This was what I said (May 24, 2016):
This week much of the Somali peninsula was flooded and so was eastern Australia.AwRastaale wrote:The Australian Bureau of Meteorology has declared El Nino is over and we will see the start of El Nina. sea-surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific had dropped back to neutral conditions. Other indicators, such as the resumption of the typically westward-blowing tradewinds, also supported proof of the event's demise.
I believe the weather conditions in Australia and in the northern part of the Horn are closely linked.
El Nino droughts began in May 2015 and we should now see el Nina weather conditions with massive rains and possibly floods.
Let's see if my own prediction is correct that we should see some of Australian weather conditions in the northern part of the Horn starting from Puntland region to eastern Sudan."Outlooks suggest little chance of returning to El Nino levels, in which case mid-May will mark the end of the 2015-16 El Nino," the bureau said in its fortnightly update.
We need to follow the Australian metrologies.
Hargeisa
Heavy rains were reported in Erigabo, Badhan, Mogadishu (this one I wasn't expecting).
Same time in Australia

In summary, we need to pay attention to Australian weather conditions. If there is serious drought, most likely it will hit our region too. I declare this the Hawdian LinkThe frequency of major flood events along Australia's eastern seaboard is increasing, with climate change one of the possible factors, senior Bureau of Meteorology researchers say.
The report, published in the bureau's inaugural edition of the Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science, comes as eastern Australia braces for the second east coast low in as many weeks, with the potential for localised flooding including in the Sydney region.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/environment/weath ... z4Bo8gi9Rb
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