A winterlike storm that brought heavy rains and wind gusts up to 83 mph to the Bay Area caused damage throughout the region, including a mudslide in Oakland that forced a handful of evacuations and several reports of downed trees and power lines, resulting in power outages for least 100,000 homes and businesses.

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As of 5 a.m., the heaviest rains and strongest winds passed through the Bay Area, according to Brian Mejia, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. At 4 a.m., the weather service cancelled the high wind warning and the high wind advisory for all Bay Area locations.

“Typically we don’t get these types of storms in April,” Mejia said. “Typically this is something we would see in January or February.”

As of 5 a.m., 24-hour rainfall totals around the Bay Area include Santa Rosa 1.87 inches, San Francisco .92 inches, Oakland .83, San Leandro .61, Mountain View .59 and San Jose .35. Higher elevations, including the Santa Cruz Mountains, received as much as 2.66 inches, while the wettest spot in the Bay Area was the rural community of Venado in Sonoma County, which received 4.39.

The weather service recorded some staggering wind gusts in the Bay Area, including a high of 83 mph in Los Gatos, Mejia said. Other high recordings include Mt. Diablo 76 mph, West Los Altos Hills 72 mph, Saratoga 65 mph and the Oakland airport 62 mph.

“Those are some of the impressive ones we received,” Mejia said.

As of 6:30 a.m., 42,805 PG&E customers in the Bay Area were affected by power outages caused by the overnight storms, according to utility spokeswoman Jacqueline Ratto. The outages include 36,785 customers in the East Bay, 2,830 in the South Bay, 2,085 in the North Bay and 1,095 on the Peninsula.

Ratto said at least 100,000 customers were without power at some point, and PG&E crews had restored power to 75 percent of those affected as of 6:30 a.m.

Thursday night, some residents of an Oakland hills neighborhood evacuated their homes after a landslide in the 6700 block of Banning Drive. The slide directly affected two homes and forced seven homes’ evacuation as a precaution.

Heavy winds overnight brought down several trees and power lines throughout the Bay Area, including several reports in Newark.

At 5 a.m., Newark police issued a shelter-in-place for several neighborhoods because of downed power lines. Residents in the area of Colbert Place between Mayhews Landing Road and Nancy Place, the area of McDonald Avenue from the 5400 block to Sandalwood Street, the area of Shorehaven Avenue from Bettencourt Drive to Shorehaven Place, and the intersection of Blackwood and Lakewood Drives were asked to shelter-in-place.

Thursday night, a downed tree blocked multiple lanes of Highway 84 just east of Newark Boulevard in Newark, according to the California Highway Patrol.

Although the brunt of the storm has passed, scattered showers are expected throughout Friday, Mejia said.

A “weaker” second round is expected Friday night, “but it wont be as nearly as much,” Mejia said. Showers are expected through Saturday morning, and then dry weather is expected Saturday afternoon and into Sunday.