In Nome, which has about 3500 residents, Leon Boardway was working as usual Friday at the Nome Visitors Centre, a half-block from the Bering Sea.
"I just want to keep my door open and the coffee pot on," he said after it had begun to rain and the winds picked up.
But few people were coming by. Residents, visitors and businesses in the town, famous for being at the end of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race and the setting for the dredging-for-gold reality show Bering Sea Gold, were boarding up windows and otherwise bracing for the storm.
"The ocean is getting worse out there," said Boardway, 71, as he checked out the centre's webcam, which from its high perch has a good view of the swells.
"I hope everybody stays calm and everybody just gets in a good, safe position," he said.
Typhoon Merbok formed farther east in the Pacific Ocean than where such storms typically appear. Thoman said water temperatures are unusually warm this year so the storm "was able to spin up".
Meanwhile, a low-pressure system was expected to drop from the Gulf of Alaska and park off the coast of Northern California, producing gusty ridgetop winds before rains set in late Saturday, the National Weather Service said.
In the Sierra Nevada foothills northeast of the state capital of Sacramento, fire crews have been fighting what has become the largest wildfire in that state so far this year. While rain is needed, the storm was predicted to also bring winds that could spread the Mosquito Fire.
The storm will slow but not end California's fire season because fuels are critically dry and a period of warmer, drier weather will follow, said Courtney Carpenter, a National Weather Service meteorologist.
Forecasters said the weather system will spread rain down the state's central coast but little if any is expected in most of Southern California, where mountain and desert communities are dealing with the aftermath of too much rain.
Crews were clearing head-high mudflows in the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles, following flash-flooding Monday. Downpours from remnants of a Pacific hurricane caused devastation in Southern California, with winds topping 160km/h last weekend.
First responders found the body of a woman missing since the mudslides tore through her mountain town. Her remains were discovered buried under mud, rocks and other debris near her home.
The deluges added to road and infrastructure damage in desert national parks from the summer's punishing monsoonal thunderstorms.