Greater Adelaide in winter 2022: close to average rainfall and warm nights

Rainfall in winter was generally close to average or above average across Adelaide and the Hills, with above average rainfall totals during June and August, but it was much drier than average in July. Daytime temperatures in winter were generally close to average across Adelaide and the Hills, while night-time temperatures were warmer than average in most suburbs.

Close to average rainfall overall

  • Rainfall in winter was generally close to average or above average across Adelaide and the Hills.
  • Rainfal totals for June and August were above average, but were very much below average during July.
  • On 5 June, multiple sites had their highest winter daily rainfall on record as a series of troughs and cold fronts crossed southern parts of South Australia.

Warmer than average nights

  • Daytime temperatures in winter were close to average or slightly cooler than average across most sites in Adelaide and the Hills.
  • Mean maximum temperatures were tending cooler, but generally close to average in each of June, July, and August.
  • The mean maximum temperatures ranged from 0.7 °C below average at Kuitpo Forest Reserve to 0.2 °C above average at Mount Barker.
  • Night-time temperatures in winter were warmer than average in most suburbs across Greater Adelaide.
  • Mean minimum temperatures were above average in June and August, but were generally cooler than average in July.
  • The mean minimum temperatures for winter ranged from equalling the long-term average at Kuitpo Forest Reserve, Mount Crawford, and Mount Lofty, to 1.7 °C above average at Mount Barker.

Adelaide (West Terrace / ngayirdapira)

  • Total rainfall for Adelaide (West Terrace / ngayirdapira) was 216.0 mm, which is 109% of the long-term average of 198.7 mm.
  • The mean daily maximum temperature for Adelaide (West Terrace / ngayirdapira) was 15.5 °C, which is 0.1 °C below the long-term average of 15.6 °C.
  • The warmest day was 22.3 °C on 28 August, and the coolest day was on 19 July when the temperature reached 11.2 °C.
  • The mean daily minimum temperature for Adelaide (West Terrace / ngayirdapira) was 8.7 °C, which is 0.7 °C above the long-term average of 8.0 °C.
  • The coldest morning was 2.7 °C on 10 July, and the warmest morning was on 28 August when the minimum temperature was 13.9 °C.

Further information

Media
(03) 9669 4057

Extremes in winter 2022
Hottest day 23.0 °C at Adelaide Airport on 28 Aug
Warmest days on average 15.8 °C at Parafield Airport
Coolest days on average 9.6 °C at Mount Lofty
Coldest day 5.2 °C at Mount Lofty on 19 Jul
Coldest night -1.0 °C at Mount Barker on 10 Jul
Coolest nights on average 5.3 °C at Mount Lofty
Warmest nights on average 9.2 °C at Noarlunga
Warmest night 13.9 °C at Adelaide (West Terrace / ngayirdapira) on 28 Aug
Warmest on average overall 12.1 °C at Adelaide (West Terrace / ngayirdapira) and Noarlunga
Coolest on average overall 7.5 °C at Mount Lofty
Wettest overall 589.7 mm at Piccadilly (Woodhouse)
Wettest day 91.0 mm at Cherry Gardens on 5 Jun
Strongest wind gust 102 km/h at Noarlunga on 5 Jun

Record highest winter daily rainfall
New record
(mm)
Old
record
Years of
record
Uraidla 89.0 on 5 Jun 81.0 on 30 Aug 1992 133
Adelaide (Glen Osmond) 54.8 on 5 Jun 53.3 on 26 Jun 1916 125
Cherry Gardens 91.0 on 5 Jun 77.0 on 12 Jun 1932 124
Mount Lofty (Cleland Conservation Park) 90.6 on 6 Jun 65.4 on 1 Jun 2007 54
Piccadilly (Mount Lofty Botanic Garden) 81.8 on 5 Jun 70.4 on 1 Jun 2007 23
Beaumont 47.0 on 5 Jun 46.6 on 12 Jun 2019 22
Crafers West 60.2 on 5 Jun 57.0 on 12 Jun 2019 22
Ironstone Road 62.2 on 1 Jun 51.8 on 2 Jul 2009 22
Piccadilly (Woodhouse) 80.0 on 5 Jun 64.4 on 15 Jul 2008 22
Verdun 59.8 on 5 Jun 51.2 on 12 Jun 2019 22
Ashton 74.8 on 5 Jun 69.0 on 21 Jun 2005 21



Summary statistics for winter 2022
Maximum temperatures
(°C)
Minimum temperatures
(°C)
Rainfall
(millimetres)
Mean for
winter
2022
Diff
from
average
Highest for
winter
2022
Mean for
winter
2022
Diff
from
average
Lowest for
winter
2022
Total for
winter
2022
Average
for
winter
Rank of
winter
2022
Fraction of
winter
average
Adelaide (West Terrace / ngayirdapira) 15.5 -0.1 22.3 28 Aug 8.7 +0.7 2.7 10 Jul 216.0 198.7 average 109%
Adelaide Airport 15.4 -0.2 23.0 28 Aug 8.5 +1.0 1.5 10 Jul 153.2 165.2 average 93%
Edinburgh RAAF 15.4 -0.5 22.0 28 Aug 7.1 +0.6 -0.2 10 Jul 120.0 155.2 low 77%
Kuitpo Forest Reserve 12.3 -0.7 19.9 28 Aug 7.0 0.0 2.4 10 Jul 349.6 313.5 average 112%
Mount Barker 13.9 +0.2 19.6 28 Aug 6.6 +1.7 -1.0 10 Jul 340.7 310.1 average 110%
Mount Crawford AWS 11.1 -0.6 18.0 28 Aug 6.1 0.0 2.4 23 Aug 301.8 269.5 average 112%
Mount Lofty 9.6 +0.1 16.6 28 Aug 5.3 0.0 0.8 20 Jul 512.8 430.4 high 119%
Noarlunga 15.1 -0.3 22.3 28 Aug 9.2 +0.3 3.6 15 Jul 174.8 181.8 average 96%
Parafield Airport 15.8 0.0 22.4 28 Aug 7.3 +0.6 -0.4 10 Jul 161.6 165.5 average 98%

Notes

The Seasonal climate summary, usually published in the first week of the following month, lists the main features of the weather in Greater Adelaide using the most timely and accurate information available on the date of publication; it will generally not be updated. More extensive discussion of significant weather events, along with later information and data that has had greater opportunity for quality control, will be presented in the Monthly Weather Review.

This summary includes data from observing sites in or near the Greater Adelaide “Greater Capital City Statistical Area” (GCCSA). The Australian Bureau of Statistics designed the GCCSAs to “include the population within the urban area of the city, as well as people who regularly socialise, shop or work within the city, and live in small towns and rural areas surrounding the city. It is important to note that GCCSAs do not define the built up edge of the city. They provide a stable definition for these cities and are designed for the output of a range of social and economic survey data.

This statement has been prepared based on information available at 9 am on Friday 2 September 2022. Some checks have been made on the data, but it is possible that results will change as new information becomes available.

In some situations, some or all of the rainfall is in the form of hail or snow. In these cases the totals given are for the water equivalent: the depth of liquid water that results from melting any frozen precipitation. There can be significant 'undercatch' of snow in strong winds, meaning the true precipitation can be higher than that reported.

Averages for individual sites are long-term means based on observations from all available years of record, which vary widely from site to site. They are not shown for sites with less than 10 years of record, as they cannot then be calculated reliably.
The median is sometimes more representative than the mean of long-term average rain.

The Rank indicates how rainfall this time compares with the climate record for the site, based on the decile ranking (very low rainfall is in decile 1, low in decile 2 or 3, average in decile 4 to 7, high in decile 8 or 9 and very high is in decile 10).
The Fraction of average shows how much rain has fallen this time as a percentage of the long-term mean.

Where temperature area averages are mentioned, they are derived from the ACORN-SAT dataset.

Information about Australian Indigenous seasonal calendars is available at the Indigenous Weather Knowledge website.

Further information

Media
(03) 9669 4057

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