Jump to content
Snow?
Local
Radar
Cold?

Frosty the Snowman

Members
  • Posts

    342
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Frosty the Snowman

  1. This should cheer a few folk up. That feature we've been keeping an eye on bares a remarkable similarity to some old 2010 streamer set ups that I think people in this thread have said many times is one of the best snowfalls from an Easterly over here. Unfortunately / fortunately dependent on your exact location it's sunk slightly south on the latest GFS on Monday before pushing back north of Tuesday, potential for snow everywhere in the region on this.

     

    image.thumb.png.a2a357f08b1ee8e4fc3cd16c14dd4bf3.pngimage.thumb.png.0c5f6445b29012ae0d2a2a8270509143.png

     

     

    1 hour ago, Craigers said:

    Here you go everyone

    radara_22450.225434393695654.thumb.png.540cd138d31ca22e8400f1bcfed65947.pngradara_00150.825228748683916.thumb.png.9d32ff699a91f511d0e9bcca8ceb71c3.pngradara_05450.92589948519981.thumb.png.502c5d6d836406f1661bf0f9fe9e54db.png

    radara_00300.404448873437108.png

    radara_01000.0114987882125241.png

     

    • Like 4
  2. 28 minutes ago, iand61 said:

    The mood in the mad thread seems a bit subdued tonight with talk of milder uppers turning snow to rain across the far south east corner at least but after trawling through several pages of everything from the SE is going to be buried to get the BBQ dusted off I’m still no wiser to what is happening anywhere north of Watford.

    Hopefully all will be revealed on a daily basis by opening the curtains.

    To be fair a lot of what happens north of Watford is co-dependent on what happens for the SE Corner, if they're panicking you should probably buy a sledge. 

    • Like 2
  3. Unlike Ian I'll fully admit to doing IMBY if you can't do it in the regionals, where the heck can you. There's a convergence line hanging around that has been referred to a number of times and is consistently showing up on the charts, a route for the Cheshire/Lancashire/Merseyside area to sustained snowfall. 

     

    Here it is on the 12Z GFS breaching the Pennine snowshield at 15:00 Monday - and remaining in place until Tuesday 06:00 when to the delight of those further north it moves northwards by 12:00 Tuesday 

     

    image.thumb.png.ddaa300bc3df85ac3ca787aff228757c.pngimage.thumb.png.c12a3cda12b7804e192694bf68e92d93.pngimage.thumb.png.4a5f5179d3843934ae325e909413dfe4.png

     

    (I posted this up accidentally was a draft from earlier, @Winter Hill has got there with the fax chart that's probably more use) 

    • Like 3
  4. 27 minutes ago, Rain Lady said:

    So nice to have a mild calm and DRY day, so far.   The wet has been relentless for weeks.  Just this month so far 49.8mm.   So a brisk drying E wind will be welcome, specially wth some sunshine.  But not a LOT more snow please.   Causes so much work and expense, quite apart from hazardous conditions.  The last dollop is still lying around.   It will takes more snow to shift it -- according to the the old saying up here.

    2021 feb 4 snowdrops and snow close.jpg

    Jeez. How far above sea level do you live to still have snow from previous events? 

     

    Surely it would shift with an early spring as well aside from more snow? 

  5. Just now, Boro Snow said:

    I am sure plenty will make it over to you aswell

     

    I hope you're right.... I'm less convinced, but that's caused enough discussion in my own regional thread without coming in here and opening it. 

     

    These kind of set ups are brilliant for you guys though, endless convective streams of showers quite possible for the North East and for inland parts of Cumbria. Remember lamp post watching a good few of these kind of Easterlies back up where I used to live. 

     

    Although having just checked my old house on the met office and seen Saturday and Sunday forecast as rain and sleet I don't feel like I missing out as much 

    • Like 1
  6. 4 minutes ago, chris78 said:

    Yeah me to, Im not a native although lived here of 20 years.    Loads going for it.   

    If you go there at the right time of night a tanked up complete stranger will threaten to kick your head in for a reason I'm still clueless too, a truly delightful place.... 

     

    Nah, in all seriousness that's happened all of once in the times I've been there - the town centre's well developed and got plenty of amenities that over places in the north west don't have in quite such an abundance.  House prices are pretty decent, and there's some amazing park spaces in the town centre to get away from it all, I can imagine it being a lovely place to live with a good balance of towny stuff that's useless and decent escapist green spaces.... if it wasn't for the snowshield  

    • Like 1
  7. 2 minutes ago, Day 10 said:

    Where is it mate, think I'll start using it.

    Hover over the user it's next to the message button under their profile info - unfortunately it only blocks the poster themselves, not replies to them. 

    1 minute ago, Snow free zone said:

    I'm going to stick up for Preston here .... there's plenty good about the place - just been voted the best place to live in the NW (not for snow obviously ) and we are near plenty of motorways so you can make a sharp exit if you really dislike it ! 

    Who the hell did they survey for that, jesus ? 

     

     

    • Thanks 1
  8. 4 minutes ago, Interitus said:

    Ok, lol, and on these occasions what were depths like in other parts of the country? It's almost like people are insinuating that this area is a match for other areas for snow showers in an easterly, it beggars belief!

    Nobody is suggesting that. What we are suggesting is there's a real possibility with either an organised trough or a straight easterly rather a north easterly, we could see some serious snow depths at least as far as the M6 line and quite possibly beyond it. 

     

    The intensity of the upcoming snow spell, combined with the low pressure of it opens up the door to some real potential. Of course Yorkshire would probably get even more, but quite frankly if Yorkshire got even more buried, meaning we get some proper snow depths I'd take it. 

     

    The idea an easterly means we'll only see concrete over this side of the country is nutty. 2018 delivered a reasonably moderate snowfall to this area, but it was much nicer snow - sadly it blew around too much to make any use of for pretty pictures, but the intensity of that blizzard was glorious. I'd love to see another event like that which Westerly's just cannot deliver here as they are always too wet, even if 'depth' isn't narnia levels. 

    • Like 1
  9. 5 minutes ago, Iceaxecrampon said:

    Sounds like.....

    Preston!

     

    Preston must be the worst place in the north of the country for snow to be honest, especially once you go through the town centre out towards Blackpool. 

     

    You seem to not get anything from a Westerly flow as it's too marginal, but has sorted it out by the time it gets to Blackburn, and then when we get to Easterlies the precipitation kills itself around Darwen/Blackburn. I've only lived here a few years and the amount of good snow events I've seen here that haven't been seen in Preston is bonkers 

    • Like 2
  10. 1 hour ago, chris78 said:

    For some in the region easterlies are great.     Now for me out on the West a big fall is incredibly unlikely, so for anyone living in those areas your get real comment would apply to every single snow forecast ever made/   i think lots of us here look at others in the N.West predicting ONLY 8cm of snow with disappointment and think...you dojnt your born!  

    It was a balanced post.

     

    As for your other point. To be fair a lot of those predicting 'only X' are predicting with our own experiences in mind as that prediction comp is 'in our back yard'. 

     

    I had 4-5inches of snow - around 10cm from an event earlier in January that delivered a fraction of that to @chicken soup who lives a mile or so from me but doesn't have the benefit of being just under 200m above sea level, I'm fully aware for those further west and at lower levels even seeing a few cms from this set up will make their days, but in a spot that did well the rest of winter where we've already had 4-5inches or around 10-12cm from snow events this winter, anything below that would be dissapointing from what I've long regarded as the 'holy grail' of weather events due to the fact I lived in the north east for many years and was there when the 2010 Beast delivered 1ft of level snow that lasted for weeks, the idea that the upper expectations of an Easterly for many over here is a possible few cms is difficult to adjust too. 

     

    As mentioned above though, there seems to be enough of a real Easterly orientation to this it could throw us into one of those rare 'good for the NW' Easterlies by all accounts. 

    • Like 4
  11. It depends which direction it's coming from round here. For an easterly like the one upcoming (and I'm sure the same applies for the East Coast when we get a stonking NW'ly too  )

     

    • Turn off the national news.
    • Start planning walks in the bright sunshine and crisp cold I'll see for the next few weeks.
    • Look up the traffic cams of areas likely to be buried
    • check house prices in the Highlands.

     

    In all seriousness actual plans coming up to a cold spell tend to be.....

     

    •  Check house prices in the Highlands
    •  Check the grit supplies.
    •  Check the snow shovel is still whether it's been for the past few months.
    • Look at youtube videos of historic events from all around the world of deep cold and heavy snow
    • Contemplating whether it's close enough to Christmas to get the decorations back out... (this one isn't)
    • Dig out the electric heaters.
    • Watch The Day After Tomorrow 
    • Tell everybody there's nothing to worry about and the media are overhyping the whole thing to be on the safe side  

     

    • Like 1
  12. 11 minutes ago, Iceaxecrampon said:

    Fun probably starts Monday to be fair for the majority of the region E streamers piling over the hill  - how far they get over is another matter.

    uksnowrisk.thumb.png.000c5bbc315a2cc4e6979405076d6a95.png

    Reload from the SW Friday - not put it up as too far out at +201 - at least it will be on the cool side.

     

    This feature keeps popping up shooting the precip right across the country out into the Irish Sea above Liverpool on various models, over the past few days. Presumably some sort of organised trough is shifting westwards to enable that. These areas probably want to keep a close eye on development of this feature, as should it come off you are looking at very significant snowfall.

     

    I think the day it's actually shifted between Sun and Mon but beyond that it's been consistent across different runs. The areas between the red bars here seem highly likely to affected, Cumbria would be feeding off general easterly precipitation anyway, so I wouldn't worry about not being included in this. 

    image.thumb.png.290efea7d56d131a5fd1a4f0c25ec1e6.png

    • Like 9
  13. Just now, cowdog said:

    It really does seem to be a poorly drawn area in regards to the North. We aren't even in it yet we know we can get hit hard by Easterlies here and are projected even on Met offices website to have constant snow from 6pm Saturday until there end of forecasts on Wednesday.

     

    Really needed to cover most of Cumbria and take it to about Blackburn imo.

    To be honest it's getting to the point I'm more optimistic about a snowy spell if I'm not under a weather warning from the MetO

    • Like 6
×
×
  • Create New...