Weather history comes alive here: explore Dayboro’s daily records, month‑by‑month trends, and seasonal storylines with an interactive dashboard that taps directly into our weather daily archive which spans over 20yrs of records.

Switch between temperature, rain, wind, humidity, pressure, solar, UV, evapotranspiration, dew point, and wet bulb views; filter any month or year range to see coloured heat maps, totals, and side notes like “2.4 mm wetter” or “3 °C warmer.”

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Understanding Maximum, Average, and Minimum Statistics

These three metrics measure different aspects of seasonal weather patterns and can sometimes appear contradictory. The Maximum Temperature represents the single hottest day during the period – useful for identifying extreme heat events. The Average Temperature is calculated from the mean daily temperature across all days in the season and reflects typical day-to-day conditions. The Minimum Temperature shows the coldest night recorded.

These metrics are independent of each other. For example, a season can have a very high maximum (due to one extreme heat wave) while still maintaining a below-average overall temperature (if most other days were cool). Similarly, a mild winter with consistent moderate temperatures might show an above-average mean temperature but a lower maximum than a winter with more variable conditions. When comparing seasons, look at all three metrics together: maximum reveals extreme events, average indicates typical daily conditions, and minimum shows cold extremes.