Work colleagues perhaps best know the state of the Ghanaian weather more than I do, as they have seen many more of them than I have, but I cannot quite get my head round the fact that we have had no less than two rainy seasons all along?
My colleagues tell me that September/October is a time when there is rain, though not as much as the semi-torrential rain that we have witnessed for the past couple of days. The official rainy season is actually around June/July, so when we get cats-and-dogs rain in short starts like this, I can only wonder one thing:
CLIMATE CHANGE?
Ghanaian; ECOWAS Community Citizen; AU Citizen. Development of life in Ghana is meaningless unless linked up with development of Africa!
Showing posts with label ghana weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ghana weather. Show all posts
Monday, September 20, 2010
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Dealing with the (Vague) Vagaries of the Ghanaian Weather...
Off-late, Ghanaians have been complaining about the weather, because for some strange--and some might say "divine"--reason, we have had what I call "centralised precipitation". That is to say rainfall that has begun in the capital of Accra--and not spread towards the nine other regions of the country that equally need rainfall!
This morning, I woke up around 5.45am to see some heavy droplets on cars outside, and a wet ground, to boot. When the cool wind blew in my face, it was sufficient proof of rainfall that had fallen during the hours of 1-4am, as around midnight I was awake, and there was no sign of rain.
Meanwhile, when I got to work, colleagues living some thirty minutes away inside the capital city did not experience any rainfall--neither did they experience it over the weekend when there was a veritable downpour!
We are not yet in the rainy season, which is supposed to start from July, and end around September.
So when the "Ghanaian Times" reported last week that there was going to be drought, and it was rebuffed by a Ghana Meteorological Agency official speaking to CITI97.3fm online (here: http://www.citifmonline.com/site/news/news/view/4811/1) , I thought that visiting their website at http://www.meteo.gov.gh would offer some resolution.
Instead the website was as dead and "under construction" as some of our roads in the more remote regions of the country!
I don't like relying on the Ghana Meteo figures provided on the evening news; I would have preferred a website--like that of the Nigerian (yes, Nigerian!) -- website that is even functioning, with contact numbers [http://www.nimetng.org/nimet/].
When will Ghanaians ever learn...
This morning, I woke up around 5.45am to see some heavy droplets on cars outside, and a wet ground, to boot. When the cool wind blew in my face, it was sufficient proof of rainfall that had fallen during the hours of 1-4am, as around midnight I was awake, and there was no sign of rain.
Meanwhile, when I got to work, colleagues living some thirty minutes away inside the capital city did not experience any rainfall--neither did they experience it over the weekend when there was a veritable downpour!
We are not yet in the rainy season, which is supposed to start from July, and end around September.
So when the "Ghanaian Times" reported last week that there was going to be drought, and it was rebuffed by a Ghana Meteorological Agency official speaking to CITI97.3fm online (here: http://www.citifmonline.com/site/news/news/view/4811/1) , I thought that visiting their website at http://www.meteo.gov.gh would offer some resolution.
Instead the website was as dead and "under construction" as some of our roads in the more remote regions of the country!
I don't like relying on the Ghana Meteo figures provided on the evening news; I would have preferred a website--like that of the Nigerian (yes, Nigerian!) -- website that is even functioning, with contact numbers [http://www.nimetng.org/nimet/].
When will Ghanaians ever learn...
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