Roger Atkinson
Greetings
all,
Just a short comment (a parting shot?), inspired by Barry's msg, on "knock-em-downs".
Up here in the centre of the universe (the Top End, for those dummies who
thought differently), I understand the term has been inherited from the
local aboriginal people, the Jawoyn, who use it to describe the season
that follows the (monsoon) wet. i.e. the build-down, as
opposed
to the build-up. I'm not contesting that the early buildup storms tend
to be gusty (though they have no monopoly on the game, the same sort of
vertical moisture/shear profile often occurs at the end of the wet), but
the expression itself (it least in this neck of the woods) relates to the
storms knocking down not trees, but spear grass. By the end of the wet,
large tracts of the Top End are covered with mature spear grass (up to
3 metre tall). Navigating your way through it can be tricky and dangerous
(you can see neither the snakes you're about to tread on, nor more generally
where you're going), so the locals are much relieved when, at the end of
the monsoon, the gusty storms come along and knock all the spear grass
down. Hence the term. Now the question is, does the WA expression have
it's own origin? Or did you fellows hear us using it and coin it? We would
understand your reasons for copying much of what we say/do :) The earliest
reference to the expression I could find in the extensive Tindal Met library
is one by Ernestine Hill in "The Territory" (a ripping yarn if ever I've
read one), published around 1950, if my memory serves me correctly (most
unlikely).
All yours....
Roger
P.S.
While I'm at it, you WAian avmet fellows, why is it, do you suppose, that
tropical thunderstorms that occur west of 129E only seem to be associated
with visibility reductions down to around 3000m, and result in significant
airfield weather deteriorations that last less than 30 minutes, when
those east of 129E often last close to an hour or even more, and
result
in much more serious vis reductions (according to vismeter data)? Is it
like that thingy about 'what is the sound of a tree falling in the forest'?
.....oh, when you're located several thousand km southwards :)
John McBride
Ah.... Roger knows I can't resist the historical aspects of the Australian monsoon: So, here, some quotes from Chapter VII of Ernestine Hill's 1951 book, "The Territory". This chapter is an account of an expedition to settle Port Darwin via two ships of "settlers" from Adelaide, the ships being the Gulnare and the Bengal. They sailed into Port Darwin together on 24th June 1870" I shall quote verbatim, with a series of dots "......" when I omit sentences and/or paragraphs". I hope you agree it is fascinating.
"New
year came in with the north-west monsoon. Rain was a thick curtain
let down on the world. Three inches in an hour, twelve inches in
a day. It rained with a helpless hysteria of weeping all through
January, February and March, till the cliffs were waterfalls and the tracks
running rivers.............And the green grass grew all round, sixteen
feet high".
.................
"In
April the wind changed -- "knockem-down rain" -- flattening the long grasses
till you could see the next hut".......
....................
"In
May the healthy trade-wind came rollicking in again, with its song of Pacific
surf and cool, cloudless weather.
John McB