Sunday 14 January 2024

Birds of 14 January

 What it says on the packet!  We begin with my usual Sunday drive around the airstrip.  Very quiet to begin with, but then added (among other species) Spotted Harrier (not photographed), Black-shouldered Kite ...


and Nankeen Kestrel (in this case a female).


In the evening Frances commented on the antics of New Holland Honeyeaters in our garden which got my camera out again.
They really like Red Hot Pokers.

They visit Cannas as well but tend not to hang around.
A Little Wattlebird posed well.
The enemy: a Swamp Rat - also known as Tunneling Garden Destroyer


Friday 12 January 2024

Wedgetails and Clouds

 A family of 3 Wedge-tailed Eagles overflew the house this afternoon with a stack of cumulus in the background.






Note the out of focus Welcome Swallow top left, as well as second Eagle bottom centre!









Saturday 6 January 2024

Annual Weather Report 2023

 A rather damp year overall, with a very dry patch in the middle.  Overall a little warmer than usual due mainly to higher daily minima.  I have tried to talk about interesting matters below rather than a simple of recitation of orders of rank etc.  Enjoy!

A summary of kay data variables for the year, from my Weather Station is in this Google Sheet.

Rain

We ended the year with 1006mm recorded at my Davis weather station.  I also have a Nylex plastic gauge which agrees closely with the weather station.  I place that total in context it the table below, showing 2023 totals for a few other sites of interest to Mallacoota.  (I have included Bombala AWS as it is close to the source of the Genoa River.)
    Angophora Drive    1006mm
    BoM Airport              898mm
    BoM Gabo                 937mm
    Clarke St                  1198mm
    Bombala AWS          592.2mm

The first chart is a time series of annual falls at Mallacoota.  For 1981/2 and 1995 no monthly data is available from BoM as no information was collected in a few months.  For 1983/4 several readings are accumulations over more than one day so daily readings are misleading, but the annual totals are accurate.

Looking at the cumulative rainfall through 2023 shows quite reasonable falls until May when a very dry period commences, lasting until October.  A major rain event in late November and early December transformed the year from 'dry' to wet.  (The level of Bottom Lake in that time was higher than the author had ever seen it, including periods when the Mouth was closed.  Anecdotes suggest it was higher at other times - possibly before the BoM Airport site began operations - commenting, for example, that the water reached to the bakery steps.)
A second way of looking at the rainfall through the year is the progression of pro-rata estimates of the annual rainfall.  This process uses the average % of annual rainfall recorded to a date divided into the cumulative rainfall year to date.   (For example by 16 April, on average, we have received 26.496% of our annual rain.  In 2023 we had recorded 275mm of rain in total, so the estimate of annual rainfall on that date is 275/0.26296 = 1037.9mm.)  The next chart plots the daily estimates through the year from 18 January: as there was a heavy fall earlier in January estimates before that date simply expand the vertical axis.  The dry period from May to September is reflected by the steadY downwards slope of the line through that period.
My final look at the year-total material is the number of days with rain.  Again there are gaps in the record, in this case also excluding 1983/4 as the data for individual days in not complete.  I have no great insights from this!
Finally a view of this year compared with median monthly fall.  This merely shows the material referred to above.

Temperature

My overall assessment of temperature is the anomaly: the difference between the average temperature for Year to date  and the long term average temperature for that period.  The following chart shows the way that calculation evolved through the year, together with the daily difference between the actual average temperature and the long term average for each day.  The anomaly ends at +0.47C, so the year overall was warmer than average. 

Heat Waves and Cold Freezes

Both minimum and maximum temperatures are used in determining whether a heat wave or a cold freeze has occurred, since (eg) if a minimum temperature is not also significantly high there is relief from the heat.  It has proved a little interesting to investigate this: I have put some definitions etc in an addendum at the end of this report and the underlying data is in the page 'Heat Wave Data' in this Google Sheet.  

I have also included a summary of the number of significantly hot or cold days in the page 'Heat Wave Summary'.  There were only 7 Cold Days in the year not of them in an extended period.  There were 32 Hot Days, of which 7, in September formed a Hot Spell (3 of the 14 values were less than 1 SD above the long term average maximum for the month).

Minimum Temperatures

The next chart shows the long term mean minimum temperature and the actual minimum value for each day of 2023.  
I have also compiled a time series of Average Minimum temperatures for each year.  The simple linear trend appears to be close to showing an upwards trend.

Maximum temperatures

The next chart shows the long term mean maximum temperature and the actual maximum value for each day of 2023.  The hot spell in September, referred to above shows well in the 2023 data.
The time series for maxima has been adjusted to allow for the values in years before 2019 coming from the airport and thus being more impacted by cooling sea breezes than my Weather Station.  I don't think that explains the very low readings in 1995-96: in those two years nearly every month was below average and a very similar pattern is evident for Gabo Island (with even lower monthly values).  In plain terms, that was a very cold period.

Humidity

Very limited background data as the BoM releases next to no data without charge.    The key points shown here are:
  • the afternoon reading is usually (see below) lower than the morning reading  (on average the afternoon reading is 85% of the morning one;
  • there is no significant trend over the year (at least for 2023).  In other words the relative humidiity is constant across seasons.
I was intrigued about the relationship between the two readings.  As expected most of them are grouped closely together.  On the few occasions where 1500 is higher than 0900 (ie % >100) it is mainly because the morning reading is very low: for example on 20 Sept the morning reading was 40% under a Northerly wind and by the afternoon the wind was Southerly boosting humidity to 77% which is very close to double. 

Wind

Again no (free) help from BoM.  The first chart shows the daily run: note the horizontal axis labels approximate the first day of each month: with months of variable length its beyond my skills and/or pay rate to get them precise.
As the series peaks around the end of the year I have compiled the last chart on a year ending June.  The key lines are the red dots (polynomial of the AVG series) and the green dashes (first half of the current period).  
The current 6 months' readings are surprisingly low given the amount of storms we have had - possibly reflecting my WS poor exposure to Easterly winds.  However I have looked at the maximum gust recorded by BoM on Gabo Island for that period and the overall shapes of the curves are surprisingly (understatement) similar.






Addendum: definitions of Heat Waves etc

The BoM defines a Heat Wave as a period of 3 or more days of significantly high maximum and minimum temperatures,  I have defined "significantly high" as 1 Standard Deviation above the long term average temperature for the month in question.

I have also defined a Hot Day (HD) as a single day in which both min and max are significantly high, so my definition of Heat Wave is 3 or more consecutive HD.  The days within a Heat Wave are rated as Heat Wave Days (HWD).

In looking at data from month to month I have also found periods in which there are several HDs but with a day in which either min or max fails to be significantly high, thus breaking the series.  It is still an unpleasantly hot period! I have decided to define such periods as a Hot Spell with the constituent days being Hot Spell Days (HSD).  I have not yet developed rigorous rules for limiting the length of a Hot Spell but it must be at least 4 days, with at least 3 of them being HDs.  (If days either side of a Heat Wave would meet the conditions for being HSD they will be counted as such.)

The same thinking can be applied to low temperatures, although I am not aware of the BoM having done so.  I have come up with the following definitions:
  • Cold Day (CD): both min and max >1 SD below the long term average for the month;
  • Cold Snap (CS): a run of several days in which most of the days are CD;
  • Cold Freeze (CF): three or more consecutive CDs.

 






Wednesday 3 January 2024

Potential storm

It looks as though a thunderstorm may join us sometime soon.  (I have tried to encourage this by watering the vegetables: if nothing else I have made some space in the water tank.)  There were continual slight variations to this radar image all day but they kept dodging Mallacoota!

Quite a few lightning strikes but again dodged us.
There must be rain in a sky like that!  Not tonight, Josephine.


Tuesday 2 January 2024

Weather Report December 2023

 We are now supposedly in an El Nino period which according to the BoM 

"In Australia (particularly eastern Australia), El Niño events are associated with an increased probability of drier conditions." 

That usually also means warmer temperatures, as explained in this BoM sheet,  in which case we have 1 out of 2!   Another very wet month with very warm daily minima and mild-warm maxima.  (I haven't looked at the other attributes of El Nino listed by BoM, although in a light-hearted way will note that snow depth in Mallacoota was, as usual, 0.0mm.)

I will do an annual report in the next few days

Rain

We ended the month with 187.4 mm of rain (275% of the median) with non-trivial amounts falling on 12 days. 
In terms of comparison over time we are well over the median and the fall in December 2022.   
The total fall was the second highest recorded for a December since 1976, beaten only by the 211.8mm recorded in 2021.  The variability between years is obvious and there is no trend in these data.

Temperatures

The overall assessment of temperatures can be represented by the difference between the average temperature for the month and the long term average for the same month, referred to as the anomaly.  The next chart shows how the value of the anomaly developed through the month: in effect warming early in the month and then cooling towards the end.
I am compiling a time series of values of the anomaly since I started to calculate this statistic in 2020. I have also compiled a 12 month moving average (to remove seasonal factors) and applied a 4th order polynomial trend to remove 'noise' (or random fluctuations).  This appears to reflect the passage of the last 2 years of La Nina rather well.

Another way of looking at the overall temperature is by comparing the daily extreme temperatures with the averages for that day of the year.  
The chart has a few interesting features:
  • The current maximum series fluctuates considerably reflecting the passage of weather events, while the current minimum series is more consistently above the long term average;
  • There is (as would be expected) much less fluctuation in the long term series.
  • Both the long term series show an upwards trend though the month, probably achieving statistical significance in the case of the maximum series.

Minimum temperatures

The average minimum temperature for the month was 16.10C, the second highest value for December since my series commenced (the highest value of 16.22C was recorded in 2018.  Not surprisingly the 2023 value was well above those for 2022 and the mean.
Noting that all months since July have been above the long term mean offers an indication that at least some aspects of El Nino have been evident for a while.  12 of the daily minima were more than 1 Standard Deviation (SD) above the long term mean for the month and a further 12 were above the average but less than 1 SD above the monthly mean.  Only 7 days were below the mean minimum for the day.

A time series of average December minima shows no significant trend.

Maximum temperatures

The average maximum temperature for the month was 23.89C above the mean but well below the highest average recorded (25.3C in 2019).  It was also above the 2022 value.
It is a trifle problematic to make large statements about the older data (based on BoM data for the airport site, adjusted to make them more comparable with my Weather Station - WS - data).  Instead I offer  the chart below showing 5 years of data from my WS.  It is interesting that the only year with a hotter end was 2019.

Humidity

One word: muggy!  Another word: soggy.  Humidity levels were high through the month with only 2 days recording humidity below 50%.  The chart of readings at the 2 standard times is rather unusual with the 2 lines being much closer together than would be expected.
For both standard times the average relative humidity across the month was above average and the value for 2022.  THat applies particularly to the 1500hrs reading.

I wondered if there was a link between amount of rain and humidity.  The correlation coefficient was not great, at 42.8%, but the chart does show a vague coincidence of higher humidity (as measured by the daily minimum rH ) and rainfall.

Wind

Most days were reasonably calm although the passage of systems did give periodic breezy days (coinciding in most cases with spikes in maximum temperature).  The windiest day, with a run of 310km, was the 4th longest run of 2023 and the 32nd longest (of 1784) recorded at my WS.
Overall the month was quite calm with average run below the values for 2022 and the 5 year average.