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Coopsy

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Posts posted by Coopsy

  1. On 16/10/2022 at 20:50, SW Saltire said:

    We first had snow on the very highest tops in mid September. 
    Hopefully you get snow soon!

    You were certainly ahead then. Though it looks like the warm October weather is going to break this weekend 😁❄️ 
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    Hopefully the snow Gods visit everyone in Scotland this year (for those that love the snow) ❄️❄️❄️

     

    • Like 8
  2. 20 hours ago, Norrance said:

    A cold breeze here and some showers early this morning and again later in the afternoon. Max if 10C and min of 3C. Nice to see snow appearing in pics from the Highlands. Got at least as far South as Perthshire. Here is Lawers today from the House on the Hill above Kenmore.

    Could contain:

    I just quoted in the North America thread that we have no snow on the mountains at 8000ft, which is the latest I have ever known it. I said I wouldn’t be surprised if Scotland  had snow before and so it is!

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    • Like 8
  3. Happy Canadian Thanksgiving weekend. 🇨🇦 

    It may well become one of the warmest Thanksgiving weekends in Alberta history.

    Many places continuing the late summer weather with forecast well into the 20’s.

    Though late Monday looks set to change with snow possible in the foothills. 

    The turkey is certainly feeling confused...

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    And certainly no need for the usual trip to storm mountain to have the fire roaring...

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    If you’re ever in Canmore you’ll end up seeing our local celebrity ‘big Ed’....

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    And finally to finish up with a typically Canadian picture of the Rockies on this rather balmy Thanksgiving...

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    • Like 3
  4. On 03/10/2022 at 14:37, cheeky_monkey said:

    yep here in Alberta it is the best and worst time of the year..weather is usually pretty much perfect warm days and cool nights rarely is it wet and is mostly sunny..the flip side the worst time of the year is almost upon us..its already Dark until 8am and the numbing cold and snow is just round the next corner..once it begins you know you are stuck with cold and darkness for the next 5-6 months 😰

    I couldn’t do Edmonton winters. We’re very lucky that the mountains moderate the winters, especially with the frequent Chinooks. We’re doing bad if we have more than two weeks of minus 30. At least the sunshine helps. Although by February I’m ready for the warmer weather 

    • Like 1
  5. October starts as September ends in the Rocky Mountains. Sunny warm days in the 20’s and cool crisp nights in the low single digits. It’s been a very good summer/Fall.

    It’s always this time of year that I get a sense of delusion/wishful thinking that this will continue but reality is that the ski season starts in around 5 weeks.

    It may still feel like late summer but Winter is coming. ❄️ 

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    • Like 7
  6. 2 hours ago, Don said:

    Winter 2004/05 featured a white Christmas for some and that prolonged wishy washy easterly in February/early March where great synoptics were let down by a lack of cold on the continent.  It was still the coldest second half of February (at the time) since 1986 though.

     

    We had a foot of snow in early March 2005 on the north downs of Kent. Elevation was certainly key as walked down the hill and barely anything but a wet slushy mess. 

    • Like 1
  7. On 31/08/2022 at 17:08, cheeky_monkey said:

    been the hottest August i can remember since living in Canada 

    Certainly has been quite memorable. I’ve never known the mountains to be this warm for this long especially during August. It’s the nighttime lows that are unusually warm. Potential no lower than 14oC/15oC this weekend. In September.

    It actually turned out the 2nd hottest August ever in Calgary just behind 1971. Not sure about Edmonton though.

    Amazing to see most of southern Alberta still under a heat warning this weekend with temps well into the 30’s.

    Looks like Tuesday/Wednesday will be the cool down to something more seasonal. With cooler rainy weather by the end of the week. 

    I have a funny feeling we’ll pay for it this winter. 🥶 


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  8. After a brief cool down in southern Alberta the heat returns yet again. It’s looking likely that we are witnessing the hottest month ever in some parts, certainly Calgary and surrounding areas. 

    As of August 21 it was on track to be record breaking, even with the cool down. But with the forecast this week of temps back into the high 20’s and 30’s before September comes, I think we might just see the record go. 

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    • Like 1
  9. 56 minutes ago, cheeky_monkey said:

    summer 1995 i never touched the lawn mower after mid June..the only summer i can remember in the UK where this was the case..one good thing about living in Edmonton is that you only have to mow the lawn about half dozen times a year tops

    Yeah same in the Rockies (except monsoon June)

    Infact I went a few years never cutting my grass as my retired neighbour used to do it every time he cut his lawn.

    I used to like him. Until one night an elk shed his antlers on my lawn. I saw them there at night and was going to get them in the morning to keep as a memento.

    Anyway next day they were gone. I was most perplexed. Not for long. My next door neighbour invited me round for a beer a little while longer and as I walked into his basement suite , what should be there above the fire place? My bl**dy antlers! 

    Morale of the story...if an elk sheds its antlers on your lawn, pick them up straight away! 

    • Thanks 1
  10. 5 hours ago, MP-R said:

    It was notable how late the trees turned last year, almost the end of October before any proper colour started appearing. Of course last year the trees were also bare well into April and May. This year will hopefully bring much better colours given how much more sunshine there's been overall.

    Geeky natural science alert....

    Interestingly it’s more about the weather in autumn rather than summer.

    According to the US Forest Service, “a succession of warm, sunny days and cool, crisp but not freezing nights in Autumn, seems to bring out the most spectacular colour displays.”

    The two primary pigments in leaves are carotenoids that produce orange, yellow, and brown colors, and anthocyanins that are responsible for resplendent reds.

    The orange pigments (carotenoids) are present in leaves year round and get to shine when the green chlorophyll takes a break. Because the orange pigments are constant, their showiness in the Autumn is predictable.  But, the red pigments (anthocyanins) are created in the Autumn in response to light, plant chemical changes, temperature, and water supply. This is where weather affects the brilliance of the Autumn colour display. (Source: Gardenista) 

    Warm days and low temperatures (above freezing) at night boost the production of the red pigments, producing a more dazzling display.  But early frosts weaken the colours.

     

    • Like 7
  11. I remember this night well as a young child. It was a Friday night/early Saturday morning event.

    Our Family left late at night/early morning to travel to Devon from Kent for our annual holiday and I remember vividly seeing lightning what felt like most of the way.

    Most impressive was seeing Stonehenge lit up by lightning as we progressed along the A303.

    I also believe the following few weeks were hot and sunny (or so it felt as a child on the beach everyday in Devon)  

  12. 30 minutes ago, Bradley in Kent said:

    In those conditions if you put ice cubes on the ground they'll sublimate straight to a gas, no melting between!

    Not wishing to discount warnings but I think we'll be pleasantly surprised how manageable the heat will be. Standard precautions should suffice, being more mindful when working outdoors of course. 

    I think it works the same way with snow. In Canada in winter the snow melts without leaving any real water behind due to the low humidity (I think) 

  13. 3 hours ago, cheeky_monkey said:

    had it here last year -45c in February +45c In June doesn't get much more extreme than that 🥶🥵

    That’s impressive. I’ve had -42oC and +40oC. That was bad enough. Another 5oC on top of that would have been torture.

    I don’t mind the cold. Minus 30 is minus 40. Just put the heating up full whack, drive to work and drive back. Stay indoors (but then we only get it for a few days max - you edmontians get it for a lot longer) 

  14. I’d be interested to see the humidity during the highest temp of past years like 2003/2019 and humidity forecast for Monday/Tuesday. 

    Humidity next week is forecast to be low so even if the temp reaches 40oC I wonder if it will feel lower than past record temps (assuming the humidity was higher then) 

    • Like 1
  15. 4 minutes ago, Ed Stone said:

    What has that got to do with summer weather?😄

    All you have to do is look back and see why this comment was made. In relation to a previous quote in relation to summer weather and how kids deal with it. It’s not difficult.

    • Like 1
  16. On 10/07/2022 at 16:42, Kentspur said:

    I swear my location by the Thames has its own microclimate...., I know my weather station is not the most technical but it definitely feels much hotter than 27-28c here today I posted in model output discussion yesterday saying we need another weather station between Dartford and Gravesend which often recorded the countries highest temps before they dismantled our only weather station, were flat, urban and suffer the sandy.

     

    I agree. When I lived there and used to drive to work from medway towns to London the car temp always rose around gravesend. In fact in 2019 when Cambridge recorded the highest ever temp at 38.7oC, it went to 39oC driving past Gravesend. 

    I would bet that the warmest temp in the UK has been recorded there. 

  17. 1 hour ago, Ed Stone said:

    It just goes to show how much our climate has warmed these past 50 years -- 1975 was considered exceptional at the time when 90F was recorded two days in a row, instead of once in three years! 1976 was of course an exception among exceptions!

    It's also worth noting that next week hasn't happened yet!

    I’d have to challenge that. 

    Its been common place to reach at least 30oC over the last century at least. In fact between 1932 and 1957 it reached 30oC every year. With almost every year breaking the 32oC, 90oF mark as well.

    Over the last 120 years it’s reached 30oC 87% of the time.

     

    • Like 6
    • Thanks 1
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