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Posts posted by Wildswimmer Pete
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16 minutes ago, Ed Stone said:
What they didn't find - because everyone seemed to have overlooked it, for some reason - was that the mornings' additional accidents were more than compensated for by a concomitant reduction during the evenings...due to lighter evenings.
Bear in mind that I was attending secondary school during the Sixties and finishing time was 4pm which was the norm for that time. So under GMT schoolkids were going home in the dark and all-year BST meant going home in the light. There was also far less traffic around back then and the standard of driving was very much higher (I passed my motorcycle test in May 1968).
However nowadays schools finish around 3pm so schoolkids are going home in the light under both GMT or GMT+1.
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On 24/09/2017 at 16:16, Ed Stone said:
Maybe you should have a wee look at the facts, Nick?
https://www.rospa.com/road-safety/advice/road-users/british-summertime-fact-sheet/
Rospa were singing from a very different hymnsheet fifty years ago. They came out fully against any notion of imposing BST all year around. Bear in mind that three year experiment was just that: an experiment.
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20 hours ago, Northwest NI said:
Anyone want to give an amateur forecast for Reykjavik from 1st to 5th October using the models? Going there for a break. First in several years. I joined this forum to learn and have my own ideas how the weather in that period might pan out. I would be interested to hear from more experienced people's interpretation.
Depending on what you're looking for. Swimming holidays ideal because of the abundance of geothermally warmed pools including of course the Blue Lagoon. Fortunately the weather is irrelevant.
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22 minutes ago, mike Meehan said:
..............we did have, as an experiment for a year, BST - I relished every single minute of that extra light in the evenings and would dearly love to return to that situation.
That experiment ran between Spring 1968 and Autumn 1971 and was an unmitigated disaster with many schoolchildren knocked down by half-awake drivers in the dark.
What about the icy roads we had to navigate to go to work before the sun rose? I had to do that on two wheels, not fun. In Glasgow the sun didn't rise until about 10am due to the elevated horizon of the Southern Uplands.
I wish people would realise that in midwinter we only have about eight hours of daylight however much we muck about with the clocks. Under GMT most of us go to work in the light, as do schoolchildren going to school while with school finishing around 3pm, schoolkids still go home in the daylight.
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I think we just got about 21C
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About 11.30pm several flashes and thunder followed by heavy rain. Off to bed now and currently quiet and rain stopped.
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December 1970 saw a light dusting of snow on Christmas Day in the Wirral and that's all we had. It was Spring 1970 that saw frequent cold shots with snow up to March. In fact Winter 1969/70 was cold and snowy from Christmas onwards.
This isn't from dry statistics, these were personal observations.
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I wish some of Lucifer's heat would make it our way but of course that won't ever happen. This is Britain, the grey land of perpetual late autumn. Appears it's time to dig out my SAD lamp.
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On 05/08/2017 at 11:23, iand61 said:
Well after seeing what seems like a procession of days where the centre of the U.K. is under rainy skies while others enjoy sunshine, it's payback time, if only for today.
just been out with the dog and although not BBQ or beer garden weather, it's decent and dry if a little bit chilly.
make the most of it though as from tomorrow afternoon it's back to conditions more like October.
Yes, what is laughingly described as "high summer" currently so dark that you would be forgiven to think today was a late October day just before the clocks go back. Needless to say it's cold and wet. No improvement in sight so looks like autumn has started a month early.
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16 hours ago, Weather-history said:
One question, since the sea gulls are helping themselves to regular ice cream, fish and chips and other snacks, why are more not croaking it from high cholesterol, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases?
Probably because they don't live all that long. Those complaints only generally affect humans in later life.
Seagulls in Llandudno have learned to dive-bomb folk coming out of chippies by tactical sh*tting on their chips knowing the meal will be thrown away for the avian thieves to gorge upon. All along the North Wales beaches and promenades there are notices warning about not feeding the gulls,
Gulls also feast on the juicy bits floating in the primary settlement tanks of the local sewage works which is why seagull poo is heaving with human pathogens. Should a gull "bless" you, you need to wash it off if possible, but whatever you do thoroughly wash your hands before touching food.
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12 hours ago, CreweCold said:
Woohoo- love autumn.
Don't think the thread is that early and I don't think that the summer lovers can moan, given the weather we've had so far this summer. They must be satisfied with what they've seen so far, surely.
You jest of course. A couple of reasonably warm days in June with the rest being a cloudfest with any sunshine restricted to the late evening when the clouds eventually melted away. Bear in mind my observation is subjective.
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2 hours ago, Ice Man 85 said:
That thread is just full of heat lovers is all. Once this vile season and all associated with it is banished for another year, they'll go with it.
We heat lovers only have three months to enjoy it. You coldies have nine months of the worst the lousy British climate can throw at us to enjoy. Cold, ice, rain, wind (mostly all together).
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A passable summer day although with a chilly breeze until the cloud cleared at lunch to almost clear blue skies. Temp. was nothing to write home about for the beginning of July - miserable 17C.
A view of Pickmere, Cheshire. Water temp was 20C, knocked back by 1C by all that cold rain last Wednesday.
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10C on a late June evening, so cold I can see my breath outside. It's also extremely dark especially as we're only just past the solstice. I do hope we aren't having the same conditions as during the past few years: semi-permanent low pressure throughout what we laughingly call "summer". Looking at the thickness charts a persistent blob of green snot covering the UK surrounded by yellows and oranges.
We have a very few months of what I would describe to be warm, I resent that little is encroached on by conditions more reminiscent of winter, let alone autumn.
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Awful cold, wet Autumn day with a miserable 13C forecast all day (it actually is 13C here).
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What a dark, miserable morning. Given current model output looks like we are resuming our usual "Forever Autumn"
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The standard British climate - a week of tolerable weather will always be followed by a month of utter ordure.
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23 minutes ago, Frosty. said:
Arrgh! The Invasion of the Green Snot with single digit temps covering much of N. England and Scotland. Have I slept through the summer months and it's now October?
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Currently lot of thunder but no visible lightning. Just had a burst of heavy rain. Rain felt warm on my topless torso. Current temp 26C
Edit: first flash of lightning, moderate rain.
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Managed 26C today understand DP is 17C. High cloud means sitting out in garden wasn't like being in a huge halogen oven.
Downside (isn't there always one?) tomorrow is the longest day
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According to Liverpool ATIS we made 26C, currently 25C with DP of 17C. Now overcast.
Happily sitting in just my shorts, no top.
North West England Regional Weather Discussion 23/04/2017 onwards
in Regional
Posted
Just had the first dusting of snow.