Jump to content
Snow?
Local
Radar
Cold?

East Lancs Rain

Members
  • Posts

    2,736
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by East Lancs Rain

  1. This YouTube channel must be loving all this wet weather… All of their videos are of walks through London, usually in rainy weather… The way they describe it.. I’ve never heard anyone describe rainy weather quite like this before…

     

    D6BEE849-81AE-4F44-9623-72B72EC993CC.thumb.jpeg.3b76d642d0dbce3e23ed89182a4c4335.jpeg

     

    Anyone would think rainy weather was the best weather imaginable! Quite relaxing to watch but I’m sure @In Absence of True Seasonscan testify, walking through the streets of London in the pouring rain ain’t no fun… 😉☔

     

    Reading the comments was quite funny too! 🙄😆

    96665426-C343-45A7-9C27-9F9653482119.thumb.jpeg.849e6e4e2bd5244a4070a27b66ccbc66.jpeg27955F8A-3033-4B9C-B44C-D2C0F1329CF8.thumb.jpeg.d1ea264b1c9f66b3bf5cba7df6539d80.jpeg

     

    279686FD-AC22-4143-BAC5-5AB59F6EF0A8.png

    FFA3E583-3FDB-4530-B839-0F7D5E72283F.png
     

    One thing I’ve noticed is that loads of people carry umbrellas in London, whereas up here, it’s rare to see anyone carrying an umbrella, even in torrential rain. People wear raincoats, just not umbrellas. Must be a northern thing I guess.

    • Like 2
  2. 3 hours ago, Alderc 2.0 said:

    Proper awful from tomorrow with it turning wetter and colder, nothing worse than cold rain and showers! Roll on spring!

    I agree with it turning colder, but wetter? It has already been very wet here… Mind you, you are in the far south closer to the high pressure.

    13 hours ago, Summer8906 said:

    Looking at how the mildness of this month has disrupted nature, what we arguably need is a a good cold and dry spell!

    A March with mean min around freezing and mean max in the high single digits would be just right, along with 150% of the normal sunshine and 20% of the normal rainfall.

    I wouldn’t mind that and it would be a nice change to the very mild, but also very wet and very dull weather we’ve been having since late September, however, Marches that are cold but also dry and sunny are very rare. April 2021 was like that but it was very rare. Usually cold Marches will also be wet and dull, and dry and sunny Marches will also be mild/warm.

    • Like 1
  3. On 18/02/2024 at 02:26, Don said:

    Indeed, you would have thought 2023 was a cool year going by many comments.  In reality it was the joint warmest on record!

    Maybe so, but it had a disappointing Spring, a rubbish July and a wet autumn and December. March, July and December were all exceptionally wet. Does anyone know what the rainfall stats were for 2023? I would’ve guessed one of if not the wettest years on record. Felt like it anyway…

     

    It has been exceptionally wet and very dull since July with only brief breaks and now it looks like the dull and wet conditions will go on into March! 😣

     

     

    • Like 1
  4. 3 hours ago, cheese said:

    even in sunshine in July or August I would not be wearing t-shirts and shorts at 13C. Much too cold for that imo.  

    It would be very unlikely to only be in the low teens if sunny in the summer though, unless it’s in the early morning or late evening, when the sun would be low in the sky anyway. Whereas on a Spring day, conditions like that are very common, and it’s amazing how warm a 15C sunny day can feel in April or May. I guess it’s down to the sun’s strength combined with the fact that in spring my body is still used to winter temps, so 13/14C feels a lot warmer than it would do in July or August. In July and August though, it usually has to be high teens for me to feel comfortable in shorts and a t-shirt.

    3 hours ago, Catbrainz said:

    Felt spring like today with 15c and sunshine. T shirt and jeans weather for me hiking wise. What I don’t get is why folks are still dressing like it’s a Jan cold snap in Winnipeg. 

    Definitely strange as if it was a month or two later with the same conditions, a lot more people would be dressing for spring. I saw many people wearing shorts and t-shirts during the February 2019 warm spell though, although admittedly it was a few degrees warmer and a lot sunnier (at least here anyway).

    • Like 2
  5. 44 minutes ago, cheese said:

    who would wear shorts and t shirts at 13/14C anyway? That might be a pleasant winter temperature but it’s definitely not warm by any stretch of the imagination!

    I have worn shorts and a t-shirt at that temp in the past in late March/April when it’s been clear blue skies and light winds. But the sun is much stronger by then so it feels warm. This current mild spell has been way too cloudy and the sun is still too weak for those temps to feel warm.

  6. It’s been another very mild day here with a high of 12°C, and it’s actually stayed dry for a change too.. Had some sunshine earlier on, but since mid afternoon it’s been really gloomy. Very light winds though so it has felt as mild as the temp. But it’s proving very difficult to get even one mild, dry and sunny day here this winter. I had one on December, where it was 12°C and mostly sunny all day, but that was a one off. This has been one of the dullest and wettest winters I can ever remember. It hasn’t been able to stay dry for longer than a deep breath and any sunshine has been a “blink and you’ll miss it affair”. There hasn’t even been many days this winter that have been average or cold with clear blue skies all day. Even in a typical mild and wet winter you’d normally get some sunny days with average or below average temps by day and frost at night.

    • Like 1
  7. 1 hour ago, WYorksWeather said:

    Sorry I'm confused? Do you want a warm/hot summer or do you prefer it cooler?

    In terms of the heat, in my view there's absolutely nothing wrong with a warm or even hot summer. What feels 'wrong' to me from a UK context are the ridiculous temperatures we can now achieve.

    A traditional UK hot summer is absolutely fine by me. Anything up to the low 30s is perfectly fine. We can have day after day after day of warm, very warm, or hot sunny weather and I'll take it.

    My preference in summer is for lots of dry sunny weather with temps in the high teens and low 20’s, maybe mid 20’s at a push. However high 20’s and low 30’s feels uncomfortable to me, so if we’re going to get a spell of hot weather, I’d rather take two days of 35°C rather than two weeks of 27-32°C temps. That said, I do not want a summer where it’s mostly cloudy, unsettled and 15-17°C either (unlike some people on the forum). 😉 A happy medium is what I want.

    • Like 1
  8. 33 minutes ago, SollyOlly said:

    I don't really know why they keep calling it "mild". It's 'warm'. And a big anomaly of warm, too.

    I wouldn’t really call it warm, as although it’s been much warmer than average it’s still been around 11-14C and mostly overcast/rainy. I know London and some areas in the South have had a day or two of mid teens and sunshine, but further north it’s just been more of a typical very mild winter spell. It hasn’t been like February 2019 where we’ve had days of wall to wall sunshine and mid to high teens, with people out in shorts and t-shirt’s. That is what I would class as “warm”. 
     

     In Absence of True Seasons Where I am, the average summer high is only around 19/20°C and as my location does poorly for low sunshine and high rainfall, I prefer summers to be average or warmer than average with above average sunshine and below average rainfall. A warmer, drier and sunnier than average summer here would usually mean a lot of dry, sunny days in the low 20’s, which is probably my favourite conditions in summer tbh. So I tend to wish for a good summer.
     

    While I’m not a fan of high temps (above 25C), it’s not too bad if I can sit indoors with the fan on and drink refrigerated water. I don’t really dread a hot summer as up here, the heat is nearly always less extreme than in London, and some summers don’t even reach 30°C here (last summer being one of them).
     

    If I lived in London however, where the average summer high is 23/24°C, and where summer months have had average highs in the high 20’s, then I probably would dread a hot summer a lot more, especially if I lived in a warm stuffy flat with no air con. If I lived in London, I would probably wish for a cooler than average summer, if anything, because that would mean an average summer high of around 21/22°C, and the sunshine and rainfall amounts still wouldn’t be too bad, becuase It’s London.

    • Like 2
  9. 4 hours ago, In Absence of True Seasons said:

    Woah the upcoming forecast looks an absolutely cracker, folks. 

     

    Wow that sure looks great. All that liquid sunshine! And those temperatures.. Lovely and mild.

    5 hours ago, TwisterGirl81 said:

    a wet one would be like a slap in the face after this autumn and winter…surely spring will be dryer?

    You’d think so but with a strong possibility of an SSW, I’m not so sure…

    1 hour ago, WYorksWeather said:

    If we are going to have a very warm summer, I'd prefer it to be more like a better version of 2023, with more spells of weather like that of June, with moderate heatwaves into the low 30s, than lots of changeable weather interspersed with ridiculous heat spikes into the mid or upper 30s.

    If anything I’d rather have changeable weather with short heat spikes than long periods of less intense heat, gets it over with quicker.

    6 hours ago, SollyOlly said:

    Completely with you, mate. I'm almost fearing summer. Prolonged heat...please not! 

    And I’m fearing a cloudy and wet 2007/08/09/10/11/12 type summer. Given the CFSV2 model is predicting a quick dissent from El Niño into Lá Nina. The last time that happened was summer 2007… (I think)

    5 hours ago, raz.org.rain said:

    Considering that so far, 1995, 2003 and 2022 are very strong analogs, I'd imagine it's worth preparing for that while we can.

    Oh no, the prospect of a warm and dry summer! 😮 Never had one of those before. I don’t know how we’ll cope….

    • Like 1
    • Insightful 1
  10. 3 minutes ago, raz.org.rain said:

    I'm getting the impression that we could be in for a pretty intense summer if things continue to go the way they're going.

    It is for that same reason that I’m getting the feeling we could be in for a really bad washout summer this year. A repeat of June 2012, July 2023 and August 2008 on the cards? Let’s hope not.

  11. 9 hours ago, SunnyG said:

    I'll believe it when I see it. My trust in official forecasts has dropped like a stone since last summer... 🙂

    The Met Office has always been rubbish at long term forecasting, they predicted a “BBQ summer” in 2009 and while June was quite good, July 2009 was a washout… Then at the end of July they predicted August would be a washout as well but it didn’t turn out to be too bad (I think). 

     

    CF229AAF-86E1-4D9A-9537-231AB897935B.png
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1202982/Met-Office-left-red-faced-Britains-forecast-barbecue-summer-turns-washout.html#:~:text=It was in April that,to confess its shortcomings yesterday.

    • Like 1
  12. 1 hour ago, In Absence of True Seasons said:

    Commuting to work 2023-2024 style

    Probably more like this if it keeps raining lol.

    0AB8747D-7A2C-4C8F-B9D1-34A83834FFEA.thumb.png.f10ade1a2723b298adbd86fee607cd94.png

     

    3 hours ago, damianslaw said:

    I bought new microspikes early Jan in the hope of a long snowy season ahead on the fells, sadly so far, they've not really been needed...

    You probably jinxed the rest of the winter lol.

     

    • Like 4
  13. 1 hour ago, In Absence of True Seasons said:

    Only 12 hours since the last dumping of moisture so thought it worth sharing seeing as how desperately we need more rain.

    Gosh that is a long time to go without rain. It’s a wonder all the plants haven’t died of thirst…

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  14. 1 hour ago, Summer18 said:

    I was going to post the same thing, I’m wearing a light jacket and still sweating yet Leeds was full of people in scarfs, hats and gloves. I mean you wouldn’t wear that for 15C in June so just because it’s February doesn’t mean you have to now! 

    Totally bizzare isn’t yet, but get the same conditions in June and many people would be in shorts and /or t-shirts. At the other extreme I’ve seen people wear next to nothing on a Friday/Saturday night in winter when it’s barely been above freezing…

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  15.  markyo You would probably love it if todays weather occurred in July or August… It has been like a typical poor summer day here, overcast, high of 14°C, rain on and off. And after the atrocious weather of the last few months the last thing we want is a cold spring… A repeat of Spring 2020 would be lovely. Wouldn’t mind a repeat of April 2021 though as despite being cold it was very dry and sunny and there was still some mild and sunny days.

    • Like 2
  16.  johncam Still bare trees here. Rain has been on and off this afternoon, currently 12.6°C with 84% humidity. Yes I can imagine 14°C in spring in Scotland must be considered a heatwave lol. 
     

    It must have been an exceptionally mild winter further south as Gavin Partridge from Northampton on his live stream last night mentioned how long the grass had grown in his garden… Whereas here it is still short.

    B66C3D91-AE0D-49CC-89C8-F4595FFAD860.jpeg

    • Like 2
  17. 2 hours ago, Scorcher said:

    It always amazes me how many people struggle to dress appropriately for the weather. I can only think they just don't pay attention to forecasts and/or don't check the temperature before they go out for the day.

    I find the opposite is true in the US (even Florida where I lived for a year) in the sense people always seem to underdress for the weather. They get the shorts out at any opportunity and hoodies are often seen when the temperature is well below 10C.

    I have noticed people in my area tend to overdress for the weather a lot of the time, with people wearing thick coats in sub 20C weather  in summer a common occurrence, whereas I only usually wear a thick coat between November and March. However I’ve been up to the north east and people tend to dress much lighter there. I was last up there in May/June 2018 and I was right on the coast and it was sunny but only in the low teens with a cold NE breeze coming from off the sea, but most people were dressed like it was a hot summers day. Very strange. I can only think it’s possibly something to do with the damp climate here. People not wanting to be caught out in the rain.
     

    I am at the more lightly dressed end of the “dressing for the weather spectrum”, have often just worn a hoodie outside when the temp has been below 10C and worn shorts in spring when it’s been sunny but only 10-13°C.. I do have good circulation though so I tend to feel a lot warmer after walking for a while, especially when the humidity is high I have noticed. I do try and make the most of the weather though, sitting outside in the garden in shorts on sunny days in spring and summer as much as possible, because that kind of weather is in short supply in this part of the world, and come late September or early October, I know the shorts will be packed away for another six months. I think a lot of people are the same, as a 15C sunny day in spring will see the local park quite busy and lots of people in shorts and t-shirts.
     

    If I lived in a warmer and sunnier climate however, I would probably take the fine weather more for granted and wait until it got a bit warmer before getting the shorts out.

    • Like 1
  18.  In Absence of True Seasons Yes the contrast between the second half of February 2019 and the first half of June 2019 was quite remarkable. Feb 2019 had quite a few days that were 12-15°C, dry and sunny, whereas the first half of  June 2019 had many days that were 11-13°C, overcast and raining, often all day! It was like they had been swapped around.

     

    Regarding the people dressing for the season rather the weather thing, I have noticed this too to some degree. Although I remember seeing people wearing shorts and t-shirts during those exceptionally mild/warm days in Feb 2019. I think as you say, people are just used to wearing summer clothes in summer and winter clothes in winter, and so if we get the odd mid teens day in winter or summer, they’ll still wear the same clothes, but if we were to get a week of mid teens temps in Feb (especially if it was dry and sunny) then people would start dressing more for spring/summer.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  19. 20 hours ago, danm said:

    probably because at this time of year the only way to get exceptionally mild weather is from a low pressure system dragging up that air. The SE will sometimes be far enough away from the core of low pressure allowing some sunny spells. Whereas in Spring/Summer the exceptionally mild air can simply come from an area of high pressure sitting over us - at this time of year that will just bring cold, sometimes sunny, sometimes frosty, foggy weather. 

    I remember I had one day in February 2019 that reached about 17°C with clear blue skies all day. It’s definitely possible here in the right setup.

×
×
  • Create New...