Hawke's Bay Today

Dry solstice an ominous opening to spring

Forecast for above-average temperatur­es

- Shea Jefferson

The weather for the first few days of the spring equinox will

be unsettled, with large parts of cloud and a deep low

exerting its influence over the

nation, bringing warm wind and rain

to the region. MetService meteorolog­ist Angus Hine

With one spectacula­r moonset and sunrise, spring has officially arrived. The clear, dry conditions as 60 watched the sunrise at A¯tea a Rangi are a harbinger for a dry spring in the region.

The spring (vernal) equinox marks a point in the European calendar when the overhead sun shifts from the northern to the southern hemisphere and is the only time of year when the sun rises due east.

In the Ma¯ramataka Ma¯ori (Ma¯ori lunar calendar), the equinox is referred to as Te Whakawhiti­nga o te Ra¯ o Ko¯anga and heralds a season of planting, fishing, and bird migration.

“For our t¯ıpuna, for our navigators, the spring solstice is about the sun crossing over the eastern pou.

“The sun [Tamanuiter­a¯] is moving from the realm of Hine Takurua, the winter maiden, to Hine Raumati, the summer maiden,” Piripi Smith, trustee of the A¯tea a Rangi Educationa­l Trust, said.

In the European calendar, the equinox falls on September 23, but in Hawke’s Bay, it was celebrated a day earlier at the A¯tea a Rangi, due to the earlier rise of the equinox in Ahuriri/ Napier.

“The sun rose this morning exactly on due east. We talked about the stars that come up before sunrise, and how these stars show the difference between seasons.

“We looked for Whakaahu Kerekere and Whakaahu Rangi, which are the heads of the Gemini twins and rise from northeast at this time of year,” Smith said.

These tohu (signs) denote the spring season, a time of year that promises particular­ly dry and warm weather.

“The weather for the first few days of the spring equinox will be unsettled, with large parts of cloud and a deep low exerting its influence over the nation, bringing warm wind and rain to the region,” MetService meteorolog­ist Angus Hine said.

The weather does not bode well for the East Coast of the North Island, with less rain than normal predicted for spring due to high-pressure systems in the east.

“The high pressure leads to more northeast wind flows than normal, which means we experience warmer than average temperatur­es,” said Niwa meteorolog­ist Seth Carrier.

“Hawke’s Bay has a good chance to see warmer than average temperatur­es and near normal to below normal rainfall. This depends on exact pressure of wind flows, but we’re looking at dry periods with occasional rainfall.”

The drier weather does not bode well for farmers, growers, or whitebait fishermen, Smith said.

“Hans Rook has been doing wananga with us, to let other people understand how the drought in Hawke’s Bay has meant that spawning eggs get dried up and whitebaiti­ng seasons haven’t been great,” he said.

 ??  ?? Photo / Ian Cooper
Photo / Ian Cooper
 ?? Photo / Ian Cooper ?? The full moon O¯turu or Ra¯kaunui heralds in the spring equinox and a season of planting, fishing, and bird migration.
Photo / Ian Cooper The full moon O¯turu or Ra¯kaunui heralds in the spring equinox and a season of planting, fishing, and bird migration.

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