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Old 03-12-2024, 03:44 AM
 
Location: Corryong (Northeast Victoria)
901 posts, read 352,212 times
Reputation: 264

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Quote:
Originally Posted by greysrigging View Post
Australia's largest sheep station underwater
( source: Weatherzone www.weatherzone.com.au )

Record West Australian rainfall has closed the Eyre Highway that links Perth to the eastern states and flooded outback stations, including Australia’s largest sheep station Rawlinna.

Just two days ago, we ran a story here at Weatherzone with the headline "Colossal rainfall over the Nullarbor", and again, extremely heavy rain has fallen over the Nullarbor Plain in Western Australia.

The heaviest falls continue to be recorded in southeastern WA in the area centred around Eyre weather station – on WA's southern coast approximately 300 km east of the SA Border.

Since the deluge began late last week, the Eyre weather station, located at the Eyre Bird Observatory, has now seen:

11 mm in the 24 hours to 9 am Saturday

141.2 mm in the 24 hours to 9 am Sunday

43.8 mm in the 24 hours to 9 am Monday

129 mm in the 24 hours to 9 am Tuesday

That makes a running total of 325 mm in the 96 hours ending at 9 am Tuesday, which has absolutely decimated their record for the heaviest rainfall in any single month, which was 203.8 mm in March 1912.

Incredibly, it also means that Eyre has exceeded its annual rainfall average within four days, having registered 325mm from this event so far. Its average annual rainfall is 315.9mm.

Just north of the Eyre weather station at Rawlinna Sheep Station, the pictures tell the story.

The million-hectare station stocking 60,000 Merino sheep is known as Australia's largest sheep station and is roughly the size of the greater Sydney metropolitan region, but today it is starting to resemble a rapidly filling dry desert lake.

Station Overseer Craig Chandler even took to the kayak to rescue the station's chickens, paddling the poultry to safety.


^^The cause of this unusually heavy rain in one of Australia’s driest regions is illustrated in the weather chart above which shows an upper-level high pressure system centred over the Camerons Corner area at the junction of the NSW/SA, and Qld borders.

The upper level high is blocking the progression of systems from west to east, enabling a moisture-laden feed of air to flow from the tropics all the way across the interior of WA down towards the Great Australian Bight.

You can see the moist tropical flow indicated by the purply-pink colour, and rain continues to fall as we publish this story, with further heavy rain possible in the days ahead.

Note to media: You are welcome to republish text from the above news article as direct quotes from Weatherzone. When doing so, please reference www.weatherzone.com.au in the credit.
How very dry! -feeling parched just from reading it
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Old 03-12-2024, 05:20 AM
 
Location: Corryong (Northeast Victoria)
901 posts, read 352,212 times
Reputation: 264
Just made a comparison on Corryong's wiki page to show the general trend... wetter, with a massive increase in the January to March period (high summer). You can also see the pronounced warming in January, against the slight cooling in February.



I must note however that typical of new airport sites, rainy days are overblown to High Heaven on account of the Bureau's negligence in failing to distinguish between rain and dew. RH figures are nonexistent at the new site (imagine my shock).
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Old 03-13-2024, 02:21 AM
 
1,230 posts, read 731,689 times
Reputation: 1340
Check out the March + anomalies at Tarcoola and Ceduna ! ( South Australia )
These will drop back of course as we head into the second half of the month.


Tarcoola:


Ceduna:
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Old 03-13-2024, 01:58 PM
 
Location: Corryong (Northeast Victoria)
901 posts, read 352,212 times
Reputation: 264
Across southwest NSW and northern Victoria it's the hottest March since 1940. I'm not complaining because it is the height of summer we're talking about - we used to get March heatwaves very frequently in the old climate. And for once February ended up hotter than January (that hasn't happened since 2007). March being warmer than both Jan and Feb hasn't happened since 1943.

Last edited by WesterlyWX; 03-13-2024 at 02:14 PM..
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Old 03-14-2024, 11:21 PM
 
Location: New Zealand
406 posts, read 108,769 times
Reputation: 211
A cold change has just come through, and it looks like it's snowing up in the hills. A friend texted and said it was snowing where he was at, near gimmerburn (near ranfurly)
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Old 03-15-2024, 12:12 AM
 
Location: Corryong (Northeast Victoria)
901 posts, read 352,212 times
Reputation: 264
Quote:
Originally Posted by sandshark View Post
A cold change has just come through, and it looks like it's snowing up in the hills. A friend texted and said it was snowing where he was at, near gimmerburn (near ranfurly)
So a 400m snow level just off the height of summer. Struth,.
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Old 03-15-2024, 12:33 AM
 
Location: New Zealand
406 posts, read 108,769 times
Reputation: 211
Quote:
Originally Posted by WesterlyWX View Post
So a 400m snow level just off the height of summer. Struth,.
Yes, the makings of a genuine indian summer.

Too early to pull the plants yet.

Last edited by sandshark; 03-15-2024 at 01:11 AM..
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Old 03-15-2024, 10:59 AM
 
Location: Helsinki
12 posts, read 4,543 times
Reputation: 25
Was Monday's 47.2C in Vioolsdrif the highest ever March temperature in South Africa? If so, this would be a coincidence since highest March temperature in Australia (48.5C) was measured exactly five years earlier, also on Monday, March 11, in 2019.
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Old 03-16-2024, 12:53 AM
 
Location: New Zealand
406 posts, read 108,769 times
Reputation: 211
3 c here this morning reaching 20 c by midday. New snow on the hills, but not as much as two weeks ago.

Still no real rain yet, with the last seven month total about 30% of average.
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Old 03-16-2024, 02:16 AM
 
1,230 posts, read 731,689 times
Reputation: 1340
Quote:
Originally Posted by Poiponen13 View Post
Was Monday's 47.2C in Vioolsdrif the highest ever March temperature in South Africa? If so, this would be a coincidence since highest March temperature in Australia (48.5C) was measured exactly five years earlier, also on Monday, March 11, in 2019.
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