Wednesday, 8 December 2021

Storm Warning

The eyewall Storm Barra
The eyewall of Storm Barra

Yesterday, we experienced a weather bomb. A fast developing system that hit hard and stayed around for a while. Our sailing club recorded wind gusts of more than 77 knots (143 kph or 89 mph) which is hurricane force. Lucky for us, the storm veered a bit more south than forecast, so we had a light easterly quadrant in the morning and northwesterly in the afternoon and overnight. Once again as with Lorenzo, the eye passed directly over us in Clew Bay. 

The white dot in the middle is over Clew Bay

We went to Westport in the morning and got our booster vaccinations then did our food shopping all in light E wind and showers. Then we braced for the worst as they had us in the Red Storm Warning zone for the evening. We are protected from the NW by the hill behind our house and it appears there was no damage.


By mid-afternoon, we had lashing rain and intense winds out of the NW, Our barometer bottomed out at 956 hPa. A 'weather bomb' is an unofficial term for a low-pressure system whose central pressure falls 24 millibars in 24 hours in a process known as explosive cyclogenesis. In the case of Storm Barra, the pressure dropped from around 1,006 millibars on Monday morning to 956 millibars 24 hours later, according to surface weather analysis by the NOAA's Ocean Prediction Center. So I looked at our barometer precisely at the centre of the storm. 

More than 24 hours later the wind is still blowing pretty hard at around 30 knots but gusting only into the 40s. It is bitterly cold even though it's 7.5 C but the wind chill really bites. Thankfully it's dry. We took a walk around the property to survey and saw no damage on the south-facing land. The polytunnel is fine as is the vineyard. No trees down but lots of kindling. Most of the leaves have been stripped from the vines but the vines did well after being tied up last month thank goodness. I still have lots of work to do up there. 

Met Eireann reported that Newport had 31 mm of rain yesterday but the land is not sopping wet as it was last week. The wind must have blown a lot of moisture away. They recorded gusts of 120 kph but they are further inland. Overall it was an interesting day. It started with a blanket of snow but I missed that. By the time I got up, it was melted as the temperature rapidly increased. By the end of the day, some 60,000 homes were without power. A violent gust of 156km/h was recorded off the coast of West Cork where scores of fishing vessels were anchored riding it out in Bantry Bay. 

Here are a few pictures from RTE. Here's a video from the lighthouse maintenance workers who got stuck out at Fastnet when the chopper couldn't pick them up. 

Apparently, Bantry was the worst hit with flooding. The promenade in Galway at Salthill was flooded at high tide - a high spring in tandem with the storm.  It was a pretty wild day. 


                    Met Eireann WEATHER DATA FOR 07-DEC-2021

Station                 Rain Max Min Sun     Wind         Gust Soil     Global Gmin

                        mm         oC oC hr Kts (Km/h)    Kts (Km/h)    oC J/cm^2 oC

Belmullet         16.8         7.0 1.5 0.0 20.3 (38)         55 (102)     5.9     88 0.6

Knock Airport         22.8         5.5 0.0 18.4 (34)         57 (106)     4.2         -0.1

Newport Furnace 31.0         6.9 0.8 22.5 (42)         65 (120)     4.4     81 0.0










Beautiful morning 8-12-21



Vineyard in good shape

Very few leaves remaining

Most leaves stripped by wind

Orchard is a fun playground

My assistant, Ghostie, likes to climb high

French and Spanish trawlers seeking shelter in Bantry Bay


Friday, 3 December 2021

Proverbs

 “Listen to the wind, it talks. Listen to the silence, it speaks. Listen to your heart, it knows.”

Native American Proverb 

Our weather for Tuesday


I actually prefer:

Listen to the wind, it sings. 

Listen to the silence, it speaks.

Listen to your heart, it knows. 

Listen to the earth, she groans.

                                DOB Dec 2021

"Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect."

- Chief Seattle, 1854

Weird weather

Solaris vines have mostly dropped their leaves now. 


Ghost didn't come home yesterday, so this morning I walked down to Stud Cottage and called her name all the way there and back. When I returned home, she was waiting. She doesn't use the road - she has her own route cross country. She is my constant companion. Like a puppy, she follows me everywhere. She especially likes the vineyard. Lots of good wildlife smells there. 

I am now also feeding Ginger cat daily. She was starving. I cannot let an animal starve. 

Ghost and I walked the land and checked the vineyard. Most of the Solaris leaves are down. But the Pinot Noir and Albarino are still holding on. The trees in the orchard have now dropped their leaves. But the weather has been so strange -- a few cold days then back to warm -- that lots of stuff is still blooming including the roses. The butterfly bushes are growing, the magnolia is budding, the grass needs cutting, and bulbs are already coming up. 

I was outside all morning today, cleaning up in patches of garden. I can't start pruning yet as I am afraid the sap is still flowing. Yet, the light is like twilight all day until the sun sets at 4:20. We only get 7h 46m of light today. Feel like hibernating. Even the polytunnel feels gloomy. And we have a new moon tomorrow so nights are dark, too, and tides are high. Heavy rain is due tonight and tomorrow. Sunday is supposed to be clear. The weekend forecast is for gardening with a 99% chance of wine. ;-)

If I can make it to the 21st, we will have turned the corner on the darkness and will start working our way back into the light. 

Pinot Noir and Albarino holding on

Rose blooming

Hungry blue tits


Weekend forecast

Weekend forecast: 

Gardening with a 99% chance of wine



Thursday, 2 December 2021

November Wx stats


The numbers are in for November and, despite the cold snap at the end of the month, the mean temperature for November was still the warmest of the past four years and a full degree above the long-term average (LTA) for the reference period 1981-2010. Rainfall turned out to be slightly higher than the LTA and soil temps quite a bit higher than prior years. 

Basically, it's all a bit unpredictable. No tropical cyclones formed in the Atlantic basin during November. However, Tropical Storm Wanda continued from the end of October through the first seven days of November.  Based on a 30-year climatology (1991-2020), a tropical storm forms in November every one to two years.

Overall, NOAA reports that the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season featured above-normal activity. Twenty-one named storms formed, of which seven became hurricanes and four became major hurricanes - category 3 or higher. Even though it seemed quiet in the Atlantic this year, it really wasn't - but it was definitely not as wild as last year. 



MONTHLY VALUES FOR NEWPORT UP TO 01-DEC-2021

Total rainfall in millimetres for NEWPORT

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual
2021225.6147.6141.145.6113.564.159.7155.6137.0265.7183.36.61545.4
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
20215.06.77.99.010.413.317.516.415.211.99.37.011.2
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
20213.65.06.88.210.914.317.916.315.211.38.6n/a10.8
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

Sunday, 28 November 2021

Big storm, bitter cold


Yesterday we had a big storm with high winds and a big chill -- temps hovering around 0C at night.  Today, we had a calm moody day with dramatic skies and warm drizzle. What a contrast. 

I walked up to the vineyard after finishing work in the polytunnel thinking the vines might be dormant. I noticed that the Rondo had dropped all its leaves, the Solaris dropped most of its leaves, but the Chardonnay, Pinto Noir and Albarino were still holding onto the leaves. Strange. I guess the shorter season grapes also have shorter season vines. And whereas the Rondo leaves had turned red first, all the others turned golden yellow, even the Pinto Noir. Not yet time for pruning. 

Well, it's almost the end of the month and we've increased our rainfall total to somewhat normal but are still way high on temperature average even with several days of bitter cold. In a couple of days, I'll report the final numbers. 

Meanwhile, the Omicron variant that was detected in SA has taken off and travel restrictions are being instituted again. Looks like we'll be staying home for the holidays yet again. Glad to have our land.