Cyclone Delcore (Aus)

Cyclone Delcore is a powerful cyclone off the coast of Australia.

Tracking-
January 3rd- Cyclone starts forming. Between New Zealand and Australia. No tropical.

January 4th around 12pm. Cyclone reaches hurricane strength. Still approaching Australia. Soaking rains start reaching the coast.

January 4th around 8pm. Heavy soaking rains slam New South Wales. Fires are getting estinguished.

January 6th- Around 4am. Cyclone mixing with ash and smoke. Causes Delcore to strengthen.

January 7th. Delcore makes partial landfall in New South Wales. Winds of 100mph. By now most if not all the fires in NSW are extinguished.

The Story of How a Hurricane Saved Australia.
Fires have been raging out of control in Australia since November or earlier. Devastating results are in the country. So, I made a hypothetical storm that removed the fires and saved the island nation. Australia needs rain, so here is one. Too bad we cant send rain over the internet!!

Story
On December 21st, a tropical low forming in the Australian basin was beginning to gain momentum. Delcore was a south. During the first week, not much movement occurred. Delcore mainly sat idle between New Zealand and Australia. The storm eventually began moving towards Australia by December 24th. That day, a narrow line of intense rain bands reached the shore. New South Wales finally received much needed rain, but not enough yet. By the end of Christmas, the rain bands had dried up. The actual cyclone was gaining strength, expanding, and developing more rain. And it was headed right for the fires in New South Wales.

On January 3rd, The cyclone was an intense C2 equivalent storm, reaching winds of nearly 100mph. The storm was just 2-300 miles off the coast of Australia. However, rain was only miles away at this point, which gave SE Australia some hope. It wasn't until January 4th in the evening that rain had begun falling in the fire region of NSW. Rain fell very heavy as the storm continued moving in on AUS. Delcore had strengthened to a C3 equivalent storm, reaching 125mph. This is when Delcore Peaked. Much of Delcore was comprised of the fire's smoke, which was an explanation of how Delcore rapidly fired up. Later it began to weaken as the smoke mostly burned off in the storm. When Delcore came ashore on January 6th, it made a partial landfall as a C1 equivalent storm. Delcore had still kept winds around 85mph. The coastline got he eyewall of the non-tropical low. On January 7th, Delcore was still on the shore, now just north of Sydney. Heavy rain kept falling across New South Wales. As of January 8th, rain has been falling for nearly 3 days. There is more rain to come.