Jump to content
Snow?
Local
Radar
Cold?

su rui ke

Members
  • Posts

    223
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by su rui ke

  1. In this setup West Fife is definitely considered inland, as is West Lothian, far southwest Edinburgh and the rest of Midlothian, the inland Borders, Perth and shire and western Angus.

    February 2001 has an almost identical uppers profile to what is predicted tomorrow:

    archives-2001-2-4-12-1.png

    Similar wind direction too:

    archives-2001-2-4-12-0.png

    Make of that what you will.

    I drove from Dundee to Edinburgh airport during that event - I think on the evening of the 5th actually. There was snow everywhere except for the strip near the Forth south of Dunfermline and out to a similar distance from the river on the other side. At the airport it was snowing, although rather wet.

    I think those of us on the east coast would put up with a day of wet snow/sleet tomorrow anyway if we though there would be any precipitation left by the time the easterly turns colder later!

  2. its here now... had pellets and sleety earlier but all the cleared surfaces now white again in 5 mins of hevy snow....proper small flakes again so uppers must be improving

    Yes, the snow from that heavy shower is sticking better than the snow from the earlier ones did. It's still wet and icy though.Hopefully things will improve further this evening.

  3. The latter stages of the ECM brings thoughts of -15C uppers crossing the North Sea and engulfing Scotland. Imagine the fast moving very heavy snow showers with hail and thundersnow....visibility reduced to 10s of metres at times and the powder snow swirling into huge drifts.

    That sort of easterly would bring the severe conditions to eastern Scotland and the central belt, similar to what northern Scotland experiences in an Arctic northerly.

    Mm, sounds a bit like January 1987 ...

  4. how did the current interesting band heading for central affect perth and dundee? anything interesting?

    We just had some sleet/wet snow at times on and off throughout the daylight hours so nothing too exciting here. There is apparently lying snow just to the north though in places like Auchterhouse and Tealing so I assume most of inland Angus should at least have a covering.

  5. Finally, snow! Discovered that the street lights here are terrible for snow watching.

    Ground looks awfy wet though.

    Yes - about half an hour after reaching the west of the city! Ground still looks quite frosty here although I'm a bit higher up than you. Also, if you're in the High St, there'll probably be salt everywhere.

    Anyway, that's enough for me too. We have lying snow for now ...

  6. Very small flakes - but everything all white outside! clapping.gif

    We are a lucky bunch of kilters tonight! Hope everyone gets to see some. Hopefully it is traversing across to Dundee too!

    I'll let you know!

    I wasn't expecting much but if it's snowing in Leith then we should at least get snow to begin with even here.

  7. Re Pier's temperature anomaly graph. It was hard to see the details but it looked suspiciously like a graph I saw somewhere else - I think maybe on the NOAA website - showing the global temperature anomaly for the year to date. Assuming that's what the graph is, it actually shows the anomaly for this year approaching a similar value to the last few years'. There is no doubt that the first few months of this year were relatively cool, as we emerged from the La Nina. The steep slope for this year actually shows that it has been very warm indeed since about March worldwide.

  8. I agree that we might have made some impact on the planet which will have an affect on the balance of climate and the Arctic, but i still struggle to see how we have had a big enough impact to be one of the main causes of global warming or the rapid warming of the Arctic? As said above especially considering we have been on this planet for barely a blink of an eye and been polluting the planet for even less, therefore not really had the the time to affect the planet enough to be much of a cause of the warming we see and increased loss of Arctic sea ice? And has this not happened before with Arctic sea ice loss, before humans were even on this planet? So is it not natural what is happening and will one way or another find another balance? - sorry if i seem ignorant or whatever, i can't say i know a great deal about the Arctic and its systems, which is maybe why i struggle to see how we play much of a role in the losses we have seen in recent times!?

    Many people also found it hard to believe that 'we' were responsible for the ozone hole!

    My answer to this general point is always to consider some of the other impacts we've had on the planet - replacing forests by monocultures of plants that suit us, damming rivers to create new lakes, (probably) causing the extinction of many species of megafauna - and the fact the we now live in what are mostly artificially engineered surroundings. When you think about some of these impacts and then the fact that we are measurably altering the composition of the atmosphere, it's not so difficult to imagine that we might also, ultimately, be responsible for the decline in the sea ice.

    Also, because something has happened before, it doesn't necessarily mean that when it happens again the cause is the same!

  9. Wrong July 1901 hottest month on record in the USA 78.35.

    As others have clarified, I think what I said is correct. I was only repeating what NOAA said on their website and I'd be surprised if they got a simple thing like that wrong.

    By the way, it's also the warmest January-July period on record in the continental US.

  10. So far it's one of the most snowless winters ever (well in the past 40 years or so) here. There have been some brief snow falls but no 'snow lying' days - or did I miss one?

    It's still been quite an interesting winter though. I wonder how the sunshine total compares to the average - I suspect it's quite high.

×
×
  • Create New...