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Post by Lommaren on Mar 12, 2018 15:32:21 GMT -5
... because why not? I think we had a light drizzle here today for sometime because it was so humid and 2°C outside, but never saw any rain drops from in here. The levels of the Nyköping river is very much under control in spite of the heavy snowfall this winter, courtesy of extremely low levels last spring.
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Post by Steelernation on Mar 12, 2018 15:34:38 GMT -5
Haven’t seen rain since February That’s the ONLY good thing about this shitty pattern. Thunderstorms? Not until late April.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 12, 2018 15:37:12 GMT -5
Very drizzly all day today.
A good amount of rain fell on 9th-10th.
Before all that, most of the month's precipitation was in the form of snow.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 12, 2018 15:40:27 GMT -5
Haven’t seen rain since February That’s the ONLY good thing about this shitty pattern. Thunderstorms? Not until late April. Yeah can't say I look forward to cold late March rain, it tends to feel like November outside those days. Today was miserable enough with the fog and 95 % humidity as it was.
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Post by knot on Mar 12, 2018 20:02:11 GMT -5
SUBARCTIC DRIZZLE FUCK ME DEAD
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Post by AJ1013 on Mar 12, 2018 20:04:03 GMT -5
Got some rain today but no thunder.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 12, 2018 20:06:21 GMT -5
Chance of some rain tomorrow, will be a very cold variety presumably mixed with snowfall if it arrives. Nyköping is forecast 8 mm of precipitation tomorrow, so will be interesting to see what kind of type it'll be when it's so marginal around 1°C.
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Post by bizzy on Mar 13, 2018 16:46:29 GMT -5
We had thunderSNOW last week, and I’m sure that’s all the thunder and lightning we’ll see this year....
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Post by Deleted on Mar 13, 2018 16:48:15 GMT -5
I had thunder-snow on January 16th. Usually they only have one clap of thunder though. There's usually one occurrence each winter on average.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 13, 2018 19:57:50 GMT -5
Has Penrith had a dozen more since last time you mentioned them to compound the misery Beercules?
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Post by knot on Mar 14, 2018 0:41:05 GMT -5
Ofcourse they did, bunch of inbred penroids. Penrith is a bogan dump. The good news is that their Jan and Feb was cooler than here. Well, you're certainly not wrong about that! Chock-full of druggos and junkies, it is
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Post by P London on Mar 14, 2018 8:52:02 GMT -5
And bugger me sideways!!!
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 17, 2018 15:00:09 GMT -5
March is our driest month, but considering the normal amount of rainfall, this cold is going to make it way sparser than usual even under those weak sub-30 mm premises...
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Post by Lommaren on Apr 2, 2018 13:53:56 GMT -5
Basically hasn't rained for three weeks now but could perhaps happen this week. Since that's on the supposed double-digits days I really hope it doesn't though.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 2, 2018 15:10:11 GMT -5
26.2mm of snow/rain today now making it the wettest day of the year.
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Post by alex992 on Apr 2, 2018 15:19:17 GMT -5
Hasn't rained here since March 12, and we've only received 4.12" of rain this year so far when average to date is 10.21". Dry as shit outside, grass is really brown and vegetation looks really dried out.
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Post by Lommaren on Apr 2, 2018 15:23:00 GMT -5
Hasn't rained here since March 12, and we've only received 4.12" of rain this year so far when average to date is 10.21". Dry as shit outside, grass is really brown and vegetation looks really dried out. Does spring rainfall only arrive in heavy bouts? Both March and April in Miami are way wetter than here on average after all. Granted, here it's so cold it takes a lot to start a wildfire anyway until maybe late May. Hopefully something will come around to Miami soon, because it sounds badly needed. Would you say the place gets even more vulnerable to drought due to the high annual rainfall than mediterranean climates and plants used to torrential rainfall, when your dry season "goes wrong"?
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Post by alex992 on Apr 2, 2018 15:30:34 GMT -5
Spring rainfall tends to be squally thunderstorms from cold fronts, or a low pressure coming from the Gulf. Low pressure from the Gulf aren't too common in April, and cold fronts become more rare. Hence it being the driest month (in terms of rainfall days). Easterlies can produce sporadic rain fall in early spring but not as much as when we have warmer water in late fall or early winter.
Late spring is when wet season starts here (second half of May) and by then rain becomes much more common as well as thunderstorms. Drought conditions tend to be subside in late May.
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Post by chesternz on Apr 3, 2018 7:52:07 GMT -5
45 mm in downtown Bangkok this morning but only a few mm in most other parts.
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Post by urania93 on Apr 3, 2018 8:11:08 GMT -5
In here today we've got about 9.5 mm of rain, I haven't heard any thunder but in some moments it looked like a quite intense rain shower. In warmer years than this it would not be so strange to see some thunderstorm in this period of the year actually.
On the other hand, the rain pattern during the previous months was really weird in comparison with the norm (really dry autumn and a really rainy January, locally involving thunderstorms too) so the rainy days of the last couple of weeks are among the most seasonal weather conditions I've seen in the last 6 months or so.
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