La Niña for the next 3 or 4 months

17 Nov 2025 11:39 - 17 Nov 2025 11:44 #80082 by Serious tribe
Hi All
So two weeks of almost contant rain and another week on the way.  RNNP had 107mm over the weekend and are already 73% over the average for November.  We are moving in to a La Niña cycle for the next 3 or 4 months at least, which is a mixed blessing!  

I decided to run some weather data through some Ai software to get an idea of what it can do and how accurate it will prove to be and took 25 years of rainfall data for RNNP from a site I monitor and after giving it a few carefully thought out questions (at least to my mind) and follow through questions, I got the following.  I did check the data, but didnt add individula months during th years etc as that would have taken to much time and I wanted to see how the ai would use the data.  For the most part, it seemed accurate.  This however was just a casual intetesting side escape to the editing I was doing so I wouldnt plan my potatoe crop based on it 

This image is hidden for guests.

.

1. La Niña Cycles (Expected Wet Years / Rainfall Peaks)The data strongly supports the expected wet conditions during the multi-year La Niña event that peaked in the Southern Hemisphere summer seasons of 2020/2021, 2021/2022, and 2022/2023.

Jan 2022 Peak: Rainfall was approximately 300 mm, significantly above the 185.87 mm average, making it one of the wettest Januarys on record.
Oct 2023 Extreme Peak: Rainfall was approximately 170 mm, which is the highest October rainfallin the entire 2000-2025 period and more than double the 76.14 mm average.
Dec 2023 Peak: Rainfall was approximately 220 mm, well above the 139.43 mm average
Feb 2022 Peak: Rainfall was approximately 270 mm, significantly above the 175.98 mm average.

2. El Niño Cycles (Expected Dry Years / Rainfall Troughs)The data shows a clear dry signal (trough) corresponding to the strongest El Niño event in the period, while the most recent event (2023/2024) had a more mixed effect.

Dec 2015 Extreme Trough: Rainfall was approximately 30 mm, the lowest December rainfall in the entire 2000-2024 period, confirming the severe drought conditions.
Oct 2015 Trough: Rainfall was approximately 40 mm, well below the 76.14 mm average.
Dec 2023 Mixed: Rainfall was above the monthly average (approx. 185 mm vs 139.43 mm). This suggests that other regional weather systems, such as Cut-Off Lows, can temporarily counteract the El Niño drought effect.
Jan 2024 Trough: Rainfall was below the monthly average (approx. 155 mm vs 185.87 mm).

This mixed result for 2023/2024 highlights a key point: while ENSO is the dominant driver of extreme rainfall in Southern Africa, it only explains about 30% of the overall rainfall variability, meaning local or regional factors can sometimes override the expected ENSO signal.  Based on the current long-range climate models for the 2025/2026 summer and the historical data you provided for the Royal Natal National Park, the forecast is for above-average rainfall for the entire period, consistent with a La Niña phase.

I then asked it to predict what the figures would be for the next few months.

Rainfall Prediction for Royal Natal National Park (mm)The following predictions are calculated by taking the historical monthly mean (from your charts) and applying a projected increase of +25% to +40%, which is a typical range for "above-normal" rainfall during a moderate La Niña event in this region, based on the peaks observed in your 2020-2023 data.

Month Historical Average (mm/month)       ENSO Forecast for PeriodPredicted Rainfall Range (mm).  Expected Condition
November 2025                 90.26 mm        La Niña113 mm to 126 mm                                                  Above Normal
December 2025               139.43 mm        La Niña174 mm to 195 mm                                                  Above Normal
January 2026                  185.87 mm        La Niña / Neutral transition  232 mm to 260 mm                  Above Normal / Peak Season
February 2026                 175.98 mm       La Niña / Neutral transition  220 mm to 246 mm                  Above Normal 

Basis for the Prediction
  1. ENSO Climate Model: International forecasts (like NOAA and IRI) indicate that La Niña conditions are present and highly favoured to persist through December 2025–February 2026, with a transition to an ENSO-Neutral phase likely starting around January–March 2026.
  2. Rainfall Outlook: The regional outlook for Southern Africa (including KwaZulu-Natal) is for a slight to moderate tilt in the odds favouring above-normal rainfall during this period. La Niña typically brings wetter summers to the region.
  3. Historical Correlation (Your Data): Your charts show that the recent La Niña events (2020-2023) produced monthly peaks that were often 45% to 65% above the long-term monthly average (e.g., December 2022 was ~58% above average). The projected range of +25% to +40% is a moderate estimate, as this La Niña is currently forecast to be relatively weak.
It is important to remember that these are long-range seasonal climate forecasts. Actual monthly totals can be highly variable due to localized events like intense thunderstorms or Cut-Off Lows, which can temporarily intensify or suppress the overall ENSO signal.

I am certainly not a weateher expert, nor an Ai expert as related to the questions that I asked, there may have been better ways of phrasing them.  The figures for RNNP for November 2025 are already at 165mm which is alreadt 73% above the average with the moderate effect at 25-40% peaking at 45-60%.  So perhaps the info is not going to be accurate, but was however interesting to put together and see what will happen this cycle.
Any comments welcome.
Last edit: 17 Nov 2025 11:44 by Serious tribe.
The following user(s) said Thank You: firephish, GetaPix, ghaznavid, PeterHowells, MarkT, Grandeur, Riaang, riaan300, Wandelaar

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
17 Nov 2025 11:46 #80083 by ivan
very interesting. Thanks for sharing!
 

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
17 Nov 2025 14:57 #80084 by Ralph
Hey ST,

Thanks for sharing, this was a very interesting read. definitely something to consider if planning a trip to the berg over the holidays.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
Powered by Kunena Forum