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Post by jgtheone on Jun 1, 2018 0:36:56 GMT -5
Melbourne Airport May Summary:Average high: 17.2°C (+0.3°C) Average mean: 13.1°C (+0.5°C) Average low: 8.9°C (+0.6°C) Maximum high: 24.7°C (3rd) Maximum low: 14.3°C (3rd) Minimum high: 13.3°C (11th) Minimum low: 2.6°C (26th) Precipitation: 56.4mm (179.0% of normal) Precipitation days: 11 Sunshine: 126.1 hours (87.8% of normal) Highest wind gust: 74km/h from the SSW (11th) Overall a slightly above average month in terms of temperatures but cloudier and wetter. PWS weatherbox:
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Jun 1, 2018 0:41:01 GMT -5
You know what would be perfect? If you posted a pic of that empty parcel of dry dry land to go along with the May stats. June to have average high of 30C next?
I've got something better than that! Some real gonzo journalism!
Thanks, that was quite interesting actually and much better than a photo.
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Post by knot on Jun 1, 2018 1:31:03 GMT -5
Where are you getting snowfall stats from?Can’t believe fucking Gothenburg was almost warmer than us in our record warmest May. Insane warmth in Scandinavia. May was the record warmest, inching past 2015 in the final days. Also drier than average. Weatherbox and stats will come tomorrow with a list of records... For local regions, I know precisely when the snow falls and how much it falls due to reports from the regional councils, so it is undoubtedly accurate. As you are not within acquaintance of such councils, you haven't any access to these snowfall statistics. There is also this site—it displays snowfall statistics for Australian locations, ranging from down south in Antarctica, across the Southern Ocean's subantarctic islands, through the continent and all the way up to the Northern Tablelands. The way in which it classifies a "snowy day" is rather strict, mind you; sleet is not counted (unlike British snowfall statistics), so the figures may seem a little low. www.australianweathernews.com/snow/Snow%20days%20descending.htm
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Post by alphatier on Jun 1, 2018 1:38:09 GMT -5
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Post by jgtheone on Jun 1, 2018 2:20:17 GMT -5
Where are you getting snowfall stats from?Can’t believe fucking Gothenburg was almost warmer than us in our record warmest May. Insane warmth in Scandinavia. May was the record warmest, inching past 2015 in the final days. Also drier than average. Weatherbox and stats will come tomorrow with a list of records... For local regions, I know precisely when the snow falls and how much it falls due to reports from the regional councils, so it is undoubtedly accurate. As you are not within acquaintance of such councils, you haven't any access to these snowfall statistics. There is also this site—it displays snowfall statistics for Australian locations, ranging from down south in Antarctica, across the Southern Ocean's subantarctic islands, through the continent and all the way up to the Northern Tablelands. The way in which it classifies a "snowy day" is rather strict, mind you; sleet is not counted (unlike British snowfall statistics), so the figures may seem a little low. www.australianweathernews.com/snow/Snow%20days%20descending.htmThat's pretty cool, although I noticed that a lot of those stations have stopped recording. Shame, but it gives a rough enough idea. There's a section there for Birdsville, btw.
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Post by knot on Jun 1, 2018 2:34:19 GMT -5
That's pretty cool, although I noticed that a lot of those stations have stopped recording. Shame, but it gives a rough enough idea. There's a section there for Birdsville, btw. Aye, the weather was plenty more exciting back in the 19th Century; used to snow regularly or annually in places like Cowra, Cootamundra, Gundagai, Mudgee and Temora, with seldom or one-time falls in the likes of Cobar, Condobolin, Coonabarabran, Dubbo, Gunnedah, Inverell, Ivanhoe, Moree, Tullamore, West Wyalong and even a single fall in Bourke! Summers were generally hotter, too—especially for Central Western regions. 1836 held the heaviest snowfall and coldest winter in Australian history, it seems...makes even July 5th, 1900 look warm by comparison!
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Post by Babu on Jun 1, 2018 2:36:33 GMT -5
Wow. We should've had a Gothenburg vs Freiburg instead
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Post by Hiromant on Jun 1, 2018 3:02:40 GMT -5
Countrywide stats:
Average temperature: 14,4°C (4°C above normal) Record high: 30,5°C Record low: -1,2°C Precipitation: 17 mm (41% of normal) Sunshine: 408 h (148% of normal)
An exceptional month in every way. But then last May was very cold so this is well deserved.
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Post by Babu on Jun 1, 2018 4:18:53 GMT -5
Umeå got 17.7/3.0 (+4.3/+0.4). This failed to beat our record by quite a margin.
Sunshine: 405h (157%), and precipitation 16.6mm (47%) on three days.
Fucking Skellefteå got 19.5/5.1. They're not warmer on average yet even though they're a couple hours north, at a similar distance from the sea, they had highs as well as lows 2'C warmer than us. That's the definition of rediculous anonoly BOKE!!!
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Post by Babu on Jun 1, 2018 4:19:37 GMT -5
Countrywide stats: Average temperature: 14,4°C (4°C above normal) Record high: 30,5°C Record low: -1,2°C Precipitation: 17 mm (41% of normal) Sunshine: 408 h (148% of normal) An exceptional month in every way. But then last May was very cold so this is well deserved. Was 408 the average of all stations? What was the most sunshine?
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Post by Lommaren on Jun 1, 2018 4:28:15 GMT -5
Calculated a bunch of stats from the Open Data in advance because it was such a special month! Nyköping would've had slightly narrower diurnal ranges, I can't recall that 3.6°C low in the middle of the month and it wasn't 28°C here at any point, but anyway, probably extremely similar means.
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Post by Babu on Jun 1, 2018 4:53:53 GMT -5
^Kolmården got 22.2/9.7'C
Vindeln close to Tavelsjö got 18.8/5.1 (I disregarded a random -6.1'C on the 30th
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Post by Babu on Jun 1, 2018 5:03:17 GMT -5
Torpshammar managed a whopping 22.0/4.3 at 62.5°N
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Post by Hiromant on Jun 1, 2018 5:13:17 GMT -5
Countrywide stats: Average temperature: 14,4°C (4°C above normal) Record high: 30,5°C Record low: -1,2°C Precipitation: 17 mm (41% of normal) Sunshine: 408 h (148% of normal) An exceptional month in every way. But then last May was very cold so this is well deserved. Was 408 the average of all stations? What was the most sunshine? Yeah, 408 h was the average. I've no idea where to get data for individual stations, maybe Anhityk can answer that question.
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Post by Babu on Jun 1, 2018 5:16:08 GMT -5
Was 408 the average of all stations? What was the most sunshine? Yeah, 408 h was the average. I've no idea where to get data for individual stations, maybe Anhityk can answer that question. I'm curious to know the May record in the Baltics. If neither the Baltics nor European Russia has hit 437h of sunshine, Sweden has just set the European record
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Post by aabc123 on Jun 1, 2018 5:21:53 GMT -5
I'd assume Baltic States and European Russia were similar. Baltic states, west Russia were really warm but the deviations from average however, were not as big as they were in Scandinavia. Deviations from averages from Russki site pogodaiklimat: Moscow +3.0c, St Petersburg +3.8c, Murmansk + 3.6c, Daugavpils +3.0c. Riga, however had the biggest deviation, +5.4c Now the west: Frankfurt am Main +3.4c, Brussels +2.4c, Cologne +2.9c, Vienna +3.1c (in April Vienna had +5.0c). The Scandinavia: Oslo +4.8c, Stockholm +4.9c, and finally, a gorod geroy Gothenburg +6.0c ... In Võru: temperature daily mean 14.7c (+2.8c warmer than average), precipitation 18.1mm (average is 52 mm), sunshine hrs 392 h 54 min (average 261 h). Nice month.
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Post by aabc123 on Jun 1, 2018 5:40:38 GMT -5
Yeah, 408 h was the average. I've no idea where to get data for individual stations, maybe Anhityk can answer that question. I'm curious to know the May record in the Baltics. If neither the Baltics nor European Russia has hit 437h of sunshine, Sweden has just set the European record As for sunshine I have only data what infoclimat has. But the problem is that infoclimat often does not record the things correctly and thus, there are gaps and logically their sunshine hrs are certainly not higher than in reality but are rather lower. Emhi itself has complete information about sunshine hrs for each official station but this information is not freely available and they want money for it. From time to time I have asked (Emhi's) information about Võru (and as well i have had to pay for it). At least temperatures, recorded by infoclimat are more or less correct compared to EMHI's data.
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Post by Donar on Jun 1, 2018 5:59:23 GMT -5
Spent this month about equally at both places. 2.9 °C warmer than average (after a 3.8 °C warmer April and January) and average rainfall in Marburg. 3.5 °C warmer than average (after a 4 °C warmer April and a 4.4 °C warmer January), also significantly drier and sunnier at Frankfurt Airport.
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Post by sari on Jun 1, 2018 6:14:26 GMT -5
The second-coldest April on record, immediately followed by the second-warmest May on record. Amazing. Ended the drought too.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 1, 2018 6:47:21 GMT -5
Looks like all that sun was well overdue 👍 Most definitely! Now watch as Buxton gets 100 hours for June lol.
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