Bonfire
Wellington bonfire party
On the first panel, the Triangle-person and an Oval-person are sitting next to an unlit campfire. Triangle has a lighter in hand and a windsock showing strong wind towards the right. Oval has a sausage on a stick readied, and both are staring at the windsock.
Second panel shows the windsock hanging down. Triangle is starting the fire, while Oval is already cooking the sausage. Smoke rises upwards.
On the third panel, windsock is now blowing to the left, with wind blowing smoke in Triangle’s face, their eyes blood-shot. Oval-person is failing to cook the sausage due to the wind.
Wellington not only sits in the roaring 40s, a global zone of powerful westerly winds, it’s also perched on the Cook Strait which forms a funnel for the wind.
As a result, the weather flips between strong northerly and strong southerly. If you want to run a bonfire, you need to time it right between these two prevailing weather patterns - but it’s hard to know how quick the transition is going to be.