Don't
mention the herd of elephants in the room!
Here
we are - what we all know to be true, but without any reference to
abrupt climate change or that this is a worldwide phenomenon.
For these idiots it's all good news. That's what happens when you have a climate change sceptic reporting.
For these idiots it's all good news. That's what happens when you have a climate change sceptic reporting.
Temperatures
have been 0.9 -1.0C above the mean and remember, swe're surrounded by all that ocean
Yesterday
i saw a report of two Dutch scientists skiiing in their underwear in
the Canadian Arctic becuase it was so hot and then going missing
because, presumably, they fell through the thin ice
NZ: Mild winter to follow golden summer
Climate
scientists have good news for those mourning the end of the golden
summer, with a mild winter predicted for the entire country
And for the bland report from NIWA
Overview
April
2015 gave New Zealand its first real taste of winter for the year,
with a polar outbreak in the middle of the month that saw
temperatures plummet nationwide, and brought snowfall to very low
elevations for southern parts of the South Island. Overall, the
month was characterised by air pressures which were higher than
normal to the northeast of New Zealand and south of Australia. This
pressure pattern resulted in a weak north-westerly flow anomaly
across the North Island and a weak south-easterly flow anomaly over
the South Island. The northward retreat of the subtropical belt
of anticyclones allowed numerous fronts to pass over the country
during the month, and these delivered bouts of heavy rain to many
parts. It was particularly wet for southern, central and
western parts of the North Island where rainfall totals for the month
were well above normal (> 149% of the April normal).
Rainfall was either above normal (120-149% of April normal) or well
above normal for western and northern parts of the South Island, and
eastern and inland parts of Canterbury south of Christchurch.
In contrast, it was a very dry month for Northland, Gisborne,
northern Hawke’s Bay and coastal North Canterbury where April
rainfall was well below normal (< 50% of the April normal) or
below normal (50-79% of the April normal). Rainfall was near
normal (80-119% of the April normal) for remaining areas of the
country. Such contrasting rainfall was reflected in soil
moisture levels that differed considerably between different regions
of New Zealand. As of 1 May 2015, soils were notably drier than
normal for Northland and northern Auckland, Gisborne, Hawke’s Bay,
coastal Wairarapa and eastern parts of North Canterbury. Soils
were wetter than normal in parts of Waikato, Taranaki,
Manawatu-Whanganui, eastern Mid-Canterbury, the Mackenzie Country and
western Southland. Elsewhere, soil moisture levels were nearer
to normal for this time of year.
Despite
the polar outbreak in mid-April, it was a mild month overall, with at
least above average temperatures (0.51-1.20°C above the April
average) for the majority of the country. The exception was
south-eastern parts of the South Island, inland parts of Canterbury
and western parts of Waikato where temperatures were typically near
average (between -0.50°C to +0.50C of the April average). It
was a particularly warm month for West Coast, eastern parts of
Canterbury north of Ashburton, Kapiti Coast, Manawatu-Whanganui and
Taranaki where temperatures were well above average (> 1.20°C
above the April average). The nation-wide average temperature
in April 2015 was 14.1°C (0.9°C above the 1981-2010 April average
from NIWA’s seven station temperature series which begins in
1909)[1].
It
was a sunny month for Northland and Dunedin where April sunshine was
above normal (110-125% of the April normal). Remaining parts of
the country weren’t so lucky, and received either near normal
(90-109% of the April normal) or below normal (75-89% of the April
normal) sunshine.
Further Highlights:
- The highest temperature was 30.4°C, observed at Cheviot on 7 April.
- The lowest temperature was -4.8°C, observed at Hanmer Forest on 15 April.
- The highest wind gust was 170 km/hr, observed at South West Cape on 7 April.
- Of the six main centres in April 2015, Auckland was the warmest and sunniest, Dunedin was the coolest and driest, Hamilton was the wettest and Christchurch was the cloudiest.
- Of the available, regularly reporting sunshine observation sites, the sunniest four centres so far in 2015 (1 January to 30 April) are: New Plymouth (1029 hours), Whakatane (1009 hours), Waipara West (972 hours) and Paraparaumu (970 hours).
Download
the full report:
Monthly
Climate Summary - April 2015 [633.3
KB]
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