Some models show promise of the current extreme heat and dry pattern breaking down and a shift to wet and tropical like conditions (still looking pretty warm, I can't see any major cool spells ahead), however GFS in its latest run is already showing signs of reneging on that as well and it all seems to be dependent on a decaying tropical cyclone rapidly spreading inland and to be perfectly honest it is all pure speculation when trying to predict TC development and behaviour so far ahead. Hopefully the monsoon is on its way back and we can get some tropical infeeds into the continent and eventually down to the SE by the end of the month.
This system that we are discussing is shaping up to be an incredible disappointment. At one stage there were 5-10mm falls predicted here and now it is down to about 1mm.
There is not much of a trigger although I swear I can see a fairly sharp upper trough coming through in the modelling along with some pretty cool air. Surely this will have some sort of effect on lifting the moisture over us atm, (it was quite muggy today and humidity seems to be rising atm).
It's been a very dry spring/summer period so far and temps well above average, still it's hard to grasp just how dry it is here atm considering how wet the ground was as recently as late October (I took photos of some very green scenery in late October), deciduous trees are going into early autumn at an alarming rate and it's just like walking on potato chips out there, about 95% of the grass has turned to hay.
Even during the prolonged drought period of 2001-2009 where we also had record breaking temps all over the place, deciduous trees weren't showing as much stress as now, it's almost as if the change in soil moisture is just as important as how dry it actually is. IMO many plants can not take going from very wet to very dry and vice versa.