Basher said..
Monday:
If you've been watching the Pozo live stream you'll already know we have a heatwave in southern Europe and that high temperatures in the Canary Islands can ruin the seasonal trade winds.
The wind direction also changes slightly and that means patchy wind in the bay at Pozo. With the extra heat, these are sometimes known as kalima conditions, and they get hazy skies and with sandy air blown in from Morocco.
Thats a new one for me. I thought the trade winds the Canary Islands gets were due to a high pressure over the Azores.
Today, and for a few days, a low pressure to the north of the Canary Islands might be cocking the trade winds up.
www.windy.com/-Pressure-pressure?pressure,2022071312,33.340,-21.973,5The wind recently has been from the north, so patchy wind in Pozo as it needs NNE/NE, the usual trade wind direction.
The high temperatures in the Canary Islands comes when the wind is from the east, from Africa. That is the Calima wind. I've been there when that has happened. The wind is from the east, light and stuffy. Easterly would be onshore at Pozo.
The high temperature in the Canary Islands is an effect of pressure/wind, not the cause.
ps, its spelt with a C as well. Calima.