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onemanmows

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Posts posted by onemanmows

  1. Hopefully we'll get something, I'm down to patches on Ben Ledi and Ben Lomond. It would be really nice to do another winter seeing snow every day (OK clear day) for weeks. Spent years in the Peak District, kind of forgot winter does have snow and snow for remaining on hills for weeks not days or even hours. Don't have to touch it would just be nice to know it's there.

  2. After enduring the model thread again month or so, came to look at me new local regional one. Much more useful, should have looked in from the start. So the thoughts are most of the snow that arrives will be convective but still not making it too far away from the Coast? I presume no posts here about us being half way through winter and it all being over at the end of February?

  3. Across most parts of the country, the snowiest winters of the 90s were 1990/91, 1993/94 and 1995/96, and 1996/97 was notable for an extended spell of snow cover from 30 December to around 10 January in some central and eastern parts of England. But with just localised exceptions, none of them were as snowy as 2009/10. Maybe the 1990s winters appealed by comparison with those of 2000-08 but the winters of 2009-11 rather put the snowier winters of the 1990s into perspective.

    From a Pennine skiing perspective I'd put winters into four broad groups:

    The Hard Winters - mid to late 70's to mid to late 80's. Most winters good snow cover for long periods, high volume falls.

    Still Cold where's me snow - late 80's to mid to late 90's. Plenty of cold but high volume snow fall the exception not the norm.

    Blairite - late 90's to late 00's (2001 and 2005 both delivered a four of five week block of skiable snow but 2001 was Foot and Mouth so the hills were closed) Hardly any high volume snow fall. Prolonged hill snow or ice the exception rather than the norm.

    New Cold - 08/09 winter onwards

    This winter so far has felt more like a lean early 90's than 'modern' winters of the 00s - the right conditions where there but it just never quite came through. Hopefully early spring with deliver some snow although I'm expecting cover to last days rather than weeks. I tend to get a feel for winter by looking at the wider environment never been convinced it would be extremely snowy but had hoped it would be snowier than it has been - what really nailed it as a poorer winter was a skein of about 70 geese heading north above Perth in the first week of Januray. That didnt really give me cold and snowy feelings.

  4. Another IMBY one from me, yesterday 19th Feb, was the fourth Saturday in a row where I've seen falling or lying snow. The general view may be so what, my point is this winter has not delivered in terms of snow cover or deep cold. It has though, in the Peak, delivered winter conditions. There have been two blocks of cold this winter and in terms of weekends and winter conditions its been more winter and mild. Continuing a welcome trend in the Pennines. It's the fourth winter in a row where I've had a week or more disruption to the day job due to snow on the hills. This didn't happen in 2006/07 and 07/08. Although the later did deliver snow / froast and ice above 500m regularly during the March of that year. The curious thing for me about this winter and the last one as well is large snow accumulations dont seem to be happening in the Pennines. Ultimately really pear shaped winter is one where you dont get winter conditions where you might expect them - in the hills!

    If we're going to see parts of the country hit 17degC plus this week - doesnt that mean temps have passed right through mild and are now into warm?

  5. Just been checking back through the Weardale Ski Club web cam pictures for the season. It shows a hill called Chapel Fell in upper weardale - http://www.skiweardale.com/ski/current.aspx

    For the third year in a row there has been snow or snow patches showing on the webcam for months rather than days or weeks. Last Autmun was a bit of a curve ball. I still think - no science here just feeling - we are in the same broad patern as the last few years. Coming further down the coutry a bit to the Peak District - I'm not expecting to see conditions that favour prolonged hill snow, the last few years March - April - May has felt generally drier and warmer. If we go through another wet summer and dry autumn I'm going to be looking the continued broad winter pattern of a cold and snow in December. Hopefully without all the factors this year that prevented sustained snow cover.

    Things still feel like they are going in the right direction overall. Although disapointed with this weekend - start of the weekend thought we might be on for a couple of days of snow cover.

    Wasn't there snow cover over most of the North at Easter 2008. I recall flying into Leeds in a blizzard and then having three days - thin - skiing in the Pennine

  6. Funny have everyone has different views of winter - I'd always thought widespread December snow, escpecially early December snow of any volume was relatively rare. Some always seemed to turn up in the hills around the time of the RAC rally but generally not a lot. For me winter has always been a Jan through to March event with the most common times for falling snow being Feb through to mid March. We always had a couple of two or three week blocks when we had to feed the sheep extra rations because of the snow cover. That just didnt seem to happend in the 90's and early 00's.

    At the moment from IMBY watch or more correctly OMH (on my hills) there have been more periods of 7day plus snow coverage in the last few years than during the mid 90's to mid 00's. Still not seen a big multi day storm but winters seem to be trending towards more snow and cold.

    One winter is it a myth question - heavy snow on the east coast of the States turns up here about a week later. Can't remember this happening that much in the last 20 plus years.

    Be interested to see if this spring, in the Peak, follows the trend towards dry with rain coming in again early June and giving a wet summer then dry Autumn again. Maybe next winter we'll finally make it back to high volume snow falls and stable air. Not as fussed about deep cold but more snow would be good.

  7. A 2005 type snow event would be quite acceptable, did well for the Pennines with 4wks of skiable snow.

    This ones been a funny one - very mild but at the same time I've seen falling snow or signs of falling snow every week since December's cold patch. It be nice to see a high volume snow event followed by stable cool to cold but that's not really mentioned anywhere. Beasterly easterly would be fine if people werent warning it could be a dry one, that would be just beastly.

  8. How about this for a lot of snow - Lake District Ski Club on Raise nr Helvellyn http://www.ldscsnowski.co.uk/page24.html

    Tow is in a good snow holding part of the hill, to put the depth into context the pylons are 5m high. The building in the second picture is the engine house for the tow. Burried at the end of the building nearest the camera is the powder room - recently built loo. Rumoured to be 2nd highest in England! Highest is Great Dun Fell.

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