SOUTHWESTERLIES
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For today's weather discussion head to: New Zealand Weather & Climate
These topics are a read-only archive and may be subject to out-of-date information.
For today's weather discussion head to: New Zealand Weather & Climate
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SOUTHWESTERLIES
In Auckland when we get a SW we always get wind,cloud and showers no matter how light the flow is-With "anticyclone southwestelies what is the weather like generally around the country?(not those cold SW eg that Canterbury gets when its really a southerly over the country but the SW when a high pressure just sits in the tasman with a weak ridge to the NW of the country?)
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15 knot Southerlies
15 knot southerlies and mostly fine weather Huh?
Its about 25Knots from the southwest here today and is supposed to be mostly fine.
Well thats not the way either being almost overcast all morning,cold and now showers developing.
Its about 25Knots from the southwest here today and is supposed to be mostly fine.
Well thats not the way either being almost overcast all morning,cold and now showers developing.
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highest average here today was 20 knots, gusting to 27 knots
(that at a height of a 10 m mast, but at only 50 feet above sea level in a large open valley only 2km from the coast line)
i.e a strong wind
but it was so normal I didnt even take any notice.
this is the normal SW conditions we get here from the SW, with cloudy periods and at times threatening to spit with rain (which it did at one stage)
and yes i agree steven, could be a few brief light showers tomorrow...
The highest speeds I have recorded from the SW are winds averging 45 knots, and regularly gusting to 65 knots, with peak gust to 75 knots
now that is windy
(that at a height of a 10 m mast, but at only 50 feet above sea level in a large open valley only 2km from the coast line)
i.e a strong wind
but it was so normal I didnt even take any notice.
this is the normal SW conditions we get here from the SW, with cloudy periods and at times threatening to spit with rain (which it did at one stage)
and yes i agree steven, could be a few brief light showers tomorrow...
The highest speeds I have recorded from the SW are winds averging 45 knots, and regularly gusting to 65 knots, with peak gust to 75 knots
now that is windy
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Positive things about Stratocumulus
1 stops you getting sun burnt in summer
2 Not a rain bearing cloud. Won't wash the cricket out.
3 Holds up night time temperatures.
4 helps to keep summer temperatures nice and cool. Means the ice cream won't melt on the cone before you have finished it.
5 No sun strike when your out driving.
6 so many more reasons....
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No doubt the southwester spoils Aucklands weather. We have good shelter from the Sth and SE but really exposed to the SW which happens to be a prevailing wind direction, more in spring/early summer. We are a west coast climate. The other great Australiasian city that cops the southwester in Melbourne. I think they get it worse than Auckland.
And Adelaide too.
Personally I like the SW when it is unstable. I have observed Thunderstorms in unstable southwesters which makes them a good wind in my book.
And Adelaide too.
Personally I like the SW when it is unstable. I have observed Thunderstorms in unstable southwesters which makes them a good wind in my book.
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The sort of SW that give more thunderstorms are usually derived more from a southerly below Taupo when theres snow in Waiouru from them-The way this ones going due to the broadness of the high in the tasman will probaby bring a front then perhaps a NW flow then quickly back SW with frontal showers mostly to the far south,west and north and probably little from Northern Otago to Gisborne ,Nelson,Wellington,BOP.
The SW this time last year were more unsettled due to the low vortex rotating south of the chathams.
The SW this time last year were more unsettled due to the low vortex rotating south of the chathams.
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- Location: Hong Kong
Hey you blokes, we have a South Westerly blowing here in Shatin, HK at the moment also, but other details are slightly different: Temp 31.4C Heat Index 35.7C, RH 60%, 12.0 km/h fromSW, pressure 1004.2 HPa.
Summer's coming on all too quickly. And this'll be the fifteenth one in a row that we have goe through in torrid Hong Kong.
Just lend us a bit of that cooler stuff if you've got any to spare.
Summer's coming on all too quickly. And this'll be the fifteenth one in a row that we have goe through in torrid Hong Kong.
Just lend us a bit of that cooler stuff if you've got any to spare.
Phil
<><
International Christian School, Hong Kong
ICS e-mail: [email protected]
DrDisk e-mail: [email protected]
About me: http://www.drdisk.com.hk/PhilSmith/about.htm
Weather: http://www.drdisk.com.hk/cyclones.htm
<><
International Christian School, Hong Kong
ICS e-mail: [email protected]
DrDisk e-mail: [email protected]
About me: http://www.drdisk.com.hk/PhilSmith/about.htm
Weather: http://www.drdisk.com.hk/cyclones.htm
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- Location: Grey Lynn, Auckland
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Yeah, it's very murky and smoggy out there at present. I work in a place without any windows so I check the webcam at http://www.weather.org.hk/data/webcam/dclive_640.jpg every so often to see if the world still exists outside.
I mean the school classrooms have windows, but the Computer Lab I work in has absolutely none.
Regarding monsoons, our winter monsoon, which is sunny, cold and very dry, blows from the NE and we were having a late visitation from it yesterday.
The Summer monsoon tends to be moist and humid and blows from the SW. It's just getting into gear again this arvo.
We get typhoons (US = "Huricanes", OZ = "Tropical Cyclones") every year during Summer and Autumn to cool us off a bit. They can drop the temperature all the way down to 25C, but the humidity stays up there near 100% so without the wind there would not be much relief.
I mean the school classrooms have windows, but the Computer Lab I work in has absolutely none.
Regarding monsoons, our winter monsoon, which is sunny, cold and very dry, blows from the NE and we were having a late visitation from it yesterday.
The Summer monsoon tends to be moist and humid and blows from the SW. It's just getting into gear again this arvo.
We get typhoons (US = "Huricanes", OZ = "Tropical Cyclones") every year during Summer and Autumn to cool us off a bit. They can drop the temperature all the way down to 25C, but the humidity stays up there near 100% so without the wind there would not be much relief.
Phil
<><
International Christian School, Hong Kong
ICS e-mail: [email protected]
DrDisk e-mail: [email protected]
About me: http://www.drdisk.com.hk/PhilSmith/about.htm
Weather: http://www.drdisk.com.hk/cyclones.htm
<><
International Christian School, Hong Kong
ICS e-mail: [email protected]
DrDisk e-mail: [email protected]
About me: http://www.drdisk.com.hk/PhilSmith/about.htm
Weather: http://www.drdisk.com.hk/cyclones.htm
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