Saturday, 2 October 2021

Grapes are gone


Alex went to the vineyard yesterday to pick the remaining grapes and he found one measly bunch. The rest were all gone except a few white ones which he ate. Cheeky birds took them all. 

The weather was miserable and changeable yesterday. Frequent showers, chill wind, a hailstorm like a tornado. Some of the support posts snapped in the wind so Alex had to fix them. The vines are rather thick right now and heavy with leaves. They were whipping around pretty hellishly. I hope they didn't break. It's too early to prune. The video is toward the end of the nasty hail squall. I couldn't get the camera to work while all hell was breaking loose. 

The showers continued through this morning, but now there are lots of puffy white clouds about and hurricane Sam, a category 4, brushing past Bermuda. We're supposed to have much better weather this week so Alex and Cormac are going to bring the boat to Kilrush. 

Have to water all the plants daily.

Ghost and I waiting out a shower

Puffy white clouds against a cerulean sky

Giant sunflower

Dahlias, roses and China aster 

Cosmos finally blooming

MONTHLY VALUES FOR NEWPORT UP TO 01-OCT-2021

Total rainfall in millimetres for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
2021225.6147.6141.145.6113.564.159.7155.6137.014.21104.0
2020139.5342.8178.225.554.7164.5187.9137.9153.4228.0206.6232.72051.7
2019146.8115.0228.5100.7112.576.682.7228.9175.5160.7148.1220.61796.6
2018274.6155.686.294.370.465.958.6179.1148.3140.9172.6201.01647.5
LTA166.7126.5141.296.894.789.7100.9132.5131.5176.0170.4180.21607.1

Mean temperature in degrees Celsius for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
20215.06.77.99.010.413.317.516.415.210.411.3
20207.26.06.611.012.813.814.416.013.810.59.16.110.6
20196.98.47.910.211.713.116.315.513.710.37.17.110.7
20185.94.65.59.113.116.116.115.012.410.98.38.110.5
LTA6.16.17.39.011.513.815.415.413.510.88.36.510.3

Mean 10cm soil temperature for NEWPORT at 0900 UTC

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
20213.65.06.88.210.914.317.916.315.2n/a11.0
20205.74.75.49.713.014.814.916.313.79.58.05.110.1
20196.16.16.88.912.213.816.715.713.59.46.25.610.1
20184.42.94.08.213.117.418.415.112.19.66.66.69.9
LTAn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Global Solar Radiation in Joules/cm2 for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
202166201334720370456945569045488494554049022413849300416
2020626310808245454619258476435374021540555255581848763195209326164
2019537810595213063764849884496074539537116264601740681674766313728
2018597613390252693470958446598495144834923226191712378424068335662
LTAn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Potential Evapotranspiration (mm) for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
20217.622.930.762.976.370.787.867.538.31.1465.8
202017.621.935.070.291.672.966.266.442.728.113.610.4536.6
201913.421.535.460.479.078.279.562.942.829.214.814.3531.4
201816.321.835.752.088.2102.487.258.737.930.218.011.5559.9
LTAn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Evaporation (mm) for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
202110.932.145.489.9111.2102.0117.293.552.11.7656.0
202022.431.951.898.9130.8104.894.392.759.138.818.113.6757.2
201917.729.552.087.3111.6112.8109.688.859.939.618.917.9745.6
201821.930.251.776.4127.4140.4120.782.253.140.622.814.9782.3
LTAn/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

DEGREE DAYS BELOW 15.5 DEGREE CELSIUS FOR NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecTotal
202132524723620016779202340N/AN/AN/AN/A
2020257276275143111735531711561932911935
2019266200235165130892736671642512621892
20182983063091941045031441001472152302027

Notes on the Data

Evaporation and PE data are calculated using Penman/Monteith formulae.
The ‘LTA’ (referred to within a table) is average for the climatological long-term-average (LTA) reference period 1981-2010.
Data updated daily at Mid-day.


Thursday, 30 September 2021

The last day of September



Rainbows two days straight in the same place.

How did it get to this? It's the last day of September and I seem to have missed the summer. We brought the boat home in two days, stopping only in Bofin and not getting off the boat. Then we visited Clare Island overnight and didn't get off the boat. Finally, we anchored in the Inishkeas and didn't get off the boat. That's it. We didn't do much of anything else except visit the Skelligs. And Alex had to fix the windlass which took many days of cramped working conditions. 

And tomorrow is already October. The grape harvest is done. The rest of the harvest is dodgy this year. We already moved all the delicate plants into the polytunnel. And it's seriously Autumn suddenly. Cold, dreary, and wet. Where did it go and how will we survive the winter? 

Plants in polytunnel fill the space


Nice place to sit 

Giant sunflower blooming