because the in winter goes in opposite direction...
The northern trade winds blow from the northeast. The southern trades blow from the southeast.
The Answer Is NOT trade winds
Trade winds
Those winds were called the trade winds at a time when trade, or commerce, was conducted largely by sailing vessels that required wind in order to travel. The trade winds were particularly useful for sailing ships engaged in trade.
Those winds were called the trade winds at a time when trade, or commerce, was conducted largely by sailing vessels that required wind in order to travel. The trade winds were particularly useful for sailing ships engaged in trade.
trade winds
The polar easterlies (also Polar Hadley cells) are the dry, cold prevailing winds that blow from the high-pressure areas of the polar highs at the north and south poles towards low-pressure areas within the Westerlies at high latitudes.
The northern trade winds blow from the northeast. The southern trades blow from the southeast.
Easterlies Westerlies and the Trade Winds.
On the other hand, Mountains may prevent moisture - laden winds from reaching dry areas, as the Sierra Nevada's do to Nevada.
The Answer Is NOT trade winds
it is the trade winds that brought Columbus ships to the Caribbean
trade winds
No. The trade winds are in the tropics.
The trade winds are the pattern of easterly surface winds found in the tropics near the equator. The trade winds blow predominantly from the northeast and from the southeast. The trade winds act as the steering flow for tropical storms that form over the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans that make landfall in North America, Southeast Asia, and India.
Trade winds blow from the Northeast in the Northern Hemisphere. Trade winds are the prevailing winds of the tropics and a major component of circulation in the atmosphere.
High winds in dry areas, and rain in any areas, due to "sign degradation".