"
Coastal Waters Forecast for New South Wales
Hunter Coast: Seal Rocks to Broken Bay Issued at 4:07 pm EDT on Monday 1 November 2010
for the period until midnight EDT Thursday 4 November 2010.
Forecast for Monday until midnight
Winds: Northeasterly 15 to 25 knots tending northwesterly 20 to 30 knots later in the evening. Seas: 1 to 1.5 metres increasing to 1.5 to 2 metres later in the evening. Swell: Easterly 2 metres. Scattered thunderstorms, mainly offshore"
this here post was put up at 5 .34 mon .It is pissing down rain and has been blowing pretty much from the south since around 8 .30 am in Newcastle which is the main city in the area they describe .
Did anyone at the BOM think to check what the wind had been doing since 8.30 am .It seems not as you can see from the updated forcast this arvo .
This post may seem pretty petty but this is also from the guys who I emailed a couple of months ago re Thredbo weather station wind readings being grossly incorrect ,by around 80% eg storm winds when I was there in Sept blowing well over 80 km/h station said 25 km/h,this is what it was like all season apparently(and potentially dangerous as a result for backcountry tourers and operators of ski lifts that tend to swing around wildly in high wind and can derail ).They thanked me for the heads up and nothing has changed it seems .These are also the guys who didn't see the pasher bulker storm coming until only a few hours out when every other forecaster (including amatuer forecasters who read the long range forecast maps that THE BOM and others produce and were all lining up at least 3 days out as the same ) .Don't aeroplanes and air traffic controllers decide which direction the planes are going to take off and land according to these forecasts or are they privvy to more accurate forecasts where someone goes outside and goes "jeez fellas its blowin south out here ,i reckon we orta change the forcast eh,crikey look at that it's been doin it for the last 8 hrs too " der !!
What have they been doing all day ???????? don't these people have science degrees and get paid pretty well to give accurate forecasts ???
I agree Lach, they can be amazingly incorrect and surely even putting their 2868head out the window would tell them they are wrong.
I just think they are not outdoor people, never go near the water, never flew kites or sailed anything, they just studied get paid shiploads and do their work from a building with no 3825ing windows!!!
Grr rant over
OK so here is the amatuer forecaster in me giving a defence for them .It seems from the radar tracking and the way the cloud in the upper atmosphere (and picked up by the IR sattelite ) that the winds higher have been coming from the NW .It seems a sneaky surface front snuck up the coast under all that through the day .that is still no excuse for the updated forecast issued this arvo that didn't seem to notice the winds right along the coast that had been blowing from the S all day .
port macquarie north had ne wins all day. So somwhere between port and newie was where the direction changed. I had noticed yesterday that the forcast was south for sydney, and ne for newie. I thought that strange at the time, but it turns out they weren't that far wrong.
It's not just NSW, victoria had a forcasat yesterday for extremely strong southwesterlys at 20-30knts then reaching 35knts for the arvo
Ended up blowing westerly most of the day at about 15knts untill about 6pm where it changed to SW and dropped to about 5knts
The forecast in SA was spot on during the weekend.... maybe the guys and girls at BOM don't like you enough.![]()
My forecast is easy. Windy 9am to 5pm weekdays, calm all other times.
(I wagged work on friday and had a short sess. don't tell anyone.)
Weather forecaster's salary - $65k
Fancy weather predicting software - $150k
New radar for the BOM - $1.25m
Forgetting to sick your head out the window to check the weather forecast is vaugely close to reality: Priceless!
well well .It went around to the NW .they just didn't factor (or notice ) the shallow surface change throughout the day .
A dark art, at times, this forecasting