check out the new remote control Jockey Wheel SmartBar Canegrowers rearview170 Cobb Grill Skid Row Recovery Gear Caravan Industry Association of Australia
Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: What's the weather like where you are?


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4444
Date:
What's the weather like where you are?


You beat me to it Chief, very similar here in Lavington, thunder lightning rain from all directions somehow, 47mm in less than an hour from 9.30pm. Just a brief blip of power out, but ABC TV out for 20 min or so, enough to lose the plot. 85% feewmidity this morning, worse than Qld from my memory.

__________________

Cheers Craig



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4601
Date:

Don't want to skite, but .....

28 degrees here in Brissy at 1045am real time.

Blue sky with a few clouds & nice breeze. 

A few light showers overnight. 

Humidity OK too.



__________________

See Ya ... Cupie




Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4444
Date:

another floggin early hours of the morning, worse in the hills

__________________

Cheers Craig



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 2812
Date:

Mount Barker WA.............41 degrees     edit- 42.4 now

Very unusual for us down South, guess what I've been doing all week? Very ironic, but it will come in handy soon.  smilesmile

IMG_5355.JPG



-- Edited by Bobdown on Saturday 5th of February 2022 04:34:31 PM

Attachments
__________________

Make it Snappy......Bob

 



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4444
Date:

Nice wood, obviously cut by Eddie ( Edward Woodwood)

__________________

Cheers Craig



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 2812
Date:

Craig1 wrote:

Nice wood, obviously cut by Eddie ( Edward Woodwood)


 A bit of a speech impediment there Craig......smile

Had a good week chain sawing and block splitting (arms are a bit longer now), and getting ready for the cooler months, then someone open the furnace door.

At least it will be nice and dry.

 

 



__________________

Make it Snappy......Bob

 



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4444
Date:

20200820_213833.jpgHow much wood could a woodchuck cut?, if a woodchuck could cut wood?



Attachments
__________________

Cheers Craig



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 7640
Date:

Is it summer ? Wearing a windbreaker down NSW south coast Culburra beach . Sun hasnt come out . Quite cold for this time of the year . Bro back in NZ is telling me they need rain and its hot !!

__________________
Whats out there


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5447
Date:

Boondall, a northern suburb of Brisbane 190 mls of rain from 6 am to 9.30 pm then another 182 mls to 6 am this morning.

A record of 372 mls of rain for us who have been living in Queeensland since 1985. We don't believe we have every had a day in Brisbane where the rain has continued no stop in a 24 hour period and I mean non stop. It is not damaging rain in Boondall with the excess water running down the large drainage system though our near by park into the huge wet lands which drains into bay.

Interesting times.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4601
Date:

Continuous rain here on Brisbane Southside, but it was far worse up at Somerset Dam where we had set up our tenting camp for a week of trapping of Redclaw.

The sleeping module on the Gazebo failed at 1am & I had to relocate the sopping wet bed to the other sleeping module.  Made a 'bed' from a dry tarpaulin for broken sleep until 3am when I was woken by water splashing onto my face.  

The gazebo had pooled water in the roof until its weight broke the frame which sagged to below waist level just outside my door.  Had to crawl out over the soaked floor.  A knife through the roof fixed that!

Packed up in the rain after retrieving the traps (20 redclaw, so failed there too).  Gazebo into the bin.

Turned out to be a good decision to leave.  The rain has only increased since we left & I expect that the area would be cut off by now.

That was the last tenting outing for this 80 year old.  Caravan only from now!



__________________

See Ya ... Cupie




Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1889
Date:

Glad your home safe and sound Cupie. I am sorry I laughed at your tenting adventure.

At our place on the south side of Toowoomba we emptied 198.6 mls at 11.30am on Friday and another 110.4 mls at 11.30am this morning and it hasn't let up here either so will see what's in the gauge in the morning.

As usual parts of Toowoomba are flooding. A lot of work was done after January 2011 to minimize flooding but there is only so much that can be done. A lot of people cannot understand how we can flood up here on the top of the range, but we have two creeks running through the city from the south side and they meet just north of the CBD.

Disaster again down the bottom of the range with flood waters through Withcott and Grantham. I bet all those who took up the council offer, after 2011, of the land swap at Grantham to higher ground are glad they did. I lived down in Gatton during the 1974 floods and remember how the Lockyer Valley fills up with water.

Stay safe everyone. Cheers.

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5447
Date:

Boondall Qld.  Second day of continual rain, 308mls of rain in the last 24hrs.

Total for the week 780mls, the old rain gauge is getting a workout. 

Looks like it may go to a third day of continual rain.

We have lived up here in Brisbane since 1985, have never experienced continuous rain event before, yes we have had a few days of off and on rain but never continuous rain, Oh well my only complaint is we were going caravanning Monday, we will look at Wednesday. 



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5447
Date:

Boondall. 427mls of rain for the last 24 hour period. 

For the 3 days since Friday of continual rail a huge 1107mls of rain.

Will this entitled us to the Golden Gumboot Awards taking it away from Tully in Northern Queensland? 

But we are ok.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 2812
Date:

Radar wrote:

Boondall. 427mls of rain for the last 24 hour period. 

For the 3 days since Friday of continual rail a huge 1107mls of rain.

Will this entitled us to the Golden Gumboot Awards taking it away from Tully in Northern Queensland? 

But we are ok.


 Not being picky Radar, but 427 + 780 = 1207mls, don't want to leave yourself 4 inches short (100ml)......ha ha 

Glad you are ok even though you sleep with Gumboots on.

Cheers Bob



__________________

Make it Snappy......Bob

 



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5447
Date:

Bobdown wrote:
Radar wrote:

Boondall. 427mls of rain for the last 24 hour period. 

For the 3 days since Friday of continual rail a huge 1107mls of rain.

Will this entitled us to the Golden Gumboot Awards taking it away from Tully in Northern Queensland? 

But we are ok.


 Not being picky Radar, but 427 + 780 = 1207mls, don't want to leave yourself 4 inches short (100ml)......ha ha 

Glad you are ok even though you sleep with Gumboots on.

Cheers Bob


 My lovely accountant wife did not pick that up, oh yes she did, I was an 100mls out on a recount.

For the 7 days period the total was 1204mls.

PS. I should of edit my post. Thank.you.

 



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 625
Date:

As posters are indicating corrections, the units used to measure Rainfall are millimetres (mm) for depth, not millilitres (ml or mL) for volume. Sorry, to rain on the parade smile

Concerns for those impacted by the severe events.



-- Edited by watsea on Monday 28th of February 2022 11:31:59 PM

__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5447
Date:

Boondall, Monday mostly sunny day with a late 6mm rain shower.

Was able to air our caravan as are getting ready to do a couple of weeks tour around the SE Qld which was good.

This morning beautiful blue sky. 



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1398
Date:

Lockhart River, Cape York. Have had to add a thicker sheet to the bed in the past week or so and have started turning the ceiling fan off when getting up for a midnight wee. Early hours temps have dropped to the low 20's which is feeling rather chilly. Humidity has dropped making things far more comfortable. Think we can say that the Wet Season has ended.

__________________

A Nomadic Life (Current)    

The Big Trip (2008/9)     



Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 23
Date:

8pm in Howard Springs NT a beautiful 28C sunny and 34C tomorrow.


__________________
Cheers Slowboat


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5447
Date:

Brisbane, mostly wet but tomorrow going to be better.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 6554
Date:

Radar wrote:

Brisbane, mostly wet but tomorrow going to be better.


 RADAR, is that better or wetter?

 

Warwick, today reached a chilly 13 degrees.  

 

Oh Cuppa, you make me feel quite warm and fuzzy at early temps in the 20s



__________________

Pay it forward - what goes around comes around

DUNMOWIN is no longer on the road and still DUNMOWIN!  



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 5447
Date:

Dunmowin wrote:
Radar wrote:

Brisbane, mostly wet but tomorrow going to be better.


 RADAR, is that better or wetter?

 

Warwick, today reached a chilly 13 degrees.  


 That is a couple of weeks back.

14 here today, peak at 19 but I was a little chilly, I wanted to go up in the caravan and give the diesel heater a work out but my lady said no.



__________________


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 6554
Date:

It is 6.50 am, I have to get up early today, but it is -2 degrees outside.



__________________

Pay it forward - what goes around comes around

DUNMOWIN is no longer on the road and still DUNMOWIN!  



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4444
Date:

Wangaratta yesterday minus 4, that put a curl in someone's tail feathers I reckon, a loverly 0 here in Lavington

__________________

Cheers Craig



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4601
Date:

Bloody cold in Brissy!!!

Forecast 10 to max 13 would you believe & drizzly rain.

First time ever, we put the A/C onto heat during the day & rugged up in 3 layers with ugg boots of course.



__________________

See Ya ... Cupie




Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 37
Date:

Farm sitting outside Cambooya, wet, miserable and about 6 degrees.

__________________


Newbie

Status: Offline
Posts: 4
Date:

Ashley, just north west of Moree NSW. 8.2 degrees, feels like 4.2 @ 9.30 Saturday 9/7/22
Still waiting for the paddocks to dry out after the rain last week. Ground is soaked, and without good sun & wind it'll take a while to dry out!

__________________


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 125
Date:

Chilly at night but, if you can find a North-facing window to sit in in the daytime it's lovely. Been out pruning the roses for last few days but you need to rug up well - 3 layers on top and two pairs of slacks one over the top of the other. Electric blanket revved up to the max at night.

Power went off for 7 days after that cyclone blew through on 11 June (170 kph winds tore hundreds of trees down). 5.30 pm into bed with a hot water bottle and stay in bed till 10 am in the mornings. Was blocked from getting out of my drive way for 2 days because of a huge tree that came down in the farm across the road from me.

Gotta watch the icy roads early in the morning if you want to go down to Devonport - have only needed to go down there twice and left it to 11 am so the ice had time to melt.

Cheers to all.  

Val  biggrinbiggrinbiggrin



__________________

Sheffield-er



Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 49
Date:

As daylight hours very slowly start to increase, we're having intermittent sunshine/showers during the day. I think we're probably getting enough rain over here in the SW corner, but of course we won't know until we look at the figures later, when the rain tapers off, around Sept/late Oct. It used to be that we could forget about any rain after late Nov/early Dec..., until around the 15th of May when big cold front storms spin up from Antarctica.
However, during cyclone season and longer, the North West corner(around Exmouth) they are more frequently getting low cells spinning down from the northern Indian Ocean(somewhere below Sumatra) and crossing near that N/W corner  ...., occasionally forming into cyclones. These low cell rain events often dump a ship of rain from the coast all the way inland into the semi arid interior..., makes things very interesting up there.
On the South West corner here we are fortunate in that we don't get floods over here..., and a cold night hereabouts only gets down around 5 or 6 deg while I would consider that a cold day max temp would be around 15-17 deg(reasonably rare).
I reckon we're fairly privileged hereabouts...., no extremes of anything.



-- Edited by Sandyfreckle on Tuesday 12th of July 2022 09:28:45 AM



-- Edited by Sandyfreckle on Tuesday 12th of July 2022 09:36:34 AM

__________________

Too stupid to understand science ? Try religion ! 



Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 4601
Date:

Sheffield-er wrote:

Chilly at night but, if you can find a North-facing window to sit in in the daytime it's lovely. Been out pruning the roses for last few days but you need to rug up well - 3 layers on top and two pairs of slacks one over the top of the other. Electric blanket revved up to the max at night.

Power went off for 7 days after that cyclone blew through on 11 June (170 kph winds tore hundreds of trees down). 5.30 pm into bed with a hot water bottle and stay in bed till 10 am in the mornings. Was blocked from getting out of my drive way for 2 days because of a huge tree that came down in the farm across the road from me.

Gotta watch the icy roads early in the morning if you want to go down to Devonport - have only needed to go down there twice and left it to 11 am so the ice had time to melt.

Cheers to all.  

Val  biggrinbiggrinbiggrin


 As a Queenslander, I find it hard to imagine living in such conditions.  But I suppose you get used to it just as we do with our summer heat & humidity and the driving rain of warm tropical storms.

It was an unrealised dream of mine to retire to a remote property in Tassie, in an old stone cabin with a view down a grassy re-entrant to a wild southern ocean crashing onto a sandy beach.  Perhaps it is better that it was just left at that  .. a Dream.

At >80 years of age, I have walked on snow only once .. on a family visit (one day) to the Alps near Canberra.  I have never seen snow falling!!!!  I have visited snow fields in Europe & Northern America, but always when there was no snow on the ground!  



__________________

See Ya ... Cupie


« First  <  Page 113  >   Last »  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us
Purchase Grey Nomad bumper stickers Read our daily column, the Nomad News The Grey Nomad's Guidebook