Perhaps, if we don't lose another wicket soon ...Richard wrote:Spoke to soon i think RupertRWood wrote:
Given that NZ looks to be sliding to defeat at present, some rain might not be a bad thing at all.

Perhaps, if we don't lose another wicket soon ...Richard wrote:Spoke to soon i think RupertRWood wrote:
Given that NZ looks to be sliding to defeat at present, some rain might not be a bad thing at all.
Fair comment but the intensity of the rain wouldn't be the only factor ... stability and steepness of the terrain would also play a part. I think the reading has to stay in the realms of "possible" for the meantime.Manukau heads obs wrote:it was only a 'Farmers Rain Gauge"
but when you saw the damage from the flash flooding...trees ripped out of gullies,fences buried under metres of silt, whole hill sides slipped away, you could understand then how much rain fell in such a short time
I recorded 150mm in 1.5 hours ...but 5 minutes up the road it was even heavier (as evident by more numerous slips)
Yes, a good record there. For the event around 24 February 1971 (New Plymouth's record flood) they don't mention the huge 2-day fall Stratford Mountain House, at the time a NZ record (over 800mm).Manukau heads obs wrote:good info here about the pukekohe floods (and others)
http://www.nzextremerainfalls.com/
states there that pukekohe got the 160mm in just over 2 hours
I had only a 50mm rain gauge (Nylex (not a wedge type) and had to go out and check it and empty it numerous times...it was after that I investigated recorded the rain on a computer
Yes, our warm 18C dewpoint weather is more like their late October/ November weather.Dean. wrote:Over xmas we had 30 degree temps with dewpoints 24 on the Gold Coast,tropical figures.
So do IManukau heads obs wrote:I remember the KeriKeri floods and the old Kent house
Tim and I were commenting on that year whilst chasing recently. Would be great to have a similar setup.treetop wrote:Thursday and Friday looking better,not much shear either at the mo. May get 2/3 days of surface convective toughs moving NW through the Waikato. I remember 5 days in a row 3 years ago with over 50,000 strikes a day. Well something to hope for anyway, gettin frustrated now !
GFS is flip flopping a lot atm.treetop wrote:Thursday and Friday looking better,not much shear either at the mo. May get 2/3 days of surface convective toughs moving NW through the Waikato. I remember 5 days in a row 3 years ago with over 50,000 strikes a day. Well something to hope for anyway, gettin frustrated now !
MetService - Thunderstorm Outlook
Valid to: Midnight Tuesday 13 Jan 2015
Issued at: 8:35am Tuesday 13 Jan 2015
Daytime cloud buildups are expected to produce scattered afternoon and evening showers and a few thunderstorms about the central and eastern North Island, and possibly inland Marlborough.
The main risk of thunderstorms is about inland parts of Gisborne and Hawkes Bay,also eastern Taupo and the Rotorua district, but a lower risk covers many other North Island areas from Coromandel Peninsula to Wairarapa, and also the Kaikoura Ranges, as indicated on the chart.
Any thunderstorms that develop will be slow moving, and therefore have the potential to produce localised heavy rain or downpours. Rainfall rates should mostly be in the 10-25mm/hr range, but there is a low risk of higher rainfall rates of 25-40m/hr in one or two places. Rainfall rates of this intensity can cause surface flooding and make driving conditions hazardous.
No thunderstorms or significant convection expected elsewhere.