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WEATHER

Norway just had its fourth wettest August in 123 years

August in Norway was the fourth wettest since the country started taking records in 1900, with new rainfall records set at over 100 weather stations, the Norwegian Meteorological Institute has reported.

Pictured is rain in Bergen.
Travel in Norway has been disrupted by Storm Hans. Pictured is rain in Bergen. Photo by Kjetil Jakobsen on Unsplash

It may seem hard to believe given the amount of rainfall that has fallen over recent weeks, but August 1951 was even wetter, setting the country’s all-time rainfall record for the month. 

“It’s seldom happened that as many records have been set as there have been in August,” Jostein Mamen, a climate researcher at the Meteorological Institute, said in a press statement. “In August we’ve set over 100 rainfall records and over 50 temperature records.”

The majority of the records were set in the area most heavily affected by Storm Hans between August 7th and August 9th. 

Fourteen weather stations in Viken set new rainfall records, twelve in Innlandet, seven in Vestland, seven in Oslo, and one each in Agder, Trøndelag and Troms and Finnmark. 

Helga Therese Tilley Tajet, climate researcher at the Meteorological Institute, said that it had been “an extreme month in the south”. 

“This applies both to how much precipitation has fallen in one day and how much precipitation has fallen in August,” she said. “This has made it the fourth wettest August for the whole country in 123 years.”

While August was cold and wet in the south of Norway, in the north it was unusually warm and in places dry.

The state meteorologist Eirik Samuelse, based in Tromsø, wrote on his weather blog that Tromsø had recorded its third warmest August on record, with an average temperature of 13.8 degrees, only rivalled by 1930, when there was an average temperature of 14C and and 1934 when there was an average temperature of 13.9C.

The Myken weather station on the island of Rødøy in Nordland recorded on 20.4mm of rain in August, 69 percent less than normal, the Grunnfjord station on Karlsøy in Troms and Finnmark recorded on 24mm, 65 percent less than normal. Finally the Dividalen II station in Målselv in Troms and Finnmark recorded 24.9mm, 65 percent below normal. 

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WEATHER

Norway to enjoy warm sunny weather on May 17th

Many will be able to enjoy clear blue skies and sunny weather on Norway’s national day, May 17th, according to the latest forecasts from meteorologists. 

Norway to enjoy warm sunny weather on May 17th

Norway’s two biggest cities could be treated to great weather on May 17th. Both Bergen and Oslo will see temperatures of between 15 and 20 degrees and clear skies. 

“The weather will be quite good in Eastern Norway. It will probably be up to 20 degrees,” Susanne Moen Olsen, meteorologist on duty at StormGeo, told broadcaster TV 2.

The forecast will come as good news to the many hundreds of thousands who will either be participating in or watching a Constitution Day parade. 

While many will enjoy the weather, the heat could make wearing a bunad, a traditional folk costume made from wool and featuring heavy embroidery and jewellery, uncomfortable for long spells. 

A forecast from Yr shows that Bregen could enjoy highs of 24 degrees on May 17th. This means that the record for the warmest-ever Constitution Day in Bergen could be broken. The record was set in 2019 and highs of 24.3 degrees were recorded. 

Trondheim was set to have decent weather, as is most of the rest of the country. 

“Generally, the weather should be quite good. In Nordland, it will be up to 15 degrees at least,” Moen Olsen said. 

Tromsø and Bodø, the two biggest cities in north Norway, will see highs of 16 and 21 degrees, respectively, although both places will have chilly lows of 5 degrees. 

Stavanger will have highs of 22 degrees and lows of 10 degrees, along with a light breeze. Kristiansand will have highs of 16 degrees but more brisk winds of between 25.2 and 40 kilometres per hour. 

Meanwhile, in Ålesund, the weather will be around 19 degrees with a gentle breeze. 

One thing to be wary of was the tradition of grilling on May 17th, as a yellow danger warning for forest fires has been issued across large parts of southern and eastern Norway. 

Below you can see a forecast for May 17th from Yr posted onto X (formerly Twitter). 

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