How much it rained in Halanayakanahalli. Analysis from Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monotoring Centre (KSNDMC) data

Halanayanahalli- off Sarjapur road is like many other parts of the city depends on groundwater for water needs. Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monitoring Center (KSNDMC) has put up a weather station at the Halanayakanahalli Gram Panchayat Office. We obtained the rainfall data from KSNDMC and here are the results… 878.5 mm from April to October 2015.

Wonder, how much the total would be if November rainfall data is added.  

Month
Rainfall (mm)
Rainfall days
Highest rainfall event (mm)
April
111.5
12
28.5
May
73.5
10
20
June
120
18
44.5
July
55.5
12
29
August
186.5
15
45.5
September
171.5
12
61.5
October
160
7
81.5
Total
878.5
86
 
 
Read our full report here: KSNDMC and Halanayakanahalli rainfall data 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

The trees we forget: What a city loses when the canopy disappears

Bengaluru's trees are more than shade; they are memory, identity, and resistance. Their loss leaves the city harsher and emptier.

Summer in India has been merciless this year, with many states recording temperatures above 42 degrees Celsius and rising reports of fatalities. Despite these harsh conditions, urban support continues for development projects that clear trees, wetlands, mangroves, and forests near cities. A recent Article 14 report provides data on thousands of trees that will soon be sacrificed nationally for infrastructure projects. Those opposing such unscientific large-scale tree felling are often labelled 'tree-huggers', 'anti-development' and 'anti-nationals'. While capitalism accelerates environmental degradation and the world faces a growing climate crisis, societal divisions deepen.  Yet, we give trees too little credit: Beings necessary…

Similar Story

Bengaluru’s flowering Tabebuia Rosea trees: Think green, not just pink

Cities must not confuse beauty with ecology; Bengaluru’s pink weeks are lovely, but unchecked ornamental planting could make the city prettier but less alive.

Late each winter, Bengaluru briefly transforms into an Indian Kyoto, as roads blush pink, office parks turn photogenic, and social media buzzes with claims of a local “cherry blossom” season. But the star of this spectacle is not cherry at all. It is Tabebuia rosea, the pink trumpet tree, a neotropical ornamental whose native range runs from Mexico to Ecuador. What seems like a harmless aesthetic win is, ecologically, far more complex. The history Bengaluru’s pink canopy is not new. Much of it can be traced back to the 1980s under forester S G Neginhal, who drove a major greening…