Air Temperatures – The following high temperatures (F) were recorded across the state of Hawaii Wednesday…along with the low temperatures Wednesday:

84 – 75  Lihue, Kauai
86 – 74  Honolulu, Oahu
84 – 74  Molokai
86 – 72  Kahului AP, Maui
86 – 75  Kailua Kona
82 – 68  Hilo AP, Hawaii

Here are the latest 24-hour precipitation totals (inches) for each of the islands as of Wednesday evening:

0.39  Mount Waialeale, Kauai
0.38  Tunnel RG, Oahu
0.00  Molokai
0.00  Lanai
0.01  Kahoolawe

0.77  West Wailuaiki, Maui
0.45  Kawainui Stream, Big Island

The following numbers represent the strongest wind gusts (mph) as of Wednesday evening:

28  Port Allen, Kauai
30  Oahu Forest NWR, Oahu
32  Molokai
32  Lanai
37  Kahoolawe

31  Kahului AP, Maui

35  Waikoloa, Big Island

Hawaii’s MountainsHere’s a link to the live webcam on the summit of our tallest mountain Mauna Kea (nearly 13,800 feet high) on the Big Island of Hawaii. This webcam is available during the daylight hours here in the islands, and at night whenever there’s a big moon shining down. Also, at night you will be able to see the stars — and the sunrise and sunset too — depending upon weather conditions.


Aloha Paragraphs

http://weather.unisys.com/satellite/sat_ir_enh_west_loop-12.gif
Cold front far northwest…low pressure aloft northeast

http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/west/cpac/vis.jpg
High clouds west and east of the islands

http://www.prh.noaa.gov/hnl/satellite/State_VIS_loop.gif
Clear to partly cloudy…cloudy areas


http://radar.weather.gov/Conus/RadarImg/hawaii.gif
Showers locally –
Looping radar image


Small Craft Advisory
…windiest coasts and channels around the eastern islands

 

~~~ Hawaii Weather Narrative ~~~

 

Broad Brush Overview: Trade winds will gradually strengthen during the next couple of days, becoming locally windier Friday and Saturday. A stable airmass will focus modest rainfall along windward slopes into the weekend.

Details:  A benign weather pattern will occur over the next few days with relatively warm air aloft, prompting a trade wind inversion remaining near 6000-7000 feet through Friday. Rainfall will be more limited than recent days, focused on windward sides during the night and early mornings. The trades are thanks to a nearly stationary ridge located well north of the state…shifting northward into Thursday. High pressure far northwest will migrate eastward and strengthen, passing north of the islands Friday…with windy trades increasing Friday and Saturday.

Looking Further Ahead: The trades will taper off some Sunday and Monday, as the new high pressure cell takes up residence several hundred miles offshore from the California coast. Modest cooling aloft, and slightly above normal precipitable water values, may result in an increase in windward showers later in the weekend into early next week, although the various models aren’t quite sure what will transpire just yet…stay tuned.

Here’s a wind profile of the Pacific Ocean – Closer view of the islands / Here’s the vog forecast animation / Here’s the latest weather map

Marine environment details:  Trade winds will continue to strengthen across the area, as high pressure ridging develops to the north of the state. A Small Craft Advisory remains in effect for the windiest waters around Maui County and the Big Island. Ridging north of the islands will become better establish Saturday, with a more dominant high north of the islands. This outlook keeps a steady supply of strong trades blowing into the weekend.

This stronger trades will maintain rough and choppy waters through the second half of the week. Surf along east facing shores will be higher…although will remain below advisory levels.

An out of season small to moderate north-northwest swell has peaked, and will begin trending down.

Surf along the south facing shores will be maintained by a small south swell through the week.

http://hawaiitravelandweather.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/hawaii_wp_016.jpg
Trade winds prevail

 

>>> Southern California Weather Brief: An upper level trough of low pressure will cause the marine layer to deepen, bringing areas west of the coastal slopes with cloudy conditions. Some drizzle or light rain will be possible this morning in some locations. Today will be the coolest for the remainder of the week. Weak high pressure will allow for some modest warming Thursday through Saturday, then another area of low pressure will bring cooler conditions…with more low cloudiness again

http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/goes/west/wfo/lox/cvis.jpg
Partly to mostly cloudy…clearing locally


World-wide tropical cyclone activity


https://icons.wxug.com/data/images/sst_basin/gl_sst_mm.gif[.


>>> Atlantic Ocean: The 2017 hurricane season begins June 1st

>>> Caribbean: The 2017 hurricane season begins June 1st

>>> Gulf of Mexico: The 2017 hurricane season begins June 1st

Here’s a satellite image of the Caribbean Sea…and the Gulf of Mexico

Here’s the link to the National Hurricane Center (NHC)

>>> Eastern Pacific: Tropical Depression 02E remains active, here’s the NHC graphical track map, and a satellite image of this system…and what the computer models show

Here’s a wide satellite image that covers the entire area between Mexico, out through the central Pacific…to the International Dateline.

Here’s the link to the National Hurricane Center (NHC)

>>>
Central Pacific
: The 2017 hurricane season begins June 1st

Here’s the NOAA 2016 Hurricane Season Summary for the Central Pacific Basin

Here’s a link to the Central Pacific Hurricane Center (CPHC)

>>> Northwest Pacific Ocean: No active tropical cyclones

>>> South Pacific Ocean:

>>>
North and South Indian Oceans / Arabian Sea:
No active tropical cyclones


Here’s a link to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC)



Interesting:
Robots Wielding Water Knives Are the Future of Farming
Just after dawn in the Salinas Valley south of San Francisco, a raucous robot rolls through a field spitting clouds of vapor. It’s cutting lettuce heads with water knives—super-high-pressure beams—and gobbling up the produce. The heads roll up its mouth and onto a conveyor belt, where workers in hoodies and aprons grab the lettuce and tear off the loose leaves.

Right across the road, workers are harvesting lettuce the agonizing old-fashioned way—bent over with knife in hand. “If you’re a beginner, it kills you because your back really hurts,” says Isabel Garcia, a harvester who works atop the robot. “It takes somebody really strong to be doing that kind of work.”

Garcia and the other workers here didn’t lose their jobs to a robot—they work in tandem with one. And just as well, because California farms are facing a serious labor shortage of perhaps 20 percent. Increasingly sophisticated robots have to pick up the slack, here and around the world. Because if humanity expects to feed its booming population off a static amount of land, it’s going to need help.

Here in the Salinas Valley, farmers and tech types are teaming up to turn this into a kind of Silicon Valley for agriculture. And they’re not stopping at water-knife-wielding robots. Because it’s data that will truly drive this agricultural revolution. It’s not just about robots doing jobs humans don’t want to do, but AI doing jobs humans can’t do. And AI can’t go anywhere without data.

For sure, the robots will definitely support the dwindling farming workforce. Fewer immigrant workers are coming to the fields, and their demographics are shifting. “Just with a changing population here in California, we’ve got an aging workforce,” says Mark Borman, president of Taylor Farms California, which operates the robot. “So people who are coming out to do agricultural, we’re not getting that younger population into the job.”

That means not only using robots to help fill those jobs, but modifying the product they grow to make things easier for the machine. Taylor Farms has selected a kind of romaine that grows more like a light bulb, which leaves a longer base for the water knife to more efficiently slice. So while workers are adapting to work with the robot, the farm is adapting the produce to work with the machine. This is what the future of agriculture looks like: Humans modifying food to fit robots as much as they modify their own behavior to suit the machines.

More and more, agriculture is about automation. Not that automation is anything novel. Farming has seen thousands of years of technological advances, from the horse-drawn plow to the combine harvester. But in this digitized world, the pace of automation is accelerating. “At the end of the day, a lot of the traditional work that’s being done in the fields, fewer and fewer people want to do that,” says Dennis Donohue, lead of the Western Growers Center for Innovation and Technology, a kind of incubator that tallies over 30 ag tech startups in downtown Salinas. “So parts of those functions are simply going to be automated.”

“We’re not looking to replace a workforce,” Donohue says. “We’re looking to maintain an industry and the food supply for North America.” In fairness, automation is also great for making money, whether it’s at the expense of workers or not. But Donahue has an existential argument on his side that, say, car factory operators don’t: Humanity is in danger of not being able to feed itself. By 2050, the world population could boom to almost 10 billion people. Farmers will have to feed those humans—not to mention their livestock—with the same amount of land. Hell, even less land, as ocean levels continue to rise.

Automation will chip away at the problem of production efficiency. But data technology solutions may be even more critical. Here in the incubator, a startup called AgriData is developing a way for machines to manage the productivity of fields. Its gadget rapidly scans trees to pinpoint fruits and determine their yield. Thus farmers can get a better sense of how their fields are producing to better time their harvests.

Up in the hills overlooking the Salinas Valley, one winery is using data to tackle an even more pressing problem: water. Hahn Family Wines has partnered with Verizon to digitize its fields, sampling the soil as well as the humidity around the plants. “With our soil sensors we’re measuring how far down that moisture is going and if it’s gone out the bottom of the soil,” says Andy Mitchell, director of viticulture. “Then we know we’ve put on too much water so we can cut back. It really helps us fine-tune our application methods.”

California may be out of its brutal drought, but there’s no telling how climate change will shape the coming decades. The state has to somehow provide water for 20 million people while watering a $50 billion agriculture industry. And that’s to say nothing of, well, literally everywhere else on the planet. But expect the technology growing here in the Salinas Valley to make its way around the world, water knives and all.