There is a possibility of very heavy or heavy rainfall on Saturday in 19 districts of Madhya Pradesh, including Indore and Ujjain. There is a red alert for very heavy rainfall in Barwani and Khandwa. Up to 8 inches of rain may fall here in the next 24 hours. According to the IMD, there is an orange alert for very heavy rainfall in Ratlam, Ujjain, Jhabua, Dhar, Alirajpur, Khargone, Burhanpur, Chhindwara and Balaghat, while heavy rainfall is expected in Indore, Dewas, Sehore, Harda, Narmadapuram, Betul, Narsinghpur, and Pandhurna. Similarly, heavy rain and storm will continue in Neemuch, Mandsaur, Agar-Malwa, Rajgarh, Shajapur, Vidisha, Bhopal, Raisen, Sagar, Guna, Ashok Nagar, Shivpuri, Sheopur, Morena, Bhind, Datia, Gwalior, Niwari, Tikamgarh, Chhatarpur, Damoh, Panna, Satna, Rewa, Mauganj, Sidhi, Singrauli, Maihar, Katni, Umaria, Shahdol, Jabalpur, Seoni, Mandla, Dindori and Anuppur. According to the Meteorological Department, it will rain in all districts of the state. Indore receives two and quarter inches of rain; Bhopal gets one and half inches The monsoon is active across the entire state. Due to this, it is raining heavily. In the past 9 hours, there have been rounds of storms and rain in more than 25 districts. According to the Meteorological Department, Indore received the highest rainfall of 2 inches. Mandla received one and three-quarters of an inch, Bhopal one and a half inches, Balaghat one and a quarter inches, Betul, Narmadapuram, Datia, Ratlam-Shivpuri three-quarter inches, Damoh, Dhar and Pachmarhi received half an inch of rain. Chhindwara, Jabalpur, Khajuraho, Narsinghpur, Naugaon, Sagar, Satna, Seoni, Tikamgarh, Umaria, Guna, Gwalior, Raisen also received rainfall. Meanwhile, a drop in day temperature has been recorded. In Bhopal on Friday, the maximum temperature came down to 29°C. It was 30°C in Indore, 33.6°C in Gwalior, 32°C in Ujjain and 28.3°C in Jabalpur. The lowest temperature of 25.5°C was recorded in Malajkhand. In Narsinghpur, Sagar, Damoh, Raisen, Mandla, Chhindwara, Guna, Dhar, Betul, the temperature remained below 30°C. Temples submerged on Shipra banks in Ujjain On Friday, intermittent rain continued in Bhopal since morning. Heavy rainfall occurred last night in Ujjain and surrounding areas. Due to this, several temples on the Shipra river ghat were submerged in water. Meanwhile, in Ganwadi Lodha village, Assistant Secretary Surya Pratap Singh Songara was swept away along with his bike in a drain. Earlier in Jagoti village, Keshu Anjana was swept away along with his motorcycle while trying to cross a culvert amid strong currents. However, he managed to get out of the water by grabbing tree branches some distance away. A video of this incident has also surfaced. The body of Mahesh Chauhan, who was swept away on Wednesday night in Ahirkhedi, Indore, was found in Sirpur pond after about 36 hours. In Pandhurna, 5 mud houses built on the riverbank collapsed due to rain. Household items along with 3 goats were swept away in the strong river current. In the Kasrawad area of Khargone, heavy rain occurred for 2 hours on Friday morning. Roads and fields were flooded. Waterlogging occurred in more than 12 wards of Balaghat. Heavy rain also occurred in Gwalior on Friday morning. Fields in Shivpur village in Ratlam were flooded. Pictures of the weather and its impact on Friday 13% less rainfall in the state so far The state witnessed storms and rain throughout the month of June this time. Meanwhile, on July 3 as well, heavy rain lashed several districts. Due to this, a total of 135.3 mm, i.e., 5.3 inches of rain, has fallen so far. However, this is 13 percent less than the normal rainfall of 156.1 mm (6.2 inches). The eastern part has received 35 percent less rainfall, while the western part has received 8 percent more water than average. Less in June, now hope from July According to the Meteorological Department, there has been less rainfall in June, but there are high hopes from July. This month has a trend of one-third of the entire monsoon rainfall. For example, Bhopal has 39 inches of normal rainfall, out of which 14 inches of rain occurs in July. Among major cities, Jabalpur is the only one where the highest rainfall of more than 17 inches occurs. In the month of July itself, up to 40 percent of the quota rainfall occurs in the state. State’s normal rainfall is 37.3 Inches The state’s normal rainfall is 37.3 inches. The normal rainfall of Bhopal, Indore, Jabalpur and Gwalior districts ranges from 38 to 39 inches. Less/More than normal rainfall in these districts Understand from the map, weather will remain like this for 4 days Such trend in 5 major cities of MP in July Record of 11.5 inches of rain in 24 hours in Indore Talking about Indore, there is a record of 11.5 inches of rain in 24 hours, which occurred on 27 July 1913. In the year 1973, 30.5 inches of water fell throughout the month. Due to the rain, a drop in temperature is also observed here. The average rainfall for the month in Indore is 12 inches. On average, it rains here for 13 days. Record of 41 inches of rain in Bhopal There is heavy rainfall in the capital, Bhopal, in July. There is a record of about 1031.4 mm, i.e., around 41 inches of rain in a single month here. This happened in the year 1986. On 22 July 1973, there was 11 inches of rain in a single day, which is still a record. Talking about rainy days in Bhopal, in the month of July, it rains on average 15 days. That means, it rains every other day. The average rainfall for the month is 367.7 mm, which is 14.4 inches. Due to the rain, the day temperature remains at 30, and at night the mercury stays below 25 degrees. Jabalpur has the record for highest rainfall Among the five major cities, Jabalpur is the one that receives the most rainfall. In the year 1930, about 45 inches of rain fell, while on July 30, 1915, the highest 24-hour rainfall of 13.5 inches occurred. Last year, more than 13 inches of rain fell in July. The highest rainfall was recorded in 2013 and 2016. The normal rainfall in Jabalpur for July is 17 inches. It rains for 15 to 16 days in the month. Gwalior receives less than 8 inches of rainfall 6 times Gwalior receives the least rainfall compared to Bhopal, Indore, and Jabalpur. In the last 10 years, there have been 6 instances when less than 8 inches of rain fell, whereas the average rainfall here is around 9 inches. Gwalior recorded its highest monthly rainfall in 1935, when 623.3 mm, i.e., 24.5 inches of rain, was recorded. Speaking of the highest rainfall in 24 hours, on July 12, 2015, 190.6 mm, i.e., seven and a half inches of rain, fell. In Gwalior, it rains on an average of 11 days in the month of July. Heavy rainfall occurs in Ujjain Like other cities in the state, Ujjain also receives heavy rainfall in July. About 40 percent of the quota’s rainfall occurs in this month alone. Post navigation Why the social media ‘Viral Cop’ lost his uniform?:₹40,000 monthly salary, ₹6 lakh social media earnings; reason behind the head constable’s resignation ₹2,000 crores spent on ₹800 cr tunnel in Jabalpur:CAG estimates irregularities of ₹100 cr; Sleemanabad project complaint reaches EOW