Dry season, wet season, wet dry season, dry wet …
It gets confusing.
Last winter (a year ago) we had a “record dry” dry season (in which under 4 inches fell from November to April).
That was followed by a “wet start” to wet season that ended on “dry note,” even if for a full season (May-Oct), the 2009 wet season chimed in on the 30-year average of 43 inches …
That puts us where we are today:
At the end of an unusually “wet” dry season.
That’s turned what’s usually a dry month of April into seeming more like July …
At least that’s how it looks from 500′ up in a helicopter.