Cold, wet weather to grip SA this week as schools reopen
The partly cloudy conditions are still expected to dominate over most parts of the country on Thursday, with cold to cool conditions expected but warm in the extreme northern parts covering areas over the northern parts of Limpopo into the lowveld of Mpumalanga.
There will be a 30% chance of rain and showers for the North West, the Northern Cape, Eastern Cape and into KwaZulu-Natal. Friday
Thobela said Friday will bring isolated showers and rain over most parts of the southwestern areas as a cold front slips south of the country, with a 30% chance of showers and rain over the Western Cape as well as the southern parts of the Free State.
Cold temperatures are expected over the escarpments of Lesotho into the extreme eastern parts of the Eastern Cape. Saturday
Very cold conditions are expected on Saturday over the southwestern interior with windy conditions and a 30% chance of showers and rain along the south coast.
Possible light snow is forecast for the eastern half of the Western Cape into the extreme southwestern parts of the Eastern Cape, with windy conditions expected along the coast into the central interior, covering areas around the Northern Cape into the Free State and the western parts of the North West. Sunday
'On Sunday, cold temperatures will persist, especially over the eastern half of the Eastern Cape, resulting in light snow over the Drakensberg Mountains that lead to the Lesotho mountains, with a 30% chance of showers and rain expected into the afternoon.
Thobela said the conditions are expected over most parts of the eastern half of the Eastern Cape with a 30% chance of showers and rain over most parts of the western areas of KwaZulu-Natal into the escarpment of Mpumalanga.
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The Herald
21-07-2025
- The Herald
Cold, wet weather to grip SA this week as schools reopen
On Wednesday partly cloudy conditions with cool temperatures are expected to dominate over the central parts into the eastern parts of the country, with isolated showers and rain expected over the eastern parts of the Northern Cape, the Free State and the southern areas of the North West. Thursday The partly cloudy conditions are still expected to dominate over most parts of the country on Thursday, with cold to cool conditions expected but warm in the extreme northern parts covering areas over the northern parts of Limpopo into the lowveld of Mpumalanga. There will be a 30% chance of rain and showers for the North West, the Northern Cape, Eastern Cape and into KwaZulu-Natal. Friday Thobela said Friday will bring isolated showers and rain over most parts of the southwestern areas as a cold front slips south of the country, with a 30% chance of showers and rain over the Western Cape as well as the southern parts of the Free State. Cold temperatures are expected over the escarpments of Lesotho into the extreme eastern parts of the Eastern Cape. Saturday Very cold conditions are expected on Saturday over the southwestern interior with windy conditions and a 30% chance of showers and rain along the south coast. Possible light snow is forecast for the eastern half of the Western Cape into the extreme southwestern parts of the Eastern Cape, with windy conditions expected along the coast into the central interior, covering areas around the Northern Cape into the Free State and the western parts of the North West. Sunday 'On Sunday, cold temperatures will persist, especially over the eastern half of the Eastern Cape, resulting in light snow over the Drakensberg Mountains that lead to the Lesotho mountains, with a 30% chance of showers and rain expected into the afternoon. Thobela said the conditions are expected over most parts of the eastern half of the Eastern Cape with a 30% chance of showers and rain over most parts of the western areas of KwaZulu-Natal into the escarpment of Mpumalanga. TimesLIVE


The Citizen
18-07-2025
- The Citizen
Cold snap and clouds: Cape Town braces for chilly, windy weekend
The approaching cold front will bring increased cloud cover and stronger winds to coastal areas. Cape Town residents can expect a weekend of cold, clear skies followed by windy and cloudy conditions as a cold front begins to push into the Western Cape on Sunday. According to the South African Weather Service (Saws) forecaster Lehlohonolo Thobela, the province is in for a partly cloudy and cold Friday, followed by a fine and cold Saturday, but will remain partly cloudy along the south coast. But the calm conditions won't last. 'On Sunday, a cold front approaches the Western Cape from the west, resulting in cloudy, cold and windy conditions along the coastal areas of the province,' Thobela told The Citizen. Clear skies for most of Saturday Saturday will start cold, with morning temperatures dipping to 8°C before rising to a crisp 19°C by the afternoon. Clear skies will dominate throughout the day, with no rainfall expected. Winds will be light and southeasterly, averaging around 9 km/h. Humidity will ease from 80% in the early hours to a dry 40% by 2pm, offering ideal conditions for outdoor activities—although residents should bundle up in the morning and evening, with temperatures expected to drop back to 13°C by 8pm. ALSO READ: Weekend weather alert: Clouds gather in Gauteng Cold front looms on Sunday Sunday's forecast marks a noticeable shift, it may feel brisker as the cold front begins to make its presence known. While temperatures remain similar, ranging between 8°C and 18°C, wind direction will begin to shift southwest by midday before turning westerly in the evening. The approaching cold front will bring increased cloud cover and stronger winds to coastal areas. Humidity levels will rise again, peaking at 80% by Sunday night. Despite the changing conditions, no rainfall is forecast, and skies will remain mostly clear until late evening, when they turn partly cloudy. NOW READ: Weather alert: Damaging coastal waves and very cold weather in EC on Mandela Day

The Herald
07-07-2025
- The Herald
Metro races to fix sewerage fault that shuts down Kings Beach
The Nelson Mandela Bay municipality is racing against time to repair a faulty sewerage pipe that is causing human waste to flow into stormwater drains, ultimately ending up along Kings Beach in Humewood. The beach has been closed by the metro due to the contaminated water to prevent health issues. The fault is on a 600mm sewerage pipe that runs through South End. The sewage spill has carved a 300m channel through the sand, stretching from a grassy patch — now sprouting reeds — to the shoreline, creating a murky path straight to the beach. On Monday, the spill spread across a large section of the beach parking lot, with pieces of toilet paper visible. The sewage spills have affected beach activities. The city had battled to locate the source of the leak since it was reported last week. Municipal spokesperson Sithembiso Soyaya said the source of the problem was located at the weekend. 'This task was made difficult by the presence of swampy terrain, overgrown vegetation, and dense trees in the area,' Soyaya said. 'Despite these challenges, progress has been made, and specialised equipment is being deployed to the site to speed up the work. 'The contractor will now begin clearing the dense tree coverage to enable access to the submerged sewer manholes. 'Once these are fully exposed, bypass pumping operations will begin, which will help prevent any further environmental contamination.' Soyaya said while this work was under way, teams continued to douse the affected areas to reduce E. coli levels and neutralise the unpleasant smell. A driving school instructor who operates from the parking lot, and did not want to be named said, the regular flooding affected his operations. 'In my case as a code 10 instructor, I use the lines drawn on the concrete surface where it is currently flooded, which means I have to give the lesson from inside the vehicle because I can't stand here. 'The water makes it difficult for the learner driver to see the lines, and it doesn't help that there's a bad smell, but what can we do,' he said. The PE Hobie Beach parkrun posted on Facebook that it its weekend event was cancelled because of the spill. 'Unfortunately, there is a big sewerage leak on our beach route towards the harbour wall,' the post reads. 'This used to be a trickle in the past, but has turned into a river of about six to eight metres wide. 'This is not safe for any of our participants or volunteers. Unfortunately, there is no way to divert around it at this stage. 'The matter has been reported to the municipality as it is clearly a huge infrastructure failure.' Parkrun Eastern Cape regional ambassador Dale Mortimer said they cancelled the upcoming Saturday event as well because of the leak. 'We took this decision with the anticipation that the issue will not be resolved by then, and we will reassess the situation early next week,' Mortimer said. 'For a while now this used to be a trickle of clean stormwater overflow from what we were told but I can't confirm this, what I can say is that there was no smell. 'But lately it became such a big leak with so much liquid that it put our runners' safety at risk. 'From what we understand, there's a sewage leak that gets mixed with the stormwater which is why there's so much smelly water going out to the beach.' Ward 2 councillor Sean Tappan said the sewage leak came from Allister Miller Drive, opposite the air wing base. 'That's been running for over a week now, and we've reported it every day and escalated it to the acting city manager [Ted Pillay] on Friday,' Tappan said. 'I got a photograph that there was a honey sucker there, and they were doing something. 'But every single day, on the weekend, including now this morning, that flow is still running into a stormwater drain. 'It's supposed to go out into natural areas where there's excess water and rain, but now raw sewage is mixing with the stormwater and that is why you're getting that terrible smell.' The Herald