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Fall Weather at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System Canada

Daily high temperatures decrease by 12°F, from 60°F to 47°F, rarely falling below 42°F or exceeding 64°F.

Daily low temperatures decrease by 12°F, from 55°F to 43°F, rarely falling below 37°F or exceeding 58°F.

For reference, on August 18, the hottest day of the year, temperatures at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System typically range from 55°F to 60°F, while on January 1, the coldest day of the year, they range from 41°F to 46°F.

Average High and Low Temperature in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Average High and Low Temperature in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov35°F35°F40°F40°F45°F45°F50°F50°F55°F55°F60°F60°F65°F65°FSummerWinterSep 160°FSep 160°F55°F55°FNov 3047°FNov 3047°F43°F43°FOct 157°FOct 157°F52°F52°FNov 152°FNov 152°F47°F47°F
The daily average high (red line) and low (blue line) temperature, with 25th to 75th and 10th to 90th percentile bands. The thin dotted lines are the corresponding average perceived temperatures.

The figure below shows you a compact characterization of the hourly average fall temperatures. The horizontal axis is the day, the vertical axis is the hour of the day, and the color is the average temperature for that hour and day.

Average Hourly Temperature in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Average Hourly Temperature in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov12 AM12 AM2 AM2 AM4 AM4 AM6 AM6 AM8 AM8 AM10 AM10 AM12 PM12 PM2 PM2 PM4 PM4 PM6 PM6 PM8 PM8 PM10 PM10 PM12 AM12 AMSummerWintervery coldcoldcool
frigid 15°F freezing 32°F very cold 45°F cold 55°F cool 65°F comfortable 75°F warm 85°F hot 95°F sweltering
The average hourly temperature, color coded into bands. The shaded overlays indicate night and civil twilight.

Barra, United Kingdom (4,304 miles away) is the far-away foreign place with temperatures most similar to Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System (view comparison).

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The fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System experiences very rapidly increasing cloud cover, with the percentage of time that the sky is overcast or mostly cloudy increasing from 46% to 72%.

The clearest day of the fall is September 1, with clear, mostly clear, or partly cloudy conditions 54% of the time.

For reference, on January 21, the cloudiest day of the year, the chance of overcast or mostly cloudy conditions is 77%, while on July 31, the clearest day of the year, the chance of clear, mostly clear, or partly cloudy skies is 63%.

Cloud Cover Categories in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Cloud Cover Categories in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov0%100%10%90%20%80%30%70%40%60%50%50%60%40%70%30%80%20%90%10%100%0%SummerWinterSep 154%Sep 154%Nov 3028%Nov 3028%Oct 141%Oct 141%Nov 128%Nov 128%clearmostly clearpartly cloudyovercastmostly cloudy
0% clear 20% mostly clear 40% partly cloudy 60% mostly cloudy 80% overcast 100%
The percentage of time spent in each cloud cover band, categorized by the percentage of the sky covered by clouds.

A wet day is one with at least 0.04 inches of liquid or liquid-equivalent precipitation. At Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System, the chance of a wet day over the course of the fall is very rapidly increasing, starting the season at 29% and ending it at 61%.

For reference, the year's highest daily chance of a wet day is 66% on November 3, and its lowest chance is 15% on July 30.

Probability of Precipitation in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Probability of Precipitation in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov0%0%10%10%20%20%30%30%40%40%50%50%60%60%70%70%SummerWinterNov 366%Nov 366%Sep 129%Sep 129%Nov 3061%Nov 3061%Oct 143%Oct 143%rain
The percentage of days in which various types of precipitation are observed, excluding trace quantities: rain alone, snow alone, and mixed (both rain and snow fell in the same day).

Rainfall

To show variation within the season and not just the monthly totals, we show the rainfall accumulated over a sliding 31-day period centered around each day.

The average sliding 31-day rainfall during the fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System is very rapidly increasing, starting the season at 3.0 inches, when it rarely exceeds 6.0 inches or falls below 0.7 inches, and ending the season at 9.4 inches, when it rarely exceeds 13.6 inches or falls below 5.5 inches.

The highest average 31-day accumulation is 9.9 inches on November 8.

Average Monthly Rainfall in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Average Monthly Rainfall in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov0 in0 in2 in2 in4 in4 in6 in6 in8 in8 in10 in10 in12 in12 in14 in14 inSummerWinterNov 89.9 inNov 89.9 inSep 13.0 inSep 13.0 inNov 309.4 inNov 309.4 inOct 15.7 inOct 15.7 in
The average rainfall (solid line) accumulated over the course of a sliding 31-day period centered on the day in question, with 25th to 75th and 10th to 90th percentile bands. The thin dotted line is the corresponding average snowfall.

Over the course of the fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System, the length of the day is very rapidly decreasing. From the start to the end of the season, the length of the day decreases by 5 hours, 3 minutes, implying an average daily decrease of 3 minutes, 22 seconds, and weekly decrease of 23 minutes, 33 seconds.

The shortest day of the fall is November 30, with 8 hours, 24 minutes of daylight and the longest day is September 1, with 13 hours, 27 minutes of daylight.

Hours of Daylight and Twilight in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Hours of Daylight and Twilight in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov0 hr24 hr4 hr20 hr8 hr16 hr12 hr12 hr16 hr8 hr20 hr4 hr24 hr0 hrSummerWinterSep 2212 hr, 13 minSep 2212 hr, 13 minnightnightdaydayNov 308 hr, 24 minNov 308 hr, 24 minNov 19 hr, 44 minNov 19 hr, 44 min
The number of hours during which the Sun is visible (black line). From bottom (most yellow) to top (most gray), the color bands indicate: full daylight, twilight (civil, nautical, and astronomical), and full night.

The earliest sunrise of the fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System is 6:47 AM on September 1 and the latest sunrise is 1 hour, 37 minutes later at 8:24 AM on November 2.

The latest sunset is 8:14 PM on September 1 and the earliest sunset is 3 hours, 42 minutes earlier at 4:32 PM on November 30.

Daylight saving time (DST) starts at 1:00 AM on November 3, 2024, shifting sunrise and sunset to be an hour later.

For reference, on June 20, the longest day of the year, the Sun rises at 5:21 AM and sets 16 hours, 23 minutes later, at 9:45 PM, while on December 21, the shortest day of the year, it rises at 8:28 AM and sets 8 hours, 3 minutes later, at 4:31 PM.

Sunrise & Sunset with Twilight and Daylight Saving Time in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Sunrise & Sunset with Twilight and Daylight Saving Time in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov2 AM4 AM6 AM8 AM10 AM12 PM2 PM4 PM6 PM8 PM10 PM12 AMSummerWinter6:47 AM6:47 AMSep 18:14 PMSep 18:14 PM8:08 AM8:08 AMNov 304:32 PMNov 304:32 PM8:24 AM8:24 AMNov 26:05 PMNov 26:05 PM7:32 AM7:32 AMOct 17:08 PMOct 17:08 PMDSTNov 3DSTNov 3SolarMidnightSolarMidnightSolarNoonSunriseSunset
The solar day in the fall. From bottom to top, the black lines are the previous solar midnight, sunrise, solar noon, sunset, and the next solar midnight. The day, twilights (civil, nautical, and astronomical), and night are indicated by the color bands from yellow to gray. The transitions to and from daylight saving time are indicated by the 'DST' labels.

The figure below presents a compact representation of the sun's elevation (the angle of the sun above the horizon) and azimuth (its compass bearing) for every hour of every day in the reporting period. The horizontal axis is the day of the year and the vertical axis is the hour of the day. For a given day and hour of that day, the background color indicates the azimuth of the sun at that moment. The black isolines are contours of constant solar elevation.

Solar Elevation and Azimuth in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Solar Elevation and Azimuth in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov12 AM12 AM2 AM2 AM4 AM4 AM6 AM6 AM8 AM8 AM10 AM10 AM12 PM12 PM2 PM2 PM4 PM4 PM6 PM6 PM8 PM8 PM10 PM10 PM12 AM12 AMSummerWinter01020300010203040
northeastsouthwest
Solar elevation and azimuth in the the fall of 2024. The black lines are lines of constant solar elevation (the angle of the sun above the horizon, in degrees). The background color fills indicate the azimuth (the compass bearing) of the sun. The lightly tinted areas at the boundaries of the cardinal compass points indicate the implied intermediate directions (northeast, southeast, southwest, and northwest).

The figure below presents a compact representation of key lunar data for the fall of 2024. The horizontal axis is the day, the vertical axis is the hour of the day, and the colored areas indicate when the moon is above the horizon. The vertical gray bars (new Moons) and blue bars (full Moons) indicate key Moon phases. The label associated with each bar indicates the date and time that the phase is obtained, and the companion time labels indicate the rise and set times of the Moon for the nearest time interval in which the moon is above the horizon.

Moon Rise, Set & Phases in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Moon Rise, Set & Phases in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov12 AM12 AM4 AM4 AM8 AM8 AM12 PM12 PM4 PM4 PM8 PM8 PM12 AM12 AMSummerWinterAug 44:14 AMAug 44:14 AMAug 1911:26 AMAug 1911:26 AMSep 26:56 PMSep 26:56 PMSep 177:35 PMSep 177:35 PMOct 211:50 AMOct 211:50 AMOct 174:27 AMOct 174:27 AMNov 15:48 AMNov 15:48 AMNov 151:29 PMNov 151:29 PMNov 3010:22 PMNov 3010:22 PMDec 151:02 AMDec 151:02 AMDec 302:28 PMDec 302:28 PM9:46 PM9:46 PM8:45 PM8:45 PM6:02 AM6:02 AM8:21 PM8:21 PM7:40 PM7:40 PM7:58 AM7:58 AM7:29 AM7:29 AM7:03 PM7:03 PM6:13 PM6:13 PM8:22 AM8:22 AM8:48 AM8:48 AM5:51 PM5:51 PM8:02 AM8:02 AM3:43 PM3:43 PM9:03 AM9:03 AM4:02 PM4:02 PM
The time in which the moon is above the horizon (light blue area), with new moons (dark gray lines) and full moons (blue lines) indicated. The shaded overlays indicate night and civil twilight.

We base the humidity comfort level on the dew point, as it determines whether perspiration will evaporate from the skin, thereby cooling the body. Lower dew points feel drier and higher dew points feel more humid. Unlike temperature, which typically varies significantly between night and day, dew point tends to change more slowly, so while the temperature may drop at night, a muggy day is typically followed by a muggy night.

The chance that a given day will be muggy at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System is essentially constant during the fall, remaining around 0% throughout.

Humidity Comfort Levels in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Humidity Comfort Levels in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov0%0%10%10%20%20%30%30%40%40%50%50%60%60%70%70%80%80%90%90%100%100%SummerWinterOct 160%Oct 160%Sep 10%Sep 10%Nov 300%Nov 300%Oct 10%Oct 10%Nov 10%Nov 10%comfortablecomfortabledrydry
dry 55°F comfortable 60°F humid 65°F muggy 70°F oppressive 75°F miserable
The percentage of time spent at various humidity comfort levels, categorized by dew point.

This section discusses the wide-area hourly average wind vector (speed and direction) at 10 meters above the ground. The wind experienced at any given location is highly dependent on local topography and other factors, and instantaneous wind speed and direction vary more widely than hourly averages.

The average hourly wind speed at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System is very rapidly increasing during the fall, increasing from 9.0 miles per hour to 14.3 miles per hour over the course of the season.

For reference, on December 28, the windiest day of the year, the daily average wind speed is 14.7 miles per hour, while on August 11, the calmest day of the year, the daily average wind speed is 8.8 miles per hour.

Average Wind Speed in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Average Wind Speed in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov0 mph0 mph5 mph5 mph10 mph10 mph15 mph15 mph20 mph20 mphSummerWinterSep 19.0 mphSep 19.0 mphNov 3014.3 mphNov 3014.3 mphOct 110.6 mphOct 110.6 mphNov 113.4 mphNov 113.4 mph
The average of mean hourly wind speeds (dark gray line), with 25th to 75th and 10th to 90th percentile bands.

The wind direction at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System during the fall is predominantly out of the north from September 1 to October 4 and the south from October 4 to November 30.

Wind Direction in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Wind Direction in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemNSSepOctNov0%100%20%80%40%60%60%40%80%20%100%0%SummerWinterwestsouthnortheast
northeastsouthwest
The percentage of hours in which the mean wind direction is from each of the four cardinal wind directions, excluding hours in which the mean wind speed is less than 1.0 mph. The lightly tinted areas at the boundaries are the percentage of hours spent in the implied intermediate directions (northeast, southeast, southwest, and northwest).

Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System is located near a large body of water (e.g., ocean, sea, or large lake). This section reports on the wide-area average surface temperature of that water.

The average surface water temperature at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System is rapidly decreasing during the fall, falling by 7°F, from 57°F to 49°F, over the course of the season.

Average Water Temperature in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Average Water Temperature in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov44°F44°F46°F46°F48°F48°F50°F50°F52°F52°F54°F54°F56°F56°F58°F58°F60°F60°FSummerWinterSep 157°FSep 157°FNov 3049°FNov 3049°FOct 154°FOct 154°FNov 152°FNov 152°F
The daily average water temperature (purple line), with 25th to 75th and 10th to 90th percentile bands.

Definitions of the growing season vary throughout the world, but for the purposes of this report, we define it as the longest continuous period of non-freezing temperatures (≥ 32°F) in the year (the calendar year in the Northern Hemisphere, or from July 1 until June 30 in the Southern Hemisphere).

While it does not do so every year, freezing temperatures are seen at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System over some winters. The day least likely to be in the growing season is January 4, with a 51% chance.

Time Spent in Various Temperature Bands and the Growing Season in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Time Spent in Various Temperature Bands and the Growing Season in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation Systemgrowing seasonSepOctNov0%100%10%90%20%80%30%70%40%60%50%50%60%40%70%30%80%20%90%10%100%0%SummerWinter100%Sep 1100%Sep 180%Nov 3080%Nov 30100%Oct 1100%Oct 198%Nov 198%Nov 1very coldcoldcool
frigid 15°F freezing 32°F very cold 45°F cold 55°F cool 65°F comfortable 75°F warm 85°F hot 95°F sweltering
The percentage of time spent in various temperature bands. The black line is the percentage chance that a given day is within the growing season.

Growing degree days are a measure of yearly heat accumulation used to predict plant and animal development, and defined as the integral of warmth above a base temperature, discarding any excess above a maximum temperature. In this report, we use a base of 50°F and a cap of 86°F.

The average accumulated growing degree days at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System are increasing during the fall, increasing by 265°F, from 538°F to 804°F, over the course of the season.

Growing Degree Days in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Growing Degree Days in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov500°F500°F600°F600°F700°F700°F800°F800°F900°F900°F1,000°F1,000°F1,100°F1,100°FSummerWinterSep 1538°FSep 1538°FNov 30804°FNov 30804°FOct 1711°FOct 1711°FNov 1788°FNov 1788°F
The average growing degree days accumulated over the course of the fall, with 25th to 75th and 10th to 90th percentile bands.

This section discusses the total daily incident shortwave solar energy reaching the surface of the ground over a wide area, taking full account of seasonal variations in the length of the day, the elevation of the Sun above the horizon, and absorption by clouds and other atmospheric constituents. Shortwave radiation includes visible light and ultraviolet radiation.

The average daily incident shortwave solar energy at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System is very rapidly decreasing during the fall, falling by 3.8 kWh, from 4.6 kWh to 0.7 kWh, over the course of the season.

Average Daily Incident Shortwave Solar Energy in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System

Average Daily Incident Shortwave Solar Energy in the Fall at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation SystemSepOctNov0 kWh0 kWh1 kWh1 kWh2 kWh2 kWh3 kWh3 kWh4 kWh4 kWh5 kWh5 kWh6 kWh6 kWh7 kWh7 kWh8 kWh8 kWhSummerWinterSep 14.6 kWhSep 14.6 kWhNov 300.7 kWhNov 300.7 kWhOct 12.8 kWhOct 12.8 kWhNov 11.3 kWhNov 11.3 kWh
The average daily shortwave solar energy reaching the ground per square meter (orange line), with 25th to 75th and 10th to 90th percentile bands.

For the purposes of this report, the geographical coordinates of Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System are 50.112 deg latitude, -127.941 deg longitude, and 167 ft elevation.

The topography within 2 miles of Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System contains very significant variations in elevation, with a maximum elevation change of 1,240 feet and an average elevation above sea level of 56 feet. Within 10 miles contains very significant variations in elevation (2,598 feet). Within 50 miles contains large variations in elevation (5,630 feet).

The area within 2 miles of Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System is covered by water (91%), within 10 miles by water (85%) and trees (11%), and within 50 miles by water (69%) and trees (25%).

This report illustrates the typical weather at Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System, based on a statistical analysis of historical hourly weather reports and model reconstructions from January 1, 1980 to December 31, 2016.

Temperature and Dew Point

Solander Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System has a weather station that reported reliably enough during the analysis period that we have included it in our network. When available, historical temperature and dew point measurements are taken directly from this weather station. These records are obtained from NOAA's Integrated Surface Hourly data set, falling back on ICAO METAR records as required.

In the case of missing or erroneous measurements from this station, we fall back on records from nearby stations, adjusted according to typical seasonal and diurnal intra-station differences. For a given day of the year and hour of the day, the fallback station is selected to minimize the prediction error over the years for which there are measurements for both stations.

The stations on which we may fall back are Port Hardy Airport, Cape Scott Light, Sartine Island Meteorological Aeronautical Presentation System, and Estevan Point Meteorological Station.

Other Data

All data relating to the Sun's position (e.g., sunrise and sunset) are computed using astronomical formulas from the book, Astronomical Algorithms 2nd Edition , by Jean Meeus.

All other weather data, including cloud cover, precipitation, wind speed and direction, and solar flux, come from NASA's MERRA-2 Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis . This reanalysis combines a variety of wide-area measurements in a state-of-the-art global meteorological model to reconstruct the hourly history of weather throughout the world on a 50-kilometer grid.

Land Use data comes from the Global Land Cover SHARE database , published by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

Elevation data comes from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) , published by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Names, locations, and time zones of places and some airports come from the GeoNames Geographical Database .

Time zones for airports and weather stations are provided by AskGeo.com .

Maps are © OpenStreetMap contributors.

Disclaimer

The information on this site is provided as is, without any assurances as to its accuracy or suitability for any purpose. Weather data is prone to errors, outages, and other defects. We assume no responsibility for any decisions made on the basis of the content presented on this site.

We draw particular cautious attention to our reliance on the MERRA-2 model-based reconstructions for a number of important data series. While having the tremendous advantages of temporal and spatial completeness, these reconstructions: (1) are based on computer models that may have model-based errors, (2) are coarsely sampled on a 50 km grid and are therefore unable to reconstruct the local variations of many microclimates, and (3) have particular difficulty with the weather in some coastal areas, especially small islands.

We further caution that our travel scores are only as good as the data that underpin them, that weather conditions at any given location and time are unpredictable and variable, and that the definition of the scores reflects a particular set of preferences that may not agree with those of any particular reader.

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