Aussie Enviro
An Australian community for everything from your backyard to beyond the black stump.
Topics may include Aussie plants and animals, environmental, farming, energy, and climate news and stories (mostly Aus specific), etc. New related communities will be split off when required, think like subcommunities that exist on that other platform.
Trigger Warning: Community contains mostly bad environmental news (not by choice!). Community may also feature stories about animal agriculture and/or meat. Until tagging is available, please be aware and click accordingly.
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- Golden rule - be nice. If you wouldn’t say it in front of your ~~grandmother~~ favourite tree, don’t post it.
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/c/Aussie Environment acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land, sea and waters, of the area that we live and work on across Australia. We acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture and pay our respects to their Elders past and present.
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The islands have different humidities. Oahu is much more dry than the big island and hardly rains, Maui has a dry side which is the side on fire now. It also rains more on the east side of the big island which is where you most likely visited. Hawaii has not changed as much as you imply.
Kona side was definitely drier, but not dry enough for a wildfire. I cannot think of one happening during the years we were there, or later while family was still there. Maybe small fires started by dumb kids?
The islands are indeed all different, but they are all tropical and now seem to be becoming drier. The same is happening here in Queensland Australia.
The rainfall maps here seem to show all the islands have relatively similar rainfall and patterns, which makes sense.
http://rainfall.geography.hawaii.edu/assets/images/mean_ann_rf_statemm.jpg
Here is a site that has been tracking rainfall in Hawaii since records began, and the trend is showing less and less rain.
http://rainfall.geography.hawaii.edu/rainfall.html
There are likely a few causes, but the fact that Hawaii has changed in the last 15 years is just that - a fact. Not an opinion.
You can check their sister sites on climate in Hawaii for more interesting information about these changes.
Kona is on the big island, I'm not sure what you mean? It would surprise me if the big island caught on fire (not caused by lava) but it did not change so much in 20 years that wildfires happen on the east side of the big island. I never said the climate has never changed, I said it did not change as much as he implied. Areas with a lot of rainfall are not catching on fire. I checked your images and they confirm what I've been saying about the diversity of the islands. I think it's wrong to compare them that way, climate change is happening but not like that.
Btw I decided to ask my partner about this and wildfires in kona and kohala on the big island have been a worry for years, there's even signs posted.