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High hopes for sunny summer 04.06.10

by Caoimhinn Barr, Inishowen Independent

AFTER the longest and harshest winter in living memory, hopes are high for a good summer here as the latest Met Eireann figures show that Inishowen is getting warmer and drier.
The average temperature for May is up slightly while the amount of rain, which has fallen here so far this year, is down a whopping 20% on the 2009 figure.
The mean maximum temperature at Malin Head for the month of May was 12.8 degrees Celsius while the mean minimum was 7.6 degrees. The average daily temperature of 10.2 degrees for May here is up 0.3 degrees on normal.
Rainfall at Malin Head for the first five months of 2010 is down almost 20% on 2009 figures. The monthly amout for May was down 13% on the mean figure, with only 51.5mm falling during the 31-day period. This was 46% less than the 2009 May rainfall of 95.2mm. The wettest day of May this year was the 5th when 9.7mm fell in one single day.
The hottest 24 hours of the month was Tuesday May 18, which recorded an impressive average daily temperature of 19.2 degrees Celsius. The lowest recorded reading of May saw temperatures plummet to an unseasonal low of just 3.0 degrees Celsius on the 8th; an amazing 16 degrees of difference in the space of just ten days.
Nationally, mean air temperatures for spring were a little higher than normal, but it was nevertheless the coldest spring since 2001.
Leenan Beach, Clonmany, during the recent warm sunshine.
March was colder than normal everywhere, while mean temperature values for both April and May were a little higher than average, despite cold spells each month.
The season’s lowest temperatures were measured during early March, when air temperatures fell below -5°C with ground temperatures below -10°C in many places.
More than 50 days with ground frost were recorded during the season at inland and eastern stations, over twice the normal number for spring. In contrast, maximum values of around 25°C were measured on May 22nd and 23rd, when the highest spring temperatures for many years were recorded in the Dublin area.
Rainfall totals for the season were below normal almost everywhere, with only around three quarters of the
seasonal average recorded in many places while sunshine totals for the season were above normal everywhere.
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