and crews performing these improvements.