Which of these tends to give the worst weather to your area?
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- cycloneye
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This poll is ok for all the members to participate as it has been allowed by the staff.
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- AussieMark
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In Oz it depends on where you live to some extent. In NSW and Qld by and large El Nino does the damage. Droughts and bushfires reign in eastern Oz when El Nino is around. Droughts are much more worrying in Oz than rain for most people. La Nina gives people a chance to plant crops and refill the water tanks and dams.
In Southern Victoria the picture is much less clear. We don't get such clear differentiation. Sometimes drughts down here come with La Nina, sometimes with El Nino. Again, too little water is seen as a far worse problem than too much.
Cheers
Rod
In Southern Victoria the picture is much less clear. We don't get such clear differentiation. Sometimes drughts down here come with La Nina, sometimes with El Nino. Again, too little water is seen as a far worse problem than too much.
Cheers
Rod
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- AussieMark
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Rod Hagen wrote:In Oz it depends on where you live to some extent. In NSW and Qld by and large El Nino does the damage. Droughts and bushfires reign in eastern Oz when El Nino is around. Droughts are much more worrying in Oz than rain for most people. La Nina gives people a chance to plant crops and refill the water tanks and dams.
In Southern Victoria the picture is much less clear. We don't get such clear differentiation. Sometimes drughts down here come with La Nina, sometimes with El Nino. Again, too little water is seen as a far worse problem than too much.
Cheers
Rod
Yes EL Nino are worse on us.
I remember the el nino of 1997-98
we had days where we had upper 30's or even 40's
and that coupled with no rain
also can't forget the 1994 sydney fires
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- southerngale
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- Audrey2Katrina
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I went with La Nina as well, although it was close between that and neutral. Someone else said it was a lose-lose scenario, and that's absolutely true. While one is better for one area and worse for others; the reverse is true for different areas... all depends on where you are located.
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A2K
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AussieMark wrote:Yes EL Nino are worse on us.
I remember the el nino of 1997-98
we had days where we had upper 30's or even 40's
and that coupled with no rain
also can't forget the 1994 sydney fires
In Victoria its less predictable.
The two worst fire seasons in Victoria last century were in 1939 and 1983. The 1983 "Ash Wednesday" fires, which killed 75 people in Victoria and SA and destroyed over 2000 homes, were the result of a full-on El Nino. (The Sydney fires in 94 that you mention were bad enough, but , by comparison, only resulted in the death of 3 people and the loss of 205 homes. I just happened to be in Melbourne for the 1983 ones and Sydney for the 94 ones. Both pretty hard to forget!)
The 1939 "Black Friday" fires, which killed 71 people in Victoria, burnt out 2 million hectares of land, and destroyed a thousand homes at a time when the population density was much lower than it was in 1983, though, occured during a La Nina. So did the 1997 Dandenong fires.
So I guess, at least down here, we can cop it both ways!
Cheers
Rod
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