Severe Weather Discussion > Tropical Cyclones, Typhoons and Hurricanes Worldwide

Darwin rumblings 2010/11

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Mike:
It's been over 12 months I think since I last posted on the forum - so sorry for that.  I've been so busy with work and finishing trade school (at my old age) that have not had too much time to concentrate on much.  Added to that the computer blew up and could not for the life of me remember all my passwords for just about everything I visit made it all the more frustrating...so I decided to take a break from forums and things and just relax a bit before I burned myself out!

Anyway...we've had a prolonged wet season which did not actually cease until late May, early June and in fact had a thunderstorm to the NW near Dundee Beach?Litchfield area during the middle of July!  Insane stuff.  Some people got some photos of it which I will get permission to share with you...quite unusual and unseasonal.  We had a burst of moisture from an upper trough which moved over from WA and created some humidity and convection, with the NW area obviously very liking those elements and the resultant thunderstorm was shown!

Given the La Nina cycle again the usual banter is about re what type of season we will have...I've almost given up trying to predict anything due to the fact that each season promises less and less.  Last season was in reality quite dull - even compared to the previous season - with no major storms moving into Darwin except for a couple of nights, Dec10 being the incredible lightning display this city has seen in many years - of course I could only view it from the loading dock at work...

The storms of the last few seasons, I believe are being affected by the urban sprawl - the storms seem to be splitting from around Middle Point area - about 30km from Darwin - and then splitting in a V and moving either NW or NE and a large hole left where Darwin sits.  if the sea breeze is supposed to aid storm initiation then something is wrong!  Any storms with weak steer or shear are killed off rapidly once they come within 20km of Darwin.

I will post some photos from last season and some other info of things I'm up to this time around.  I will have to spend an hour or two going over all the thread topics in the forum to catch up on everything, so apologies again but glad to be back online here...

Some photos from 2009/10 to get things rolling





















There was also the opportunity to film with National Geographic in November 2009 for their recently finished documentary on lightning chasers.  It was filmed by an Austrian film company which had been to the US and South America and then came to Darwin to look me up and take them chasing.  Little nighttime action but a host of daytime storms which they were well pleased with.  Spent 10 days with them filming off and on and the trailer to the doco is herewith below.  Tom Warner is also featured in another snippet but I was humbled to see moi in the doco!  From what friends say in the US my ten minute addition was at the end of the hour long doco.  They caught more lightning in two days than they did spending 2 weeks in the US!!  Should be receiving my unedited copy of the doco soon from the producers.  Quite exciting to film with them and very exhausting!

Link to NatGeo doco trailer....the time lapse of the car is pretty cool...!

http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/series/naked-science/3625/facts#tab-Videos/08490_00




cheers all!

Karina Roberts (slavegirl):
wow! Sounds like you have been extremely busy to say the least! I am loving the pics you have posted and cannot wait for your chase reports for the NT i find them a most interesting read and always love your photography - keep up the excellent work Mike :)

Mike:
Not a lot happening up here as yet.  Had a nice large storm the other afternoon which produced some CGs but short lived.  Most of the instability was and will be concrentrated on the NW region of the NT for now but the dreaded high pressure ridge is certainly strong for the next few days probably up until next weekend.  Inland trough has caused some rumbles and rain as the ridge meets the trough but mainly through the interiors of the NT.

Hector has been on and off of late, decent enough CAPE to get him up to 45,000ft - whilst not huge - still conducive to the Tiwi Islands for this time of year but the systems are confined to the northern areas of the islands so he's a little hard to see clearly with all the heat haze.  Thus far he's been forming in CAPE of less than 1000 and been producing heavy precip.  There was one day a fortnight ago whereby the CAPE was around 1500 and the system was unreal.  No less than 8 fully matured large anvilled storms were in plain view from the mainland with two immature cells on the trailing edge!  It's a crying shame he only forms between say 1pm and 4pm and then starts to dissipate...storms that size only 78km away would be an impressive sunset shot!  Unfortunatley Hector only produces minimal lightning - and pretty rare to see any from the coast I might add - if you were situated in the bays around the islands or offshore you would be getting some nice CG's, but there must be too much moisture in the system to promote active electrification aloft for those big positive discharges.  Really interesting to find that out actually...a large MCS storm with little lightning...oh well, makes a nice postcard shot when he's crispy and anvilled!

 There's been plenty of talk this season being a super la Nina period..(has something to do with cooler water at certain levels etc, something I neglect to focus on!) BoM has expressed similar views as numbers continue to add up to a simmilar season to 74-75 and we know what happened then!  The weather has been very early as far as a build up is concerned, only with the strong high cells down south are we getting drier air, but it's not cooling things down at all.  BoM tips a cyclone in December (although nothing new!) but indicated also that the tropical depressions that will form will do so more in the Timor and Arafura seas and not so much in the Gulf of Carpentaria.  If the unseasonal weather thus far is any indication then chasing up here could be a ripper for 2010/11.






cheers all.

Mike:
Well the season has officially started being October.  We've had storms just about everywhere except in the city so there has been no lack of opportunities to get something.  Most of the storms are being confined to the inland regions and far NW coast of late.  September proved to be a very unseasonal period, I guess the strong La Nina cycle has something to do with that.  The storms over the past few days have been okay, a little bit messy at times and not akin to the standard late October/November storms that show strong persistent updrafts in clean blue sky...when they do go up they are short lived and sometimes low capped.  An abundance of Pileus but most of the maturing storms are further out yonder with large anvils.

I've chased when I have been able to and whilst there's lots of structure shots, those big bolts have eluded me on occasions.  Even using a trigger for the daytime shots the bolts have not been strobing enough to allow the trigger to nail the strikes.  We're in for a wet week by the looks of the GFS, a weak low will form off to the NW later in the week so that would add more precip to an already record making September rainfall wise.  

I've undertaken a personal task to research lightning and the BoM are supportive and would like any data/footage or stills of the particular lightning I'm reseasrching. Primarily it will be reverse lightning and blue jets.  I've been scratching my head as to why we have so much lightning yet little upward leader activity to promote reverse lightning, even with tall structures and a plethora of negative strikes.  Questions to be answered hopefully.

Tom Warner in the US has been a great help with equip info that I could use and Dr Earl Williams in the US has asked a lot of questions...usually with the line 'What evidence do you have of this' scenario....answers I can't give yet because no-one has done any research since the late 80's during Project Dundee in Kakadu.  Earl wants me to get strong, powerful negative CG images or video...this is something that has a lot of mystery to them apparently...the more they pulse the better.  The return stroke rate is of interest to him it seems.

So chasing thus far has just been nailing target areas using the models etc and not being a radar chaser!  I like to get out alone as the storms come in just to brush up on all the knowledge that MB and Jimmy have taught me over the years to make sure my forecasting and nowcasting is spot on for success rates.  So far so good.  Have a few secret locations with great views and ya gotta keep some areas to yourself!!!

Here's a few photos of the storms during September and this week.  Comments always welcome and will keep everyone up to date on what transpires this season.



















Michael Bath:
Hi Mike,

Nice set of images there.

Do you mean lightning that shoots out the top of the anvil, or ground to cloud strokes?   GCs are very uncommon here but of course there are not many structures around. I can only remember one storm in particular that had several ground to cloud strokes from comms towers on the ranges north of my place, but really, quite rare.
regards, Michael

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