Weather 'tis yet Spring
The weather at Carwoola has been a tad ordinary for the 10 days we have been back. Here are a couple of images from the Bureau of Meteorology radar pages to emphasise the point.
This first is a doppler image showing a pretty strong NW wind on 12 August.
Of course to get a doppler image there must be some rain for the radar to bounce off. Here is the equivalent conventional radar image showing that there was indeed plenty of rain heading our way.
This next image shows the display on my personal weather station. The key points are indicated by the arrows. The blue arrow marks the time (about 1am on 12 August) when the temperature drops about 6 degrees C (from 7 to 1) in a couple of hours. The red arrow shows 6am when the temperature has climbed back the 6 degrees in one hour. My expectation is that the first phenomenon marked the sky clearing while the second was when cloud rolled in with some warmer air behind it.
Similar radar patterns were seen on the 14th.
As I say the weather has been ordinary.
In the England the saying we used to use was "April showers bring forth May flowers". These showers are the equivalent of February and apart from the poor scansion of "February flowers ..." there is not a great deal that flowers in March in that country. Also some of the flowers here, especially those of a bulb persuasion, are getting their act together already.
Ain't they pretty! Less visually pretty are these Grey Butcherbirds.
Their call is IMHO one of the more melodious sounds around this area. As one of the birdswas, when initially spotted snuffling around in some dense foliage I am hopefull that they will nest close to the house this year. Possibly that will be less good news for some of the smaller, tastier species.
This first is a doppler image showing a pretty strong NW wind on 12 August.
Of course to get a doppler image there must be some rain for the radar to bounce off. Here is the equivalent conventional radar image showing that there was indeed plenty of rain heading our way.
This next image shows the display on my personal weather station. The key points are indicated by the arrows. The blue arrow marks the time (about 1am on 12 August) when the temperature drops about 6 degrees C (from 7 to 1) in a couple of hours. The red arrow shows 6am when the temperature has climbed back the 6 degrees in one hour. My expectation is that the first phenomenon marked the sky clearing while the second was when cloud rolled in with some warmer air behind it.
Similar radar patterns were seen on the 14th.
As I say the weather has been ordinary.
In the England the saying we used to use was "April showers bring forth May flowers". These showers are the equivalent of February and apart from the poor scansion of "February flowers ..." there is not a great deal that flowers in March in that country. Also some of the flowers here, especially those of a bulb persuasion, are getting their act together already.
Ain't they pretty! Less visually pretty are these Grey Butcherbirds.
Their call is IMHO one of the more melodious sounds around this area. As one of the birdswas, when initially spotted snuffling around in some dense foliage I am hopefull that they will nest close to the house this year. Possibly that will be less good news for some of the smaller, tastier species.
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