facthunter Posted August 13 Posted August 13 Nice day today. Went to a NEW shed, Airconditioned. Nev 1 1
onetrack Posted August 25 Posted August 25 (edited) Well, it's still wet, and getter wetter - and now it's COLD, too! Perth had a maximum temperature of just 11.4° today, the coldest Winter day here for 50 years. It was bitter outside, and it was also raining in squalls, and dark and gloomy as well. We have already exceeded our total average Winter rainfall (June, July, August), and our August rainfall is already 50mm over the monthly average for August - and another 16mm will send us into new rainfall record territory for the August average. The best part is the rain for the last 2 months has spread widely into the State and the crops are looking fantastic. From a very dry Summer and Spring, and a sowing season where grain was largely scratched into very dry soil, and the crops struggled to make headway in May and June - the turnaround from the end of the first week in July has been nothing short of amazing. The GIWA has already boosted the States total grain crop estimate, to be well above average, at 21.9M tonnes - but since they released their August report a couple of weeks ago, we've had a lot more rain, and the crop tonnage can only go up from here on in. Personally, I'm looking forward to a break in the Winter weather and some nice sunny Spring days. We're off to the Dowerin Machinery Field Days on Wednesday, the rain will have eased, but it's not going to be a warm day, by any measure. The forecast for Dowerin is 1° to 15° with occasional showers - and the wind will be cold, too! Edited August 25 by onetrack 1
Marty_d Posted August 25 Posted August 25 I'm sorry... Still rolling on the floor at the thought of 11.4 degrees being your coldest day! 1
facthunter Posted August 26 Posted August 26 Watch out for Marty's mob. The Schoolkids wear Shorts, even in Winter. IF ever they Invade the Mainland we are for it. Having flown into Perth over a long period, It's Often a windy Place and IF the Weather goes really Bad, Alternates are far away. I ended up at Meekatharra ONCE. It's Nothing like Perth. Nev 1
rgmwa Posted August 26 Posted August 26 I ended up at Meekatharra once too and sat out a storm for two days. The plane was tied down in the open and I didn't expect it to survive the battering, but somehow it did. 2
Marty_d Posted August 26 Posted August 26 3 hours ago, facthunter said: Watch out for Marty's mob. The Schoolkids wear Shorts, even in Winter. IF ever they Invade the Mainland we are for it. Having flown into Perth over a long period, It's Often a windy Place and IF the Weather goes really Bad, Alternates are far away. I ended up at Meekatharra ONCE. It's Nothing like Perth. Nev Nah we melt in the heat. You're safe. 1
facthunter Posted August 26 Posted August 26 When's THAT Ferry going to start earning it's Keep?. Nev 1
spacesailor Posted August 26 Posted August 26 Sydney has had a " balmy " day , Shirt off & into shorts for the first time in an awful long time . spacesailor
Jerry_Atrick Posted August 26 Posted August 26 It is bloody dry and hot-ish in SW England at the moment. Grass is almost universally brown everywhere, was 31 degrees with not too much humidity, which is unusual for this nick of the woods. They are talking baout drought.. Was like being home. 1
facthunter Posted August 26 Posted August 26 I was there in the 80's when there was a drought that had people flaking out everywhere.( London). The heat and haze came from Spain. It could be WORSE now from what I hear. Nev 1
old man emu Posted August 27 Posted August 27 On 26/08/2025 at 6:09 PM, Jerry_Atrick said: nick of the woods But Jerry, the correct term is "neck of the woods". The phrase was creted by our Ameican cousins. The phrase originated in America in the late 18th or early 19th century, possibly from a native word for "corner" or from the literal "neck" (a narrow strip) of a forest settlement.
red750 Posted yesterday at 05:26 AM Posted yesterday at 05:26 AM The wind has been a bit strong down Tassie way. 2
nomadpete Posted yesterday at 08:44 AM Posted yesterday at 08:44 AM 3 hours ago, red750 said: The wind has been a bit strong down Tassie way. Yeah, I noticed its been a bit breezy lately. Can't have been all that windy - there hasn't been a tree across my driveway for months. Actually although we are up high, we are relatively 'shielded' by a ring of 50mtr high blue gums. At times they get quite a dance going - it's amazing how far they can sway without coming down. Don't worry Nev, the house is 51mtrs from any of them. 1
nomadpete Posted yesterday at 08:48 AM Posted yesterday at 08:48 AM 3 hours ago, red750 said: The wind has been a bit strong down Tassie way. We don't want the world to know we are here. 1
rgmwa Posted yesterday at 09:59 AM Posted yesterday at 09:59 AM 1 hour ago, nomadpete said: We don't want the world to know we are here. Where? 1 1
facthunter Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago You used to be able to walk to Tasmania. Bass Strait is average depth of about 200 feet. It's on the same continental shelf as we are so it's not likely to "SNAP OFF " and go drifting to the "Shakey Isles" Pacific RIM of FIRE. . Much more RECENT Geologically. Nev 1
nomadpete Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago 52 minutes ago, facthunter said: You used to be able to walk to Tasmania. Well maybe YOU used to. I guess you are quite a bit older than I. 2
kgwilson Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago (edited) The dinosaurs used to walk from Antarctica to Australia before Tasmania existed as an island but then this was a few years ago. Well quite a few actually. Edited 14 hours ago by kgwilson 1
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