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Originally published January 23, 2010 at 6:38 PM | Page modified January 23, 2010 at 8:16 PM

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California storm sweeps east after trashing beaches

After a week of powerful rainstorms left mountains of steaming trash and twisted debris on Southern California's beaches, the weather front moved east to bring floods and snowstorms to Arizona and New Mexico.

The Associated Press

SEAL BEACH, Calif. — The sky was blue and the sun bright for the first time in days after a week of powerful Southern California rainstorms, but all Victoria Macey could see was the mountain of steaming trash and twisted debris on her favorite beach.

"I'm completely shocked. From our house, all we could see was gorgeous clouds and then we come down here and there's so much trash, it's really sad," Macey said as she photographed a sopping plastic baby doll propped atop an overturned end table. "I can't believe how many shopping carts there are."

Similar scenes played out on beaches in Long Beach, Newport Beach and San Diego where the Los Angeles, Santa Ana and Tijuana rivers empty into the sea. Many surfers said they would avoid the water because of concerns about bacteria from storm runoff.

The mounds of soggy sofa cushions, rusted shopping carts, plastic children's toys, dented refrigerators and hundreds of plastic cans and food wrappers were just one calling card left by a week of rain that pelted Southern California and went on to tangle with Arizona and New Mexico.

About 35 miles north of Seal Beach, hundreds of residents who evacuated from wildfire-scarred communities in the San Gabriel Mountain foothills north of Los Angeles returned home Saturday to assess the damage and remove mud and debris from their properties. There were no reports of major damage despite widespread concerns about mudslides and debris flows.

About half of the 500 residents of a small western Arizona farming community who were evacuated after floodwaters swept through the town Thursday, returned Saturday. Muddied streets and damaged homes and businesses remained, and La Paz County sheriff's spokesman Lt. Glenn Gilbert said the community was in cleanup mode.

On Saturday, the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office said the body of Jacob Baudek, 6, who was swept away by rising by floodwaters in central Arizona on Thursday, was seen by hikers along the Agua Fria River and recovered from the riverbank.

At higher elevations, forecasters warned of blowing and drifting snow and issued winter weather and wind advisories for southern New Mexico, with heavy snow expected in the Gila and Sacramento mountains.

In Northern California, a rare tornado warning was issued Saturday in the San Francisco Bay Area's Contra Costa County after a trained weather spotter reported seeing a funnel cloud. The National Weather Service said the cloud was seen about 9 miles south of Oakley, but it weakened without touching down and the agency's warning expired.

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