Wyndham weather: Forecast for May 25
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Today's forecast is sunny; fresh nw/ne winds.
At 7am today, expect extremely dry conditions with a dew point of 3.8. The temperature feels like 5.9, which is much colder than it actually is. The relative humidity is 68 per cent.
The highest expected temperature today is 19, the same as yesterday's max.
Today's maximum will be topped on Monday, but cooler conditions are expected on five of the next six days.
The chance of rain today is 5 per cent.
Showers are more likely tomorrow with the Bureau of Meteorology forecasting a medium (40 per cent) chance of rain.
The UV index is predicted to be 2. While there is a low risk of harm from sun exposure. Experts suggest using eye protection, sunscreen and covering up, especially people with sensitive skin who burn easily.
Winds will be north around 15 km/h in the morning increasing to north around 25 km/h in the afternoon.
Details for the next six days:
Monday, May 26: Partly cloudy. Late shower. Strong NE/NW winds Min - 11. Max - 21.
Tuesday, May 27: Partly cloudy. Showers, chance storm. Fresh NW/SW winds Min - 8. Max - 16.
Wednesday, May 28: Mostly cloudy. Showers. Fresh SW winds Min - 10. Max - 16.
Thursday, May 29: Mostly cloudy. SW winds Min - 10. Max - 17.
Friday, May 30: Mostly cloudy. W/SW winds Min - 9. Max - 17.
Saturday, May 31: Morning fog patches. Mostly sunny afternoon. NW winds tending SE Min - 9. Max - 17.
The previous Wyndham weather article can be viewed here.
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ABC News
8 hours ago
- ABC News
Minimum temperatures across Queensland remain 'significantly' below average
Queenslanders are in for more cold weather as minimum temperatures across the state remain below average on Wednesday. Bureau of Meteorology's (BOM) Daniel Hayes said the cooler weather would continue for the rest of the week because of a low-pressure system in the Tasman Sea and a high-pressure system pushing cool air into Queensland. It comes as Roma Airport recorded the coldest temperature in the country on Tuesday, alongside Mount Ginini — about 75km south-west of Canberra — with the minimum temperature reaching -3.6 degrees Celsius. Mr Hayes said while the Cairns region continued to record temperatures slightly above average, the rest of the state would experience "quite significantly below average" temperatures. He said frost would also be patchy on the Darling Downs and the Granite Belt. Wellcamp Airport, near Toowoomba, recorded -2.4 degrees at 6am on Wednesday, Dalby experienced -1.7 degrees while Charleville woke up to -0.3 degrees. Charleville's temperature will start at 0 degrees, Dalby is forecast to hit a minimum of 3 degrees, and Warwick and Stanthorpe can expect a low of 4 degrees on Wednesday. "We're still looking and seeing some of those minimum temperatures, particularly just that little bit further west through the inland parts, and the Darling Downs will be cool," Mr Hayes said. "It's largely going to be a fairly stable situation through to about the end of the week when things start to warm a little. "But even then, as it starts to warm, it's going to be a fairly gradual warming. "We're not looking at anything significant." Mr Hayes said the south-east would continue to endure cooler weather, with Brisbane set to hit a low of 9 degrees and a top of 19 degrees on Wednesday. Further north, temperatures remain in the mid to late 20s, with Townsville forecast to hit a top of 26 degrees and Cairns hitting a maximum of 27 degrees. Mount Isa is forecast to have a chilly start to the day with minimum temperatures set at 2 degrees, but a top of 21 degrees is expected.

Sky News AU
9 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Cold weather sweeps through major Australian cities with mercury set to plunge throughout the week
The mercury looks set to plunge throughout the week for most Australian cities with frosty mornings on the way as winter ramps up. Clear skies appear set to bring cold temperatures to much of the country on Wednesday, with frost likely in several regions. The odd, patchy shower could occur across New South Wales, although the coast is forecast to remain clear and dry. Elsewhere, light showers could sprinkle over parts of southern Victoria and eastern Tasmania. 'Extensive frosts looking possible across parts of central Queensland, northern Victoria, southern New South Wales, and parts of Tassie as well,' Sky News Australia Meteorologist Alison Osborne said. 'As for Queenslanders it's looking particularly nippy for you. Down to minus one in Roma tomorrow, four degrees in Toowoomba, one degree in Longreach to kick off your Wednesday, and just nine degrees in Brisbane.' Chilly temperatures are expected for most cities, with highs of 19 forecast for Brisbane, 18 for Sydney, 14 in Melbourne, and 13 for Canberra. Frosty mornings are forecast to stick around throughout the week, with clear skies set to deliver cold nights. 'Believe it or not, it's not the wettest weather or the cloudiest weather that brings the coldest conditions during winter in Australia, it is the clearest weather - clear, cold nights,' Ms Osborne said. 'The temperature is dropping very quickly with no blanket of cloud to prevent that heat escaping. 'Overall, most of the country is expecting clear winter nights this week. What this means is very cold winter nights, temperatures dropping quickly as soon as the sun goes down.' Parts of Western Australia and areas stretching from central Queensland to Tasmania should expect morning frost from Thursday through to the weekend, although some regions could see a brief reprieve on Friday due to an increase in cloud and windier conditions. Frost is normal for the start of winter in June, bringing the threat of damage to crops in rural areas. The Bureau of Meteorology has issued a Frost Warning for the Mallee, Wimmera, Northern Country, North Central, North East, Central, and East Gippsland forecast districts in Victoria and the Riverland, Upper South East and Lower South East forecast districts in South Australia. The Bureau warned 'temperatures at ground level can be many degrees lower than those recorded by standard weather stations, especially in calm conditions with clear skies'. In addition to frost, parts of the nation's south are forecast to see rainfall later in the week. A cold front and low are expected to push into SA on Thursday, which is likely to bring widespread rain before weakening over the following days. 'The mostly dry weather continues for most of the county on Thursday, but we are watching some showers, likely to develop over the New South Wales and the Victorian Gippsland coasts, of less than five milimetres. Widespread falls through South Australia are likely to be under five (milimitres) as well, so nothing too heavy there,' Ms Osborne said. Patchy showers are expected across the nation over the weekend, with a front likely to sweep across SA and Victoria bringing rain and cloudy conditions.


The Advertiser
a day ago
- The Advertiser
Wild and windy: 90 kilometre wind gusts lash the Hunter in cold snap
WILD and windy conditions have swept through the Hunter over the King's Birthday long weekend, bringing icy temperatures and damaging weather. The gale-force winds brought down a large tree across Black Hill Road near Minmi, where emergency services were called to assist. The Bureau of Meteorology's Belinda House said a low-pressure system in southern parts of the Tasman Sea off the south coast of NSW caused the gusty environment. "The Hunter is on the northern side of that low-pressure system, so we're seeing those fairly fresh and gusty, west-northwesterly winds funnelling down through the Hunter Valley," she said. The Nobbys Head weather station recorded a wind gust of 91km/h on Monday morning, June 9, at about 11am. "Since then, it's been gusting between 70 and 90 kilometres all morning. It's likely we'll continue to see a fairly windy day right across the Hunter for the rest of the day and again tomorrow," she said. Temperatures on Monday saw Newcastle reach a top of 15 degrees with a feels-like temperature of six. Further up the Hunter, the mercury dropped with Scone and Muswellbrook forecast to reach just 12 degrees and 13 in Singleton and Cessnock. "They are really cold daytime temperatures. On Tuesday, we can expect temperatures to warm up a bit, pushing 18 or 19 degrees through parts of the coast," Ms House said. "But it will be a reasonably chilly night with parts of the Upper Hunter likely to get down to six or seven degrees." She said the combined conditions and cold temperatures were a recipe for snow to fall at Barrington Tops. "We don't specifically have a report for Barrington Tops, we have measured precipitation. So, it's cold enough, it's high enough. I think it's a safe assumption. Knowing that we've seen snow fall up through the tablelands, that there will have been some snow up there," she said. "There is no chance for snow after Monday." The Barrington Tops remained closed until further notice on June 9 due to recent flooding. The public is urged to avoid affected areas. WILD and windy conditions have swept through the Hunter over the King's Birthday long weekend, bringing icy temperatures and damaging weather. The gale-force winds brought down a large tree across Black Hill Road near Minmi, where emergency services were called to assist. The Bureau of Meteorology's Belinda House said a low-pressure system in southern parts of the Tasman Sea off the south coast of NSW caused the gusty environment. "The Hunter is on the northern side of that low-pressure system, so we're seeing those fairly fresh and gusty, west-northwesterly winds funnelling down through the Hunter Valley," she said. The Nobbys Head weather station recorded a wind gust of 91km/h on Monday morning, June 9, at about 11am. "Since then, it's been gusting between 70 and 90 kilometres all morning. It's likely we'll continue to see a fairly windy day right across the Hunter for the rest of the day and again tomorrow," she said. Temperatures on Monday saw Newcastle reach a top of 15 degrees with a feels-like temperature of six. Further up the Hunter, the mercury dropped with Scone and Muswellbrook forecast to reach just 12 degrees and 13 in Singleton and Cessnock. "They are really cold daytime temperatures. On Tuesday, we can expect temperatures to warm up a bit, pushing 18 or 19 degrees through parts of the coast," Ms House said. "But it will be a reasonably chilly night with parts of the Upper Hunter likely to get down to six or seven degrees." She said the combined conditions and cold temperatures were a recipe for snow to fall at Barrington Tops. "We don't specifically have a report for Barrington Tops, we have measured precipitation. So, it's cold enough, it's high enough. I think it's a safe assumption. Knowing that we've seen snow fall up through the tablelands, that there will have been some snow up there," she said. "There is no chance for snow after Monday." The Barrington Tops remained closed until further notice on June 9 due to recent flooding. The public is urged to avoid affected areas. WILD and windy conditions have swept through the Hunter over the King's Birthday long weekend, bringing icy temperatures and damaging weather. The gale-force winds brought down a large tree across Black Hill Road near Minmi, where emergency services were called to assist. The Bureau of Meteorology's Belinda House said a low-pressure system in southern parts of the Tasman Sea off the south coast of NSW caused the gusty environment. "The Hunter is on the northern side of that low-pressure system, so we're seeing those fairly fresh and gusty, west-northwesterly winds funnelling down through the Hunter Valley," she said. The Nobbys Head weather station recorded a wind gust of 91km/h on Monday morning, June 9, at about 11am. "Since then, it's been gusting between 70 and 90 kilometres all morning. It's likely we'll continue to see a fairly windy day right across the Hunter for the rest of the day and again tomorrow," she said. Temperatures on Monday saw Newcastle reach a top of 15 degrees with a feels-like temperature of six. Further up the Hunter, the mercury dropped with Scone and Muswellbrook forecast to reach just 12 degrees and 13 in Singleton and Cessnock. "They are really cold daytime temperatures. On Tuesday, we can expect temperatures to warm up a bit, pushing 18 or 19 degrees through parts of the coast," Ms House said. "But it will be a reasonably chilly night with parts of the Upper Hunter likely to get down to six or seven degrees." She said the combined conditions and cold temperatures were a recipe for snow to fall at Barrington Tops. "We don't specifically have a report for Barrington Tops, we have measured precipitation. So, it's cold enough, it's high enough. I think it's a safe assumption. Knowing that we've seen snow fall up through the tablelands, that there will have been some snow up there," she said. "There is no chance for snow after Monday." The Barrington Tops remained closed until further notice on June 9 due to recent flooding. The public is urged to avoid affected areas. WILD and windy conditions have swept through the Hunter over the King's Birthday long weekend, bringing icy temperatures and damaging weather. The gale-force winds brought down a large tree across Black Hill Road near Minmi, where emergency services were called to assist. The Bureau of Meteorology's Belinda House said a low-pressure system in southern parts of the Tasman Sea off the south coast of NSW caused the gusty environment. "The Hunter is on the northern side of that low-pressure system, so we're seeing those fairly fresh and gusty, west-northwesterly winds funnelling down through the Hunter Valley," she said. The Nobbys Head weather station recorded a wind gust of 91km/h on Monday morning, June 9, at about 11am. "Since then, it's been gusting between 70 and 90 kilometres all morning. It's likely we'll continue to see a fairly windy day right across the Hunter for the rest of the day and again tomorrow," she said. Temperatures on Monday saw Newcastle reach a top of 15 degrees with a feels-like temperature of six. Further up the Hunter, the mercury dropped with Scone and Muswellbrook forecast to reach just 12 degrees and 13 in Singleton and Cessnock. "They are really cold daytime temperatures. On Tuesday, we can expect temperatures to warm up a bit, pushing 18 or 19 degrees through parts of the coast," Ms House said. "But it will be a reasonably chilly night with parts of the Upper Hunter likely to get down to six or seven degrees." She said the combined conditions and cold temperatures were a recipe for snow to fall at Barrington Tops. "We don't specifically have a report for Barrington Tops, we have measured precipitation. So, it's cold enough, it's high enough. I think it's a safe assumption. Knowing that we've seen snow fall up through the tablelands, that there will have been some snow up there," she said. "There is no chance for snow after Monday." The Barrington Tops remained closed until further notice on June 9 due to recent flooding. The public is urged to avoid affected areas.