Heavy rain in most places, but monsoon yet to cover all south

The latest map supplied by the IMD shows the northern limit of monsoon 2017 scything through about two-thirds of Karnataka and the balled fist of Andhra Pradesh.
The south-west monsoon usually covers the entire country by mid-July. (File photo)
The south-west monsoon usually covers the entire country by mid-July. (File photo)

Ten days since the southwest monsoon officially touched the southern tip of south India, it has inched up only half the way toward the Vindhyas. The latest map supplied by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) shows the northern limit of monsoon 2017 scything through about two-thirds of Karnataka and the balled fist of Andhra Pradesh.

Kerala and Tamil Nadu are fully covered, the latter only notionally, since it has little business to do with the southwest monsoon. Telangana and Odisha are beyond the pale yet.

Yet, Telangana has been having rains, which, as per the Met’s quibbling, are pre-monsoon showers. Whatever they are, they have been good to the state, with the state capital Hyderabad receiving 110 mm so far, apparently 88 mm more than normal.

As for real monsoon precipitation, Kerala has been well lashed so far and is in for a pounding of 7-11 cm in the next two days, the weather bulletin said. Fishermen have been warned about strong westerlies along the Malabar coast.

In Karnataka, the monsoon made touchdown last Wednesday, IMD director Sundar Mahadev Metri said, and would cover the whole of the state by the end of the weekend. The monsoon struck south interior Karnataka and the coast of Karnataka on Wednesday itself. Most parts of southern and coastal Karnataka have experienced heavy rain up to 13 cm in the last couple of days, and climate change expert Ram Kumar said, “It looks good for South India this year.”

The Rayalaseema region in Andhra Pradesh has been covered but clouds are giving the miss to the coastal districts and moving east to Bay of Bengal.

Saturday was Odisha’s formal date with the monsoon, but IMD said it’s going to take two more days. Although heavy rainfall has been predicted for one or two places over coastal Odisha, the real monsoon is a few days off.

(Inputs from Kerala, Telangana, Andhra, Karnataka, Odisha)

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