Jump to content
Snow?
Local
Radar
Cold?

skifreak

Members
  • Posts

    3,086
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by skifreak

  1. 3 hours ago, snowray said:

    It will be the white Easter next, then showers in May!😆

    I don't mind early March snow, thats about it though.

    Well to be fair, this has a bit of a 2012 feeling about it.  The Scottish Ski Season came to a grinding halt after mid February, not a single ski lift run for snowsports in March 2012, yet this was Coire Cas on CairnGorm on Sat 12th May 2012!

    Could contain: Piste, Nature, Outdoors, Snow, Slope, Person, Shoe, Helmet, Mountain, Handbag

    • Like 2
  2. 1 hour ago, Polaris said:

    Absolutely. I remember the days when a wet and windy day was just that… a wet a windy day.

    Now, due to social media and Hype, a low pressure system is given a name to label as a storm. Imagine the folk in the world that actually get proper storms, hurricanes and typhoons. 

    So Storm Frank... you want to tell the people flooded out of large parts of Ballater,  that it wasn't a real storm? Just a wet and windy day that obliterated from existence a couple of hundred yards of the A93, left a bridge at Braemar unstable so that the only way in and out was over the 2200ft Cairnwell Pass which had to be kept open 24/7 through January and February? That the arches on the A90 Bridge of Dee went full bore for the first time in 488 years was just a damp winters day?

    Just a wee breeze that Frank, a breeze that ripped a roof of a chairlift drive at Glencoe ski area with such force it smashed a hole in a building further up the mountain and knocked a ski lift tower out of alignment before disintegrating, maybe tell the owner of the car overturned in the carpark at 1200ft at Glencoe that Storm Frank wasn't actually real wind?

    Some serious pish gets posted in this thread.  

    • Like 6
    • Thanks 1
  3. On 05/12/2022 at 23:24, Mair Snaw said:

    Pub run.. well lets just say its had a few too many shandies tonight.. its showing snaw for Perth so it must be pi55ed... after the last few weeks of constant rain and dull dank rubbish i will be more than happy to take 4 or 5 days or dry sunny cold weather.. a dusting of snaw should it come will do for me...

    You moved to Perth for snow? 😲

    • Like 4
  4. 25 minutes ago, Ravelin said:

    Currently a breezy but sunny 8.7C and dry, but the latter likely won't last. The 'snow event' Tue into Wed for here isn't looking like much of an event at all now. 

    Well that's a bit of a spectacular drop in snow totals across the board for the mountains... 

    • Like 1
  5. 1 hour ago, Ross90 said:

    Weds looks interesting, if there aren't any downgrades the yellow windy warnings will be out.

    Some of the runs and ensemble members look more like red than yellow! 

    With regard to the question were the hills as bare in the 1988/89 winter - yes, CairnGorm didn't ski at all until mid-Feb, Sat 18th Feb they opened with one third of the Coire Cas T-bar in use loading at the top of the Gunbarrel and getting off were the main run crosses the T-bar 2/3rds of the way up! 

    • Like 6
  6. 37 minutes ago, Hairy Celt said:

    We have an old phone that works fine with no other connection than the phone line, although it's not going to last forever - think it was a work cast-off about 30 years ago. Are these devices still made?

    Yes, 6 to 10quid at Argos. However, the PSTN copper network is due to be switched off in Dec 2024 - interesting to see what if any contingency is put in place. We frankly should have been laying single mode fibre to premises / homes since the early 1980s, though the basic copper telephone network does have the advantage that the phone is powered by the exchange line.

    However there does seem to have been quite a few exchanges go offline in recent storms entirely. I’ve older relatives that were flown around in RAF sea kings delivering charged batteries and fuel for topping up generators around telephone exchanges that couldn’t be reached by road in the Highlands.

    • Like 1
  7. 2 hours ago, Northernlights said:

    Another observationis OK wind directions have been different but I have never seen so many trees come down so easily

    Is a factor here not just the wind direction that the strongest winds have come from, but we’ve gone a number of winters without particularly notable storms. Certainly on the mountains, the ski areas haven’t had particularly big damaging storms come through for a few winters, not on the scale of Storm Frank that ripped roofs of buildings, blew in vehicles windows even at relatively low levels like the Glencoe carpark at just over 1000ft, overturned vehicles in the Coire Cas Carpark on CairnGorm etc!

    • Like 4
  8. Having a flick through charts for something more palatable, looks like lows to our north putting a squeeze on things and it could get pretty blowy particularly far North and the hills later in the week towards the weekend, but that could just be the warm up act for really stormy spell early February, and colder too? Very little snow in Jan 2020 on the hills either, then February, particularly in the West brought lots of snow and was persistently stormy into mid March. Would take a repeat of 2020 weather from here given the spring we had! 

    • Like 8
  9. Would take Feb 20 to mid end May 20 repeat! February 2020 brought huge amounts of snow to the Scottish Ski Areas, season was morphing into an epic when Covid pulled the plug. Have seen some charts in the ensembles suggesting the Northern Highlands could see 50cm plus of snow, while South of the Great Glen and thus the ski areas see next to nothing. Risk the blizzards could get South of Shetland to the mainland and still not benefit the ski areas!

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

    I think golf courses were closed during the first lockdown but open on subsequent ones - can't remember exactly but a golfing friend was definitely gloating about getting to play golf when I was complaining about Glenshee being forced to close. 

    Anyway, the damage is done so hopefully a decent spell of weather arrives at some point to give them a boost. 

    Since we’re off topic, golf courses were not required to shut under Level 4 restrictions in Scotland and the ski areas went into the season with roughly the same operating criteria as golf courses for level 4 operations. (However, golf courses and tennis courts were closed in all 3 England lockdowns - so media coverage has often been misleading on the status of golf in Scotland).

    The only lift served skiing last season at Glencoe, Glenshee and the Lecht took place under Level 4 - lockdown, but the rules were changed from 5th January. The intention was to keep ski centres, golf courses and tennis courts / clubs open for outside activities.

    What appears to have changed was HIE closed down CairnGorm Mountain on Christmas Eve and made a big song and dance about how responsible they were being and that they were looking after the local commiunity, this set the precedent and HIE heavily lobbied to get the ski sector shutdown to stop the other areas getting ahead of CairnGorm. I’ve heard and seen enough stuff in the industry to be sure in my mind that it wasn’t Covid that shut the ski areas on 5th January 2021, it was HIE malfeasance. 

    • Like 2
×
×
  • Create New...