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BleakMidwinter

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Posts posted by BleakMidwinter

  1. 2 hours ago, nick sussex said:

    OMG this is so exciting and I’m not even in the UK. 

    Absolutely thrilled to see this ECM upgrade , please verify ! :)

    It would be fantastic to see folk get to enjoy more snow and more time to enjoy it.

     

    Yet again, can I sneak in a quick THANKYOU to you and everyone else in here who has been so good at explaining what I'\m looking at when you post a chart - it means I've been really able to enjoy the excitement - and still am doing! :)

    I'll remember this cold period for a long time, not just because of the weather but because it is the first time I've had ANY slight understanding of how all these charts and models and so on actually work! 

    • Like 6
  2. 2 minutes ago, syed2878 said:

    this easterly has bin crap for here. as scotland they do well for snow even when we have crap winters.

    It's actually very rare for Edinburgh to get more than 1-3 inches of snow - I lived there for 35 years and we had two snowy winters in 1979-80 and 2010-11. This current Red Warning is unprecedented. Most years, Edinburgh gets a couple of inches of wet snow that lies for a day or two turning to grey slush, or even gets none. That 2010 year you all go on about? The entire UK coated in snow except Edinburgh - because Edinburgh lies low, is next the sea, surrounded to Wst and South by snow-gobbling hills - so it only gets major snow from an Easterly like this, and they are rare...

    As for the Highlands, well, yeah, they do get snow, but you'd expect them to as they are both higher altitude and further north. Like Canada and Russia get more snow than the Midlands, too :)

    • Like 2
  3. 23 minutes ago, BleakMidwinter said:

    She is somewhere en route on the coast road in this, west of North Berwick... 

    Hurrah, Niece and her boyfriend have safely reached home. 

    Although Boyf has now had to go back out in the Red Warning as it turns out Older Niece decided to go out driving in it. I shall be having words with her. She has the right, as does everyone, to risk her own life but this is needlessly risking other people's lives... grrrr!

    Stay safe, everyone...! 

    • Like 4
  4. 44 minutes ago, Soaring Hawk said:

    Ridiculously irresponsible of your niece’s boss. I hope she gets home safely.  

    She is somewhere en route on the coast road in this, west of North Berwick... little hatchback car... at least she's with her boyfriend and they DO have an emergency-box in the car, and they've got experience driving in eg Iceland in winter, as well as up by Aviemore in snow, plus they both go running so are reasonably fit and outdoorsy, but all the same, I shall be happier when I know they're home safe... 

    • Like 4
  5. 49 minutes ago, Diamond Joe said:

    not us I know but parts of Scotland now got a Red Warning out. You dont see that often

    We think it's the second one ever. There was one in late 2010 but it was lifted before its time arrived, so maybe doesn't count. 

    My younger niece is bang in its path at work in North Berwick trying to convince her criminally-irresponsibly-stupid boss to let her away early as she has a dozen miles to drive home on the exposed coast-road. I shall be very relieved to hear she is home, but so far she isn't. 

    This is exceptional for Edinburgh. 

    image.thumb.png.583e0ff84cdbcbd6730b9b2677a756f2.png

  6. 5 minutes ago, Walsall Wood Snow said:

    I suppose somebody's bound to miss out in these situations. I suppose it must be our turn. Hopefully not but at least we did pretty well in December when most of the country got diddly squat. Swings and roundabouts I suppose.

    Yep, my thinking too - I'm enjoying the excitement of the charts and forecasts, learning more about how models work, and seeing how the different systems struggle to comprehend how this particular set-up works. 

    And one of the things I've really struggled with since moving south from Scotland is the dismal grey miserable dull late-winter/spring weather so to have these clear crisp properly-cold days is WONDERFUL! Honestly, people go on about Scotland never getting any sun, but Jan and Feb are more often than not bright blue skies and beautiful sunshine like the last few days, with this invigorating exhilarating cold to walk in... between the spring gloom in Englandshire and the dreadful dark evenings in summer, I have found it a very different place to live in. 

    So I'm enjoying this cold weather, with or without snow! Like on of Terry Pratchett's trolls, I wake up and feel more alert when it's properly cold :) It's a little challenging working round no central heating but we've been fine so far, it's a good little flat with decent double-glazing :)

    Stay safe, people, and enjoy the glorious cold! :)

    • Like 3
  7. 30 minutes ago, A Winter's Tale said:

    Given the Met Office's track record I would agree. I can't remember the last red warning for snow in a Scotland - I think Edinburgh in December 2010

    There was one red warning that winter for Edinburgh and I got hugely excited and then it vanished a few hours before its time-stamp... :'(

    Mind you, I did have enough snaw that winter, so I survived :)

    But that's the only red warning I've ever seen. 

  8. I've got a bit of a problem. I just went down and not only swept and salt-gritted the steps out to the carpark for when my chap gets home (and put tons of raisins and suet out for the birds) but also swept and salt-gritted the front steps that we never use. 

    As a result I'm now glowing radiantly with smug virtue, and I'm a bit worried this will melt the snow-cover we still have... ;)

    • Like 1
  9. 41 minutes ago, Staffordshire said:

    GFS really doesn't look all that great to me, or am I missing something? Light to moderate snowfall for a few hours, surely wouldn't accumulate to more than 2-4cm?

    Remember this is the convective snow from the easterly, and apparently when it's this very dry powdery stuff it tends to produce much more accumulation than ordinary frontal snow - so instead of 1mm precipitation producing 1cm of snow, it can be more like 1mm = 3cm. That would man your 2-4cm might be 8-12cm... 

    Watch and wait, I reckon! :) 

    • Like 1
  10. 19 minutes ago, I remember Atlantic 252 said:

    thawing though as soon as it stops, Feb won't be as good as Dec

    Ours has stayed for the last 10-15 minutes at any rate after the snow stopped - fingers crossed it stays again... once a base layer gets established, it will help everything else that falls to not-melt, presumably... so if this thin layer stays and freezes overnight then... I dunno, fingers crossed anyway and it looks lovely - my extended family was increased by one small boy arriving in the small hours so I'm finishing knitting for the new baby, and the view from where I sit has a huge big conifer tree which looks just like a Christmas card with snow on each layer of its waving conifer-fur!

    • Like 2
  11. Proper heavy snow here, visibility dropped right down, light levels dropped right down, settling on all surfaces inc wet tarmac car-park - exception being the line where all the school-run cars come in and out, rpesumably with salty grit on their tyres from the top road they turn in off! But even that's starting to cover over. 
     

     

    A local Wunderground reckons -0.1C, feels like -0.7C, DP -2C. 

  12. 8 minutes ago, Midlands Ice Age said:

    More info on the snow melt...

    The small ice pellets that fell (polystyrene!) have not melted but the fluffy snowflakes on the same area have now gone.

    Contrary to my last report the next shower is about to descend upon us.

    Looks like polystyrene again!!! 

    Very odd, considering the really cold uppers are now getting over us!

    MIA

     

    Is it graupel? Sounds like it and that would fit with very cold uppers, wouldn't it?

  13. 24 minutes ago, kmanmx said:

    Cool that amber's are out, don't cover much of the midlands yet, but they're very likely to be revised leading up to T0.

    The MetO website says three Western counties of the Midlands in this Amber - note the Impact Matrix - highest level of disruption BUT medium-low level of likelihood
    image.thumb.png.4e71bd1b1e9271c5de0a43d37da2c9f6.png


    image.thumb.png.94e5ddc16e331a57ba59000fff79f694.png
    image.thumb.png.e75838274bd7a320e3de9510ff6e7a5f.png
     

    • Like 1
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