The number of potholes reported around San Diego is up sharply over the past nine months, thanks in no small part to a wet winter that’s dumped more than seven inches of rain in the area since December.

San Diego officials received reports of 12,094 potholes between May 20, 2016 and Feb. 2, according to data provided by the city. Two-thirds of those complaints landed in the city’s inbox over the past two months — a period that’s seen the city receive a little more than two-thirds of its annual average rainfall.

Complaints racked up since May amount to nearly twice the typical yearly tally called in between 2010 and 2015. Crews spent, on average, 16 days to fill reported potholes. Workers needed around half that amount of time to fix a pothole in 2015.

Heavily-trafficked streets around San Diego International Airport and Valley View Casino Center counted among the most frequently reported pothole spots since 2010. Quieter residential streets in North Park, Mission Hills and Pacific Beach were among thoroughfares that waited the longest for a road rut fix. It took the city almost three years, between February 2010 and October 2012, to fix a single such pothole on Campus Avenue, near Park Boulevard in University Heights.