It’s been a long, hot start to 2018 for Orange, and the bad news is there’s no real signs of significant rain or a drop in temperatures.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
Dr Andrew Watkins, the manager of long-range forecasts at the Bureau of Meteorology, said a weak La Nina pattern has failed the deliver expected summer falls.
And with the ‘wet pattern’ on the way out, he concedes there may be a battle for farmers searching for good, consistent rain in the lead-up to sowing their winter crops.
“Over the last couple of weeks the La Nina has declined reasonably quickly,” Dr Watkins said.
“What we have experienced is less than our models actually suggested, it’s been a disappointing pattern from that perspective.
“A moderate or strong La Nina would give rainfall and cloud, which would result in lower temperatures.
“Basically all across New South Wales that hasn’t been the case and as the La Nina fades out and we head into a neutral pattern the outlook for the remainder of February through to April is benign.
“There’s no real push either way. There’s nothing to suggest we will get the rain we need but there’s nothing to say we won’t either.”
The neutral pattern Dr Watkins spoke of is likely to linger through autumn, and while rain or the lack of it is one major topic, extended periods of heat are another.
The outlook for March is for the temperatures to be much closer to average but there is no push either way for rain.
- Dr Andrew Watkins, Bureau of Meteorology
So far in February Orange has had an average maximum temperature of 28.3 degrees, which is more than two degrees above the month’s long-term average.
It was a similar story in January, when the mercury averaged 29.3 degrees at the day’s hottest point, well up on the 20-year mean of 27.1.
Orange’s hottest day so far this year was the 37 degrees recorded on January 7, while a number of towns across the Central West have had multiple days in 2018 where they exceeded 40 degrees, with Forbes hitting a maximum of 44.4 degrees in January, Parkes reaching 43.2 and Dubbo topping 42.6.
The Bureau is expecting temperatures to be closer to average for the remainder of summer.
“In January, most of NSW had Decile 10 temperatures, meaning they were in the top 10 per cent of all historical data,” he said.
“It’s easy to see why the land is so parched.
“The outlook for March is for the temperatures to be much closer to average but there is no push either way for rain.”