Donald Trump managed to flip some traditionally blue counties in other states but lost in Orange County, a historically conservative stronghold that’s turning bluer.

Hillary Clinton snagged 401,577 votes countywide (49 percent), compared to Trump’s 361,121 (44 percent), according to results posted Friday morning. Third-party candidates Gary Johnson, Jill Stein and Gloria Estela combined got 43,293 votes (4 percent).

Roughly a third of Orange County ballots remain uncounted, and final results likely are weeks away, but here are some takeaways so far:

Voter turnout higher than expected

The voter turnout rate fell sharply in some parts of the nation, according to early estimates. However, Orange County voters bucked that trend and had a strong showing. Roughly 80 percent of registered voters cast a ballot, a first since 1976.

Trump vs. Clinton

Among Orange County’s largest precincts with more than 2,000 registered voters:

Trumpland: Yorba Linda

Much of this conservative North County city voted Trump, but this precinct, an equestrian neighborhood that straddles Yorba Linda Boulevard near the Nixon library, went redder than any other large precinct in the county; Trump got 812 votes (67 percent) and Clinton got 360 (29 percent).

University of Clinton, Irvine

The University Hills neighborhood just south of UCI’s campus, largely populated by professors and other faculty, was the bluest among large precincts in the county. Clinton got 1,163 (88 percent) and Trump got 103 (7 percent).

The purplest neighborhoods

The hundreds of ballots cast in this precinct were evenly split between Clinton and Trump, 315 to 315, making this neighborhood near Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa the purplest in Orange County.

It was the same deadlock just a few blocks away, at this smaller precinct next to South Coast Plaza; Clinton and Trump votes were split 202 to 202.

One tiny precinct goes Green

Green Party nominee Jill Stein received 100 percent of the vote in this precinct, an industrial sliver of Santa Ana at Dyer Road and the 55 where six people were registered to vote and only two did – both for Stein. This was the only third-party victory in Orange County.

Some in Coto chose nobody

In this neighborhood that hugs Coto de Caza Drive, a little over 7 percent of voters left the presidential candidate section on their ballots blank, making this precinct evidently one of the least impressed with any presidential candidate.

Source: Orange County Registrar of Voters