Hey Phil, Great Job! This climate watch is a great help with managing my small beef cattle property in Lower Barrington. The weekly red/blue, Hi/Low, boxes and the view of the deep southern ocean, along with the climate modelling are really good. Compare your appraisal/description of the next month with the BOM "July to Sept" outlook for Oz. While the BOM is good, it doesn't drill into the driving factors influencing our short and longer range weather. It is good explaining the El Nino/La Nina, but what about the "Indian Ocean Dipole" (IOD), and especially the "Southern Oscillation Index" (SOI). I know the SOI can change fortnightly but combining it with the Hi/Low map would give us some indication of it's affects over time. Please include. Alan
Your comment about how easy it is to exceed average rainfall in some locations, reminded me of 1974... (1st year of High School for me) In Peterborough, in the Upper Mid North of South Australia... (not quite the outback or desert areas but close). On the 1st & 2nd days of the school year, we received something like 2 1/2 times our average annual rainfall in 36 hours... When your average is approximately 9 inches (230mm) it's relatively easy to get that up to 22 1/2 inches (570mm)... *BUT IN 2 DAYS?*
This is so useful for planning how we keep our bees this month
surely these weather conditions are typical of the roaring forties wind flow which has been around forever and a day.
Thank you for all your work and graphics and science into all of this. Its raining a little in Christchurch now. Keep warm and take care.
Watch out for the Romulans in the neutral zone!😅 El Narnia, double😅.
Stormy with a chance of squares and rectangles
Hey Phil, Great Job!
This climate watch is a great help with managing my small beef cattle property in Lower Barrington. The weekly red/blue, Hi/Low, boxes and the view of the deep southern ocean, along with the climate modelling are really good. Compare your appraisal/description of the next month with the BOM "July to Sept" outlook for Oz. While the BOM is good, it doesn't drill into the driving factors influencing our short and longer range weather. It is good explaining the El Nino/La Nina, but what about the "Indian Ocean Dipole" (IOD), and especially the "Southern Oscillation Index" (SOI). I know the SOI can change fortnightly but combining it with the Hi/Low map would give us some indication of it's affects over time. Please include. Alan
Park that high on up. Keen for some 'no chance of rain' days.
Thanks Phil, it’s been a while since we have had colder than average temperatures.
cheers phil and team aprecite your work
"Map by NZ Taxpayer" Haha, nice one guys !
Excellent thank you.
Your comment about how easy it is to exceed average rainfall in some locations, reminded me of 1974... (1st year of High School for me)
In Peterborough, in the Upper Mid North of South Australia... (not quite the outback or desert areas but close). On the 1st & 2nd days of the school year, we received something like 2 1/2 times our average annual rainfall in 36 hours...
When your average is approximately 9 inches (230mm) it's relatively easy to get that up to 22 1/2 inches (570mm)... *BUT IN 2 DAYS?*
Yes exactly!!!! One big downpour and boom, there goes your annual numbers!
Very interesting and well presented. Thanks Phil.
❤️ this show!!👍👍🥂🥂👍👍
Brrr yeah, thanks Philip
Legend
Thanks I’m learning from your forecast. Very enjoyable
Thank you.
That’s brilliant thanks!!🎉
Roll on summer. Everyone I know is immunocompromised
Vax up
@@chrisscott558 I'll pass
@@chrisscott558 I dose up on D3, Zinc and C. Works a treat. 66, not vaxed, and I never get sick.
Next update 1/8/24 Christmas in August
How about talking about the sun and planets controlling the weather?
Why? Read a Solar physics journal.
That's all redundant and irrelevant since they built the HAARP (s)
@@PharCanal_007 Conspiracy theory nonsense.
🤨
have a look into the number .33
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
First it was the Twilight Zone
Now it is the Neutral Zone
Along with the pesky Romulans
I thought we were getting warmer 🤪