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mike57

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Posts posted by mike57

  1. I went into the garden last night after seeing the post and picture from @Wold Topper Our horizon to the north is not that good here, and there is quite a bit of stray light, but I did detect a very feint glow in the north, but couldnt see any colour, and all attempts to photograph it to bring the colour out failed. I hadnt got to grips with night mode for my phone camera.

    Lunchtime brought a strong SW wind, force 5-6, with broken cloud but some showers about, although they missed me. Temperatures 10C. SW meant a head wind for the first 3.5 miles, and a good bit of that uphill so quite a slog going out

    .20231106_125418.thumb.jpg.23512cc5d29b279eebf306793a7faf1d.jpg

     

    • Like 3
  2. Well as expected winds here were nothing out of the ordinary, but I would be interested to know how much rain fell last night in our area. It woke me at about 4.30 but I suspect from the state of the ground and roads today that it rained hard most of the night. Lunchtime bike ride got diverted after encountering this leaving the village. Didnt even get as far as yesterdays flood. Retraced my route and did another 8 miles on a different route.

    Bucktongateflood02-11-23.thumb.jpg.24e2caa9884318859c2aa9031d7e3f5b.jpg

    Winds were force 3-4 NE with some broken cloud, and temps of 12C

    • Like 2
  3. 37 minutes ago, Beverley Lass said:

    Hi all,
    What might we get in terms of wind here in Yorkshire from
    the coming storm Ciaran .. I'm reading this chart as around 45 - 50 mph ?
    The rain will be the major problem perhaps.

    Thats my take, Metoffice have wind speed forecast lower than forecast here, a gale but just a normal autumn one here. Only issue might be direction, Easterly. Rain on the otherhand... Totals are mounting day on day. Ground is waterlogged. Up on the Wolds issues will be quite local, but I imagine people on the various flood plains must be concerned.

    • Like 2
  4. 4 hours ago, FetchCB said:

    Aside from the screaming winds and hearing the windows creak my memory of 1987 was the silence in the morning...nothing  no traffic noise no birds silence

    I had a lucky escape, I was working in SE London that week, but had wrapped on site up mid afternoon on the Thursday, and headed home to Yorkshire early leaving Kings Cross at 5pm. When I woke the next morning the full impact was clear from the news. Back in Yorkshire it was windy, but no more than a normal autumnal gale. Even at the work site there was no hint of what was coming.

  5. 1 hour ago, Mapantz said:

    I cannot remember the last time my power was knocked out by a weather event.. I'd have to go right back to the 90's 

    It very much depends on the supply infrastructure. Where we used to live was at the end of long 3.3kV overhead run with a transformer on a pole and further overhead runs at 240v to feed the houses. Every winter we would loose the power at some point often more than once, and on one occasion for nearly a week after a bad snow storm in 1990. I had (still have) an old diesel generator which was sufficent to keep essentials going. Where we live now is mainly underground, and power cuts are much rarer. Generator had one outing in anger last year, none so far this year.

    A wider scale outage, caused by destruction of the high voltage transmission infrastructure is going to affect a much wider area, and is caused by a breakdown of the national grid. Supply capacity (or the ability to get it where its needed) is less than demand and unless swift action is taken everything breaks down. We have never had an event in the UK on the scale of the USA NE 2003 blackout, although we got very close a couple of years ago. Obviously if a major storm knocked out high voltage distribution over a wide area then a grid collapse could occur as its not then possible to get the power from the generation to the consumers.

    Most weather related cuts tend to be local, the grid, by its nature has some resilience built in, although there have been concerns that cost cutting is reducing that. Storm Arwen caused some serious power cuts in the NE and Scotland, this was mainly trees going through local overhead lines.

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  6. 39 minutes ago, A Face like Thunder said:

    You've now got a yellow weather of your own for rain on Thursday through to 06.00 on Friday. I'm sure you could do without it.

    Yes, very wet round here. Fortunately up on the chalk Wold actual flooding on a wide scale doesn't happen, not like the Derwent in Malton or the Ouse in York. To be honest looking at the forecast for the South we are escaping the worst by the look of it.

    Lunchtime today brought mainly cloudy skies with a very light shower. Winds N force 3 temps 10c

    • Like 1
  7. 3 minutes ago, alexisj9 said:

    True can already hear what storm, why bother naming this, it's doing nothing. Same as every storm, it's named for local impacts in the area it hits.

    I think this is the problem with the impact and probability matrix as it stands. A severe danger to life storm still gets the yellow warning while probabilility is low, the same warning as much less severe immenent storm. Peoples respsonse to the the two scenarios needs to be different, a severe storm will mean a potential shutdown, where as the less severe storm wont affect most people, unless you are doing something outside for example.

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  8. And a groundhog day today, went out early as there was a break in the weather, got wet (not a wet as yesterday) during last 10 mins. If I had gone at my normal time would have got wet through. Winds started light S force 2, backing and increasing 3-4 ESE while I was out. Temps 12c but given the damp and greyness academic. BUT I wont complain as memories of the summer weather are still burnt into my memory.

    Edit/update: One hour later now dark with moderate to heavy rain. Lights on in home office.

    • Like 2
  9. Woodburner lit in the evenings currently, we always start by burning the tatty 'small' wood at this time of year and save the proper logs for when we need a 24hr a day burn. Wood sheds have enough seasoned wood stacked to last the winter, and the good thing, it's only cost me sweat and effort and a bit of electric to gather it cut it and split it. Apart from cost the other advantage is that if we are cold we don't feel guilty about having a hotter fire.

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  10. Well lunchtime bike ride was a slog, SE force 6-7, a steady blow too, not particularly gusty, which was a head wind for 3 miles. Sunny, and not cold, but when you are slower down the hills into the wind than up with the wind behind you know thats at least force 6.

    Pictures taken by Mrs Mike57 at 7.30 am this morning, waves were building up at Bridkington harbour,

    IMG_2186.thumb.jpg.6c5d1166831558f1fc42236c7cef3f0a.jpgIMG_2179.thumb.JPG.1cf16cb040bed1730e27d4b54068cabb.JPG

    • Like 6
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