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moffatross

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Posts posted by moffatross

  1. How unusual is this view of the UK ? It's as if the weather gods have decided to see what the opposite of normality looks like and put all the high ground areas on the western side of the British Isles (West Highlands, Southern Uplands, Lake District, Snowdonia, Beacons, Dartmoor & Exmoor, W &  SW Ireland) in the sunshine, and put everywhere else in the cloud. Did the sun set in the East after all ?

    Wall-to-wall sunshine now in Moffat. An excellent day for painting & paint drying as it's quite windy, but not so much fun being up a ladder.

    cloud.JPG

     

  2. 27 minutes ago, Hairy Celt said:

    Not sure I've ever heard of someone cleaning house walls before.  OCD?

    Getting the house ready for the survey before we sell. The wall had at least fifteen years worth of algae and farmyard dirt accumulation. I have already rendered and painted the west and south facing walls which were badly weathered, but that north facing wall was simply looking rank so didn't need repairing and painting. Saved myself about 3 days additional work and £100 worth of masonry paint :D

    It's all part of the plan to exit Moffat and move to Scotland's highest village  ... I anticipate much snow gloating on this forum next winter from our new place at 400 metres ASL :)

    • Like 2
  3. 1 hour ago, CatchMyDrift said:

    I'm paying for it though. 6.7C, grey and breezy, it's back to November yet again. At least the drizzle has stopped, that's the most positive thing I can say about today :) 

    I have sympathy. Moffat is an absolute cool, dreich drizzle magnet on anything with a SW'ly component. There is lots of flat ground between us and the Solway Firth that doesn't suck up any moisture and when the air gets here, it's just pure minging, whereas  just 20 miles east at Selkirk & Hawick, the sun can be shining with temps 4 or 5 degrees warmer with the Moffat and Ettrick Hills having sucked up the moisture before it gets there.

    As I said, it's a remarkable effect in Moffat when the tables are turned but you can console yourself that WSW is the status quo !

  4. 5 hours ago, Northernlights said:

    From my view of the mountains I can see some massive drifts  in the gullies and depressions after some big falls of snow and periods of severe gales in the last 2 months down to about a thousand feet.

    I think Iain Cameron's impression is right though. He and I have done surveys  in the Moffat Hills in the Spring over the last few years and we'll need to get out in the next couple of week I reckon as there may be little left by May. If you compare the Ben Nevis photo in the twitter link to this one from a couple of years ago when I was skiing the gullies with some pals at the end of April you'll see it's been a very lean snow winter.

    14077620003_594043c181_h.jpg

    • Like 1
  5. A fabulous, fabulous day !! :) Barely a breath of wind, and with warm sunshine, and blue skies, working outside from 8 am - 6 pm (and in a t-shirt from 10 am) was a total pleasure, and getting some rays on my pasty white skin to make some much needed Vitamin D was a proper brucy bonus :D

    All was peachy until I heard the news that airport taxes are to be reduced (reducing government income) while D&G are about to slash their (already scant) bus services because they don't receive enough money from government to support them. Government used to be about the people ... now it's all about big business :angry:

  6. 5 hours ago, Northernlights said:

    Up to 13.5c here shirt sleeves bedding cattle. No daffodils here as even in sunny ares they are only a few inches through the ground and in shaded areas they are hardly peeping through yet. Its been pretty cold since mid January here and all the daffodil growth was in late November and December. Definitely April for daffodils here in full bloom.

    No daffs here either but a few crocuses are poking through. What seems very unusual is that our snowdrops are still in full bloom, which is odd because they seem to have been flowering for many weeks !

    • Like 1
  7. 35 minutes ago, snowidea said:

    Dull but dry in Falkirk. Ready for spring now, want to get out in the campervan. 

    I've been renovating a house for months so my ski season has been a write-off. It's been utterly minging here in Moffat today, the cloud is down to the town and there's been rain on and off from the get-go so I've spent the day indoors, scraping loose plaster and papering walls and ceilings. Looking forward to hitting the CalMac ferries with the touring push-bike after the clocks change, but very tempted by a wee early Spring stravaig with the fly rod on Tuesday as that's when the broon trout season starts :)

    15086091918_c6078f03b1_h.jpg

    • Like 3
  8. Don't want to venture into the MO thread, but I have no idea why ECM & GFS have been at such odds, though at least they've consistently been at odds.

    GFS keeps modelling a brief, ineffectual Scandi High then a quick & messy breakdown, wheras ECM has a prolonged HP sitting over the UK with very light wind, dry weather, sometimes sunny, sometimes warm conditions. Just looked again and though the Met Office were initially siding with GFS, it appears from their mid-term narrative that they've dropped yesterday's high over Scandinavia reference and sided with the ECM. This is promising :)

    • Like 2
  9. 18 minutes ago, SW Saltire said:

    Next weekend could well be very pleasant. GFS giving my location 13c next saturday with the Azores high nudging up. That model always underdoes those temps so with some sunshine mid-teens may well be possible for some of us next weekend. Long way to go until that gets near verification but a nice prediction to see if nothing else :)

    Yes, both the GFS operational and its control run have been consistently modelling that plume for several days, and both are really out on a limb compared with the rest of the their ensemble pack. The broonie season starts in just 10 days, and I very much fancy a mosey up to Loch Skeen with a fly rod with some early Spring warmth, assuming the ice has melted of course :)

  10. 3 minutes ago, scottish skier said:

    Seems N. England got a little something out of it, but naff all for S. Scotland.

    The north if England was always progged to get a colder undercut from the west. The uppers here were just too high (-4 @ 850), and DP's were marginal at best (0 -> +1). Looking towards the hills this morning I can see the snow line here is about 400 metres. Reckon the high villages (Wanlockhead & Leadhills) will be snowy.

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