Archive for April, 2010

Posted by Meteo.ae On April - 30 - 2010 0 Comment

More weird weather on the way! May, a month that is supposed to be dry, one month away from June, the start of summer, will start with a fresh and strong round of thunderstorms and rain over central and NW Arabian Peninsula. A deep low (typical of late winter) will pass over Turkey and cooler air into northern Arabia, resulting in explosive thunderstorms over a large part of Saudi Arabia. Western Yemen, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar are also at risk of these thunderstorms. Rain and thunderstorms will also extend to much of Iraq and western Iran. The middeteranian countries and Egypt might  [ Read More ]

Posted by Meteo.ae On April - 30 - 2010 0 Comment

April proved to be really wet across a large part of the Arabian Peninsula, mainly over much of central Saudi Arabia and Yemen. Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar have also been affected by periods of thunderstorms.  Iraq and western Iran also got periods of heavy rain/showers/thunderstorms. Thunderstorms were forming on more or less a daily basis for at least 3 weeks. And this is not reaching an end yet, thanks to abundant equatorial moisutre coming and weak upper troughs! But how much rain really fell? The first map below shows rainfall accumulation/day during the last 30 days. Well, Saudi Arabia got  [ Read More ]

Posted by Meteo.ae On April - 23 - 2010 0 Comment

Tropical moisture continues to flow into Arabia, and lows continue to drift over SW Asia, inducing thunderstorms formation over Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, and Iran. During the next 7 days, it will be the same with effects possibly reaching Bahrain and Qatar. There are hints that early May will also show a similar pattern; however, that will be extremely abnormal given that May is a very dry month and summer is on the way

Posted by Meteo.ae On April - 17 - 2010 0 Comment

Numerous thunderstorms have affected the Arabian peninsulua with severe storms in SW Saudi Arabia as well as strong storms in Bahrain. There are reports of casualities in Saudi Arabia Between 100 and 200 mm have fallen over Saudi Arabia