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School Weather News 1999
From:
education@royal-met-soc.org.uk
Subject: MetLinkInternational Day 5
Date: Fri, 29 Jan 1999 22:37:23 -0000
Dear MetLink friends
What a difference a day makes! Yesterday, the weather seemed idyllic
on Tristan da Cunha. Then
up crept a weak front and gave our friends at St Mary's School some
rain overnight! Today, they had 8 oktas of cloud. The high pressure
they enjoyed yesterday (the South Atlantic subtropical anticyclone)
has slipped away eastwards and Tristan da Cunha is now close to
fronts and small areas of low pressure. These fronts are attached to
an area of low pressure (984 mb) west of Bouvet Island, which (at 54
deg 26 min South 3 deg 24 min East) is well to the south-east of
Tristan da Cunha (37 deg 6 min S 12 deg 20 min W).
Over southern Africa, the satellite images show lots of fuzzy white
patches, indicating cumulonimbus clouds, which is pretty typical of
late January in this part of the world.
Peterhouse found 21 mm of
rain in their gauge this morning. The wettest places in southern
Africa appear to have been Mozambique and Natal. Like yesterday, a
broad coastal strip of Namibia had virtually no cloud. Once again, I
wonder if a sea breeze circulation was responsible?
Zimbabwe,
Zambia and Madagscar: please will you give us
statistics of average temperatures of
average temperatures and rainfalls in January for your parts of the
world?
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RESPONSE TO ZAMBIA RAINFALL QUESTION >>>>
Date: Mon, 1 Feb 1999 19:41:46 -0000
Here is a response to a question I asked in my report on Day 5. It's from Augrey Malambo, Banani School, in Zambia.
A word about average temperatures and rainfall in January in this part of the world. Zambia is a warm country and hence average daily temperatures at this time of the year are around 23/24 degrees. The normal day temperatures average around 26 degrees while night temperatures are around 17 degrees. Rainfall in a day averages 20 mm, particularly in the northern parts of the country where it is not abnormal to have over 60 mm in a day. Some places even have higher rainfall readings at this time of the year particularly between January and February when the ITCZ is either over Zambia or further in the south. The southern parts of the country including the valley areas such as the Zambezi and Luangwa valleys, however, are drier comparatively.
When the rains are this high at this time of the year, many parts of the country experience many problems in terms of transport. Roads become impassable because of mud in places without tarred roads (rural areas particularly) and in urban centres the roads develop big pot holes that at times are only filled in or mended after the rainy season. This problem is already common this season because the country seem to have received more rains than in the past few years (this is according to the weather reports on TV and radios, and personal visits to various areas of the country). We truly don't know what our roads will look like by the time the rains end at the end of March or beginning of April. On the part of farmers, complaints are that the high rains received so far are destroying crops because the fertility of the soils has been drastically affected despite applying chemical and biological manures. Please take it that, on the overall, Zambia is wetter this year than the past few years.
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The ITCZ was quite well defined today (see
DTOT Meteosat Image below), but notice
how patchy it was. It's never as continuous as shown in the text
books.
As the observations from
Tarragona and
Malta show, the weather
over the western part of the Mediterranean today has not been as nice
as the summer holiday brochures show. There were cool west or
north-west winds and, for Malta, showers and quite strong winds,
which reached gale force at times. The area of low pressure which was
centred over the Ligurian Sea a few days ago is now centred over the
Ionian Sea, between Sicily and Greece. Thus, it is centred not far to
the east of Malta.
Pressure has been rising over the British Isles, to more than 1030
mb, but that has not brought much sunshine. Indeed, there has been a
lot of mist, cloud and drizzle from weak fronts. During my drive back
to Cardiff from Reading this afternoon (1530-1730 GMT), I had to use
the windscreen wipers of the car almost all the way, because of
drizzle. The wettest parts of Europe today appear to have been
Switzerland, southern Germany, Rumania and western Bulgaria, and snow
has fallen over western Russia.
The weather has not been quite as cold in northern Finland and
northern Sweden today as it was yesterday, but it has still been
bitterly cold by most people's standards. The flow of air from the
east appears to be weakening, however, to be replaced by air from the
west. I therefore expect much higher temperatures than of late to be
reported from Finland and Sweden in the next few days. Perhaps the
cars will soon stop behaving like kangaroos!!
That's all for today. I look forward to receiving your observations
next week.
Best regards Malcolm
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