Wednesday, June 24, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Amazing! Kerala Man Predicting Rain With Precision Since 34 Years

IANS, 24 Jul, 2017 11:55 AM
  • Amazing! Kerala Man Predicting Rain With Precision Since 34 Years
Be it downpour or a thunderstorm, this weather man has never failed to record it over the past 34 years. 72-year-old MP Vimal Kumar, who wakes up at 6 am, starts his day by checking the rain gauge. 
 
A native of Muttil village in Kerala, Kumar uses a metal funnel accompanying with a calibrated measuring cylinder installed in front of his house, reported the Times of India. He meticulously enters the readings in a record book after taking the daily rainfall measurement.
 
The oldest entry in Kumar's data book was recorded in 1983 when the annual rainfall measured was 2,328 mm.
 
 
The weather man who is believed to predict the climate along with his immense stock of data has become a popular figure among many. Reportedly, from coffee and cardamom cultivators to weather bureau and confectionery giant like Cadbury, visit the weather man to seek consultation.
 
 
 
"I began recording daily rainfall data in 1983 after observing that the yield of coffee is heavily dependent on the timing and quantity of rain which is critical for blossoming and fruit setting. Blossom showers of at least 25 mm, ideally by mid-February, and 'backing showers' of 37 mm at least within 30 days of blossom showers, helps a lot in fruit development and retention of coffee" said Kumar.
 
He further added, "After years of observation I can now predict the quantity of rain in mm by just watching the precipitation and its duration."
 
As per Kumar's data record book, the maximum annual rainfall was recorded in 2014 at 2,968.2 mm while a minimum of 1,261.1 mm was recorded in 2016.
 
His venture has also been appreciated by S Sudevan, the regional director of Indian Meteorological Department (IMD). "IMD has four weather monitoring stations in Wayanad. But personal initiatives like this can provide hyper local weather information that can be of use to farmers and others in a specific locality," he said.
 
He owns a 30-acre of coffee plantation and many rain-dependent ryots in Muttil.
 
While he is travelling, the dedicated weather man directs his relatives to record the rainfall so that he can update his record book whenever he is back.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

How Santa Delivers Presents On Christmas Eve Explained

How Santa Delivers Presents On Christmas Eve Explained
The mystery of how Father Christmas can deliver presents to 700 million children in one night, fit down the chimney and arrive without being seen or heard has been explained by a UK physicist using Einstein's special relativity theory.

How Santa Delivers Presents On Christmas Eve Explained

An African Love Story In Which India Played Cupid

An African Love Story In Which India Played Cupid
I did not plan to fall in love when I left the DRC where I worked as a journalist with (state broadcaster) Radio Television National du Congo

An African Love Story In Which India Played Cupid

In Punjab, AAP Fights Within And Outside

In Punjab, AAP Fights Within And Outside
As the Punjab assembly elections draw closer, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and its leadership are grappling with a host of political skirmishes -- both within and outside.

In Punjab, AAP Fights Within And Outside

A Minimalist Holiday Season: How To Simplify Gift-Giving Without Being A Scrooge

A Minimalist Holiday Season: How To Simplify Gift-Giving Without Being A Scrooge
TORONTO — Rachel Jonat and her husband didn't purchase any Christmas gifts for their three sons when they were too young to understand the tradition.

A Minimalist Holiday Season: How To Simplify Gift-Giving Without Being A Scrooge

In No Cash Wedding Season, Indian Groom Gets Rs. 11, Guests Served Just Tea

In No Cash Wedding Season, Indian Groom Gets Rs. 11, Guests Served Just Tea
Mahavir Singh and his wife Gyano, residents of Nattoki madiya village in Greater Noida, organised the simple wedding of their daughter Sanju in Noida Sunday night.

In No Cash Wedding Season, Indian Groom Gets Rs. 11, Guests Served Just Tea

Indian-Origin Surgeon Awarded Prestigious Award

Indian-Origin Surgeon Awarded Prestigious Award
An Indian-origin British orthopaedic surgeon has been awarded the prestigious 'Hunterian Professorship' by the Royal College of Surgeons of England for his research on stem cells in articular cartilage repair.

Indian-Origin Surgeon Awarded Prestigious Award