Thanks to all for your feedback.
Dew point still high and with multiple troughs around the upper NI today, might get a rumble.
I see there is some interest with the SSW, so here is my 2 bobs worth as I see it at the moment. I tell you that it has now normalised in the stratosphere and the full impacts of the SSW have now reached the surface of Antarctica. The polar continent is still around +4c above normal and certain areas have reached a 20c + anomaly. One spot is 28c degrees above normal.
The zonal wind changes from the stratosphere into the troposphere can cause fractures and displacements of the sub tropical and polar jet streams. The high pressure ridge that is becoming stationery over the Australian bight is directly related to the SSW. It no longer has the steering of the Jets, it’s becoming surrounded and is becoming stationary. This can allow polar cold waves to launch east of the ridge into the mid latitudes….and NZ could be in the firing line.
As I mentioned in mid April, I have never seen a set up like this before as the sea surface temperatures are well above what would exist in July. Hobart just found out what this means with a 170 year May rainfall record smashed last Thursday evening due to extreme moisture advection off a warm Tasman which was triggered from a polar upper low which spawned the surface low and rain bomb. EC and GFS predicted around 20mm to 50mm for greater Hobart on the 00z run as the rain commenced. 125mm + fell. The big models had no historic precedence to refer to and got moisture levels so wrong.
I’m still not 100% certain of what the impact is on NZ but I was sure that the models would become randomly extreme in the 2nd half of May with the synoptics to follow. Attached is the yesterday’s synoptics of the conveyor belt of polar lows and the temps of Antarctica, no projections, just real data

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