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Post by greysrigging on Sept 30, 2024 18:17:05 GMT -5
1st of October:- the official start of the Northern Australian rainy season.
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Post by greysrigging on Sept 30, 2024 22:17:09 GMT -5
The first day of the wet season at lunch time: And indoors ( living room )
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 1, 2024 1:12:41 GMT -5
Couldn't quite crack 37c before the sea breeze came in...
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 1, 2024 17:26:18 GMT -5
Brutal day out in Palmerston yesterday; Pilko's ( from PCOW FB Group ) dog struggling in the heat... looks like he is melting !
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 2, 2024 18:35:49 GMT -5
The Stuart Highway has reportedly been closed temporarily at Wycliffe Well due to a bushfire. Bushfires NT warned that wildfire activity in the area has increased, with heavy smoke impacting visibility on the highway between Wycliffe Well and Karlu Karlu/Devils Marbles Conservation Reserve. Active fire may also occur close to the roadside. Bushfires NT has asked motorists to avoid the area if possible, although some truckies have reported being able to pass through in the last hour. “If you are travelling in the area, please turn on headlights, slow down and follow all directions of police and emergency service workers,” they added. Conditions may change and drivers are urged to stay informed until threat is reduced. Updates can be found on the Bushfires NT incident map.
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 4, 2024 16:09:45 GMT -5
A few showers about overnight, but nothing in my gauge. Yesterday was a warm one in Darwin - 36.3c at 12.30pm.
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 4, 2024 16:23:39 GMT -5
I can't recall ever seeing 5 consecutive +36c days in a 7 day Darwin forecast !
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 5, 2024 15:30:49 GMT -5
Heat intensifying early in Australia's northwest ( Source: Weatherzone ) Heat has been intensifying early for this time of year in Australia's northwest this past week and is expected to continue doing so, prompting heatwave warnings. As of Saturday morning, heatwave warnings had been issued for part of the Northern Territory's western Top End, but can be expected to also be issued for larger areas, including across much of Western Australia's Kimberley. ^^Image: Heatwave forecast for Thursday 3rd October to Saturday 5th October from Bureau of Meteorology, indicating an area of Low intensity heatwave for the NT's western Top End surrounding a smaller area of Severe heatwave. ^^Image: Heatwave forecast for Tuesday 8th October to Thursday 10th October from Bureau of Meteorology, indicating two large heatwave areas of Severe and Extreme. Last weekend, Oenpelli (Gunbulunya), a good three-hour drive east of Darwin, achieved its first back-to-back 40-degree days in September in more than a decade. Since then, Derby, in WA's Kimberley has achieved its hottest week this early in the 'build-up' season in 11 years., averaging a maximum of 39.6 degrees. The so-called 'build-up' is the transition time between the dry and wet seasons, when daily sunshine hours reach their peak and heat and humidity increase. This sort of heat is more typical of mid-to-late October, so has arrived two-to-three weeks earlier than normal. Compared to this time last year, this past week has been the hottest week since early November, reaching the mid-to-high thirties each day. The heat has largely been due to skies staying mostly clear, allowing sunshine to continually heat the ground each day with help from a warmer-than-normal nearby ocean. The sea surface of the eastern Indian Ocean has been running warmer than normal by one-to-two degrees for this time of year, giving nearby land areas an extra heating boost. ^^Image: Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies from NOAA, indicating water about two degrees warmer than normal off Australia's northwest. A clue to the warmer-than-normal eastern Indian Ocean is the 28.3 degrees that Christmas Island warmed to today, its warmest day this early in the season in eight years. As far as the people on the ground go, most locals would be used to this sort of heat, particularly in short spells but may find the longer version challenging by later next week. For tourists, most are likely to find it tiresome so should keep out of the sun and avoid exercise in the heat of the day. Tours around Litchfield Park will become increasingly energy sapping with each day. Darwin itself will remain on the fringes of the heatwave, mostly in the area of Low Intensity, a relative oasis. ^^ 8 of the next 10 days in Darwin forecast to reach 36c !
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 5, 2024 18:35:52 GMT -5
The next 10 days out at Humpty Doo:
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 6, 2024 4:06:06 GMT -5
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 7, 2024 0:04:43 GMT -5
The Top End heatwave continues....
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 11, 2024 17:46:33 GMT -5
The first 12 days of October; the Airport is running at record levels for max temps.
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 12, 2024 4:41:20 GMT -5
Heat waving bye-bye to Australia's Top End ( Source: Weatherzone ) A heatwave affecting the Northern Territory's Top End for the past week or so is fizzling out, effectively farewelling residents and allowing them some recovery. Since late September, temperatures have been as much as two to three degrees hotter than average, consistently reaching the mid-to-high thirties. This might not sound like a lot, but in the northern tropics, anything hotter than normal without relief can have a cumulative draining effect. Weekly maximum temperatures have averaged as high as 40.8 degrees at both Bradshaw and Douglas River, 40.1 at Bradshaw, 39.9 at Tindal (near Katherine), and 39.8 at both Jabiru and Bulman. This sort of long-lasting heat has not been experienced in a few years in some places. It has been the hottest week in 10 years at Tiwi Islands' Pirlangimpi (averaging a maximum of 37.1 degrees), five years at Douglas River and two years at Bradshaw. ^^Image: Average maximum temperature for the week 5-11 Oct 2024 (BoM) For Darwin, it hasn't been so unusual, a week with maximums averaging as high as 35.1 degrees. Last month was hotter for longer, giving residents some handy experience. Looking ahead, a cooler change will take place but only gradually during the next several days. It will be helped along by winds turning from easterly to more humid northwesterly and cooling showers and thunderstorms, a typical trend for the end of the dry season, better known as the 'build-up'.
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 12, 2024 14:09:39 GMT -5
A cracker of a shot by a local storm chaser....
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 13, 2024 4:15:40 GMT -5
Storm radar looking good 300klm south of Darwin at Katherine/Tindal 20.2mm of rain at Tindal RAAF Base. And a substantial cool down after a 37.9c max temp.
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 14, 2024 18:07:35 GMT -5
Typical of Top End thunderstorms, some locations recorded heavy rain, others missed out completely Darwin Airport only 1.6mm and my place only 1.7mm, the first rainfall of the month.
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 15, 2024 13:50:43 GMT -5
Bit of a shower around the Desierto de Leanyer atm ( 3.50am ) *Edit:.. nice heavy rain ( thunderstorm )in the Northern Suburbs; 12mm at the Airport so far ( 4.15am ).
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 19, 2024 1:46:09 GMT -5
Isolated pockets of extreme heatwave conditions for the Tiwi Islands in the Northern Territory. Isolated pockets of severe heatwave conditions in the Top End and the remainder of the Tiwi Islands of the Northern Territory, parts of the Northern Goldfields, Upper Flinders and North Tropical Coast of Queensland and parts of the Kimberly in Western Australia. Low intensity heatwave conditions over the remainder of the Top End and the Gregory district of the Northern Territory, the Kimberley and North Interior in Western Australia, Cape York Peninsula, western Gulf Country and areas of north central Queensland including isolated pockets in the North Tropical Coast and Tablelands.
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 19, 2024 14:59:27 GMT -5
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Post by greysrigging on Oct 20, 2024 0:23:19 GMT -5
^^
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