August 2008 very cold and cloudy

The daily weather log

Weather log August 2008

The second week of August was the coldest week of the year. Temperatures by day and night were six degrees below normal. In the whole month few temperatures were above normal. Only six days got above 20°, compared to the usual twelve. The very last night soared to nine degrees above normal.
However, no days or nights were particularly cold. Although the 13th was the coldest morning of the winter at -2.8°, it was only a little lower than -2.7° on the 11th and 20th (and also on the 12th of July).
Most days had very dry air, with morning dew points below zero. Despite that, there was a lot of cloud. The number of mornings free of cloud was only five, the fewest in ten Augusts.
There were nine rain days spaced through the month, totalling 31.6 mm.

 Comparing August months

Climate August 2008

All the mean temperatures (daily maximum, daily mean, and daily minimum) were the lowest for August in a decade. The mean was over two degrees below normal.

It was a frosty month. In ten Augusts, none had as many minima below -2° (6) or below zero (14) as this one, but August 2005 had more total frosts (21 versus 18) counting minima below +2.2° in the screen.
Mean humidity (morning dew point) was extremely low. At -0.4°, it was over two degrees below normal. In the decade, only July 2002 had drier air, with a mean morning dew point of -3.1°.
There were more cloudy mornings (55%) than in any August of the decade. Five of the seven cloudiest months of the decade have come within the last ten months: Nov ’07, Dec ’07, Feb ‘08, Jul ’08, and Aug ’08. All had 50% or more cloudy mornings, almost twice the decade median of 27%.
The rainfall total, 31.6 mm, is on the 46th percentile for August, and below the average (40 mm). Totals for several months together are much the same as a month ago, but the serious shortage has moved back to the six-month total. The total for 2 months (July and August) is in the 28th percentile, 3 months in the 41st, 4 months in the 25th, 5 months in the 17th, and 6 months in the 7th percentile . Rainfall totals for longer periods are normal.


Data. Rainfall data is from Manilla Post Office, courtesy of Phil Pinch. Dew point values before August 2005 are from Tamworth Airport 6 am data supplied by the Bureau of Meteorology. Temperature and other data are from 3 Monash Street, Manilla.

 

July 2008: more cloud, less frost

The daily weather log

Weather log July 2008

With 52% cloudy mornings, this was the cloudiest July (and the fifth cloudiest month) in a decade.
There were no long warm or cold spells, so the seven-day mean temperature scarcely changed until the cooler final days. Yet each day’s temperatures were quite different from the day before. Wednesday the 9th was the 4th coldest day of the decade. It reached only 9.8°, and Monday the 28th, at 11.3°, was not much warmer.
Five nights were warmer than 8°. They were separated by cold nights, but there were only fourteen frosts, the coldest, on the 12th, being 2.7°. Widespread fog on the 15th did not lift until 11 am, and there was thick fog in the valley on the 26th.
Eight rain days were scattered through the month. The wettest day had 9.4 mm, and the total was 33 mm.

 Comparing July months

Climate July 2008

The mean daily maximum and daily mean temperatures for the month were normal but, on the average, nights were warm. As a result, the mean daily temperature range, 13.6°, was the narrowest in ten July months. Sunny, frosty, droughty July 2002 had a range of 18.5°: more than 30% wider! (The month with the narrowest mean temperature range for the decade was June 2007, with 10.9°. That was also the cloudiest month.)

July usually has about 17 frosts. This month’s total of 14 made it the least frosty July this century. July 1999 had only 13 frosts, with none below -2°.
Humidity (early morning dew point) was normal for the time of year.
The rainfall total is not far below the average: 33 mm is in the 46th percentile for July. The total for this June and July together (98 mm) is better than usual: in the 52nd percentile of two-monthly totals. Not so good are the three-monthly total (112 mm) in the 30th percentile and the four-monthly total (132 mm) in the 20th percentile. Worse, the five-month total (134 mm) is only in the 8th percentile, due to the 2 mm rainfall of March. The six-month total is much better (in the 29th percentile). Rainfall totals for longer periods are normal.


Data. Rainfall data is from Manilla Post Office, courtesy of Phil Pinch. Dew point values before August 2005 are from Tamworth Airport 6 am data supplied by the Bureau of Meteorology. Temperature and other data are from 3 Monash Street, Manilla.

 

June 2008 warm, with rain

The daily weather log

Weather log June 2008

Most of June was very warm. The 7-day average temperature stayed three degrees above normal for the first three weeks. All five rain days came during that time. The first, with 38.2 mm, was the wettest June day in a decade. By the 4th of the month the average rainfall for June (44 mm) had already been beaten. Sadly, the total rose only to 65.2 mm, the same as last year. Around the rainy days the nights were about 7° warmer than usual, and humidity was high (morning Dew Points near 10°). There were frequent fogs, including one on Saturday the 7th that was widespread and thick, and lasted a long time.

The fourth week saw a return to normal June temperatures, with sunny cloudless days. Frosts came back, but there were only eight altogether instead of the usual thirteen.

 Comparing June months

Climate June 2008

This June was warm and humid. However, due to the cool, dry change in the fourth week, it was no warmer or more humid than June of 2005. The graph shows that June 2005 had very high rainfall. It was the sixth wettest June on record.

While this month had more cloud than usual, June last year was much cloudier, and had bitterly cold days – nearly five degrees colder! By contrast, sunny June 2006 had very cold nights, including 21 frosts.
The rainfall total of 65 mm is high. It is in the 78th percentile for June, and nearly twice the median value (36 mm).
The rainfall total for this May and June together (79 mm) is in the 38th percentile of two-monthly totals, while the three-monthly total (99 mm) is in the 23rd percentile. Being above the tenth percentile, these do not count as “serious” shortages of rainfall. The four-month total (101 mm) is a serious shortage: it is only in the 9th percentile. The five-month total is much better (in the 35th percentile). Rainfall totals for longer periods are all normal, that is, near the median.


Data. Rainfall data is from Manilla Post Office, courtesy of Phil Pinch. Dew point values before August 2005 are from Tamworth Airport 6 am data supplied by the Bureau of Meteorology. Temperature and other data are from 3 Monash Street, Manilla.

 

Summer 2007-08 was very cool,cloudy and wet

Weather log summer 2007-08

The daily weather log

Most summers recently have had one or two days over 40° and nights over 25°. Not this summer! The hottest day reached only 36.3°, and the warmest night 22.1°. Only 37 days went over 30°: half the usual number. Air conditioners may not have had much use!
The 7-day temperature curves show warm spells in the second week of December, and in the second and fourth weeks of January. Temperatures were then normal. The rest of the time they were well below normal.
Daily minimum temperatures were not so low. This made the daily temperature range small, especially during humid spells.
Humid weather (dew point 16°) came with rain in early December, mid-January, and early February. The air was rather dry (dew point 10°) at New Year and in the very last days of summer.
There were 33 rain days (normally 21). The longest dry spells were eight days from the 22nd of January, and nine days from the 20th of February. February the 6th was the wettest day, with 32 mm, and the summer total was high, at 311 mm.
It was a very cloudy summer. More than half the mornings were cloudy (over 4 octas) and many (18) were completely overcast. Only 13 mornings had a sky clear of cloud.

Comparing summer seasons

Mean daily maximum temperature and mean temperature this summer were the lowest in the nine year record. Mean daily minimum temperature was lower in 1999-2000, which has the next coolest mean temperature. While the cool summer of 1999-2000 had a large daily temperature range (15.6°) related to low rainfall, this summer had a very small daily temperature range (13.2°) related to high rainfall and cloud.
The mean daily maximum this summer (29.7°) is 3.3° below the nine-year average. The fall of over 4° from the very high maxima of the last two summers is dramatic.
Humidity was normal for the time of year.
For rainfall, this short record begins with the 15th driest summer (99-00, 125 mm) and includes the 19th wettest summer (05-06, 319 mm). This summer’s rainfall of 311 mm is 84 mm above the long-term summer average of 227 mm. It is on the 83rd percentile.
At 53% cloudy mornings, this summer season is by far the cloudiest of any season in the nine-year record. No others exceeded 41%.

Climate for summer 2007-08

Data. Rainfall data is from Manilla Post Office, courtesy of Phil Pinch. Dew Point values before August 2005 are from Tamworth Airport 6 am data supplied by the Bureau of Meteorology. Temperatures, including subsoil at 750 mm, and other data are from 3 Monash Street, Manilla.

Very cool January 2008

The daily weather logWeather log January 2008

The month began sunny and dry, but two degrees cooler than usual. Three rainy days beginning on the fifth brought high humidity and one daily maximum temperature as low as 24.4°. This is 9.2° below normal! Eight fine days followed, with normal January temperatures.

With a second rainy spell from the 17th to the 21st, days were again remarkably cool: five days were more than 8° below normal. In the dry fine weather that followed, all temperatures – maximum, minimum, and mean – were even lower than when the month began. They slowly rose to normal by the end of the month.
Humidity was normal for January: the morning Dew Point was 10° to 12° in the dry spells and 18° in wet spells, giving an average of 14.2°.
Rain fell on nine days. The wettest day, the 17th, had 17.2 mm, and the total was 65.8 mm.

 Comparing January monthsClimate January 2008

This January had the coolest days in nine years, and the second coolest mean temperature. This month’s mean daily maximum (31.0°) was 2.9° below the nine-year average (33.9°), and an astonishing 4.4° below last year’s figure (35.4°). Because the mean maximum was low and the mean minimum was not, the mean daily temperature range this month (13.7°) was also low.

Using Dew Point to measure humidity, January and February are Manilla’s most humid months. This month’s mean morning Dew Point of 15.3° is normal.

With 39% of mornings having more than 4 octas of cloud, this was a cloudy month, but not as cloudy as December (58%) or November (50%).
The total monthly rainfall of 65.8 mm is 21 mm short of the long-term January average. However, total rainfalls for the last 2, 3, and 4 months are all above the 80th percentile.


Data. Rainfall data is from Manilla Post Office, courtesy of Phil Pinch. Dew point values before August 2005 are from Tamworth Airport 6 am data supplied by the Bureau of Meteorology. Temperature and other data are from 3 Monash Street, Manilla.