Jump to content
Snow?
Local
Radar
Cold?

Stuart

Members
  • Posts

    9,211
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Everything posted by Stuart

  1. UK Outlook for Friday 27 Aug 2010 to Friday 10 Sep 2010: The north and northwest of the UK will continue to see further spells of rain or showers, perhaps extending further south at times, whilst an emphasis on mainly dry, bright and increasingly warm weather is expected for the south. Rainfall amounts should be mainly average or below average across most of England, Wales and southern Scotland, but may end up being slightly above average in the far north and west of Scotland. Temperatures are likely to continue to be average or slightly above average for most of the UK, but warmer in the south. Updated: 1231 on Thu 12 Aug 2010 http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/uk_forecast_weather.html
  2. UK Outlook for Tuesday 17 Aug 2010 to Thursday 26 Aug 2010: Unsettled weather conditions will affect many parts of the UK throughout the period, with the heaviest and most persistent rain the east at first and, most probably, to the north, west and southwest later. There will be some drier and brighter weather at times too, the best of this is likely to be in the west and northwest initially, then more likely across central, eastern and southern parts later. Daytime temperatures will be close to average for the time of year, although it will be rather cool in areas affected by more persistent rain. Southern and southwestern parts of the UK may become warm at times later in the forecast period when some improvement is expected. Updated: 1221 on Thu 12 Aug 2010 http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/uk_forecast_weather.html
  3. Changeable Becoming warmer http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/cgi-app/reports?LANG=en&MENU=weekahead&DAY=20100812
  4. Good round up coast keeping my eyes on this today for here:D
  5. Storm Forecast Issued: 2010-08-12 01:23:00 Valid: 2010-08-12 00:00:00 - 2010-08-12 23:59:00 Regions Affected East Midlands and East Anglia (NE England, Midlands East Anglia and SE England are included in the WATCH) Synopsis Low pressure "Xenia" (FU Berlin) continues to dominate the weather across the country on Thursday, located over the North Sea. Scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms are forecast to develop over many parts of central, northern and eastern England as instability increases. Given the rPm airmass, hail is likely in many of the showers, and in stronger cells the hail may be moderate in size, accompanied by torrential downpours. There exists the potential for funnels or a weak tornado to develop. Showers will decrease in coverage during the evening hours, becoming mainly confined to the North Sea by the end of the forecast period. http://www.ukasf.co.uk/module-Storm/mode-forecast/id-330/
  6. I been talking to a mate live in scottish Borders there had some thunder yes you right there been taking to a mate in greenlaw there had thunder
  7. yes here to I am looking forward to my 2nd storm of the year if it happen later on lol
  8. UK Outlook for Wednesday 25 Aug 2010 to Wednesday 8 Sep 2010: The north and northwest of the UK will continue to see further spells of rain or showers, perhaps extending further south at times, whilst an emphasis on mainly dry, bright and increasingly warm weather is expected for the south. Rainfall amounts should be mainly average or below average across most of England, Wales and southern Scotland, but may end up being slightly above average in the far north and west of Scotland. Temperatures are likely to continue to be average or slightly above average for most of the UK, but warmer in the south. Sunshine will follow a similar pattern with more sun likely in the south, and rather less in the north. Updated: 1235 on Wed 11 Aug 2010 http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/uk_forecast_weather.html
  9. UK Outlook for Monday 16 Aug 2010 to Wednesday 25 Aug 2010: Most parts of the UK should have a fine start to the period, though eastern and southeastern areas will be more unsettled with showers or rain with strong winds in eastern coastal areas. Northwest Scotland is also likely to turn cloudier with some light rain by mid-week. Temperatures away from the cloudier areas will be near or just above normal. Later next week conditions will become more unsettled across a wider area with most parts having some rain or showers at times, best of the brightness then to the south and east. The weekend and first part of the following week may see the unsettled conditions becoming more confined to the northwest, with rising temperatures elsewhere. Updated: 1238 on Wed 11 Aug 2010 http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/uk_forecast_weather.html
  10. well look like just rain for us for today but there have been sunsine this morning all i do just cross my fingers. But loooking at the gfs seem updated it at the last min:lol:
  11. Thanks Coast good maps per all ways and looking at them I could maybe see a storm later in the day or missed out
  12. well i hope i see something today nick i got my finger cross Storm Forecast Issued: 2010-08-11 00:46:00 Valid: 2010-08-11 00:00:00 - 2010-08-11 23:59:00 Regions Affected C, N, S + E Scotland, NE England and Yorkshire (Scotland and N + E England are included in the WATCH) Synopsis Low pressure "Xenia" (FU Berlin) continues to dominate the weather across the country on Wednesday, located over the North Sea. Widespread scattered showers and thunderstorms are forecast to develop over many parts of Scotland and Northern England as instability increases. Given the rPm airmass, hail is likely in many of the showers, and in stronger cells the hail may be moderate to locally large in size, accompanied by torrential downpours. There exists the potential for funnels or a weak tornado to develop. Showers will decrease in coverage during the evening hours, becoming mainly confined to the North Sea by the end of the forecast period. http://www.ukasf.co.uk/module-Storm/mode-forecast/id-329/
  13. well not been going on with storms when i been away my next day is wed afternoon
  14. Summary August glints rather than sparkles No doubt many of us hope August will bring a month of sunny weather with a little warmth, if not an out-and-out heatwave, depending on one's preference. As I trawled through Met Office records, however, the first thing that came to hand related to heavy rain and flooding in Edinburgh, Fife and the Northern Isles within the first two weeks of August 2008. Northern Ireland was also badly affected around 15-16th August in the same year. The signs are that August 2010 will break few if any records. High and low pressure systems have alternated in dominating the British Isles, bringing a mix of weather types and never allowing a prolonged spell of any one type. This pattern looks set to continue in the coming days. Monday 9 August 2010 to Sunday 15 August 2010 Northwesterly flow caps week's temperatures Low pressure to the north of Scotland offers an unsettled start to the week. Even when the system has the good grace to drift towards Scandinavia, a ridge of high pressure to the southwest of the British Isles will maintain a northwesterly flow across many areas. This will keep temperatures at or below the seasonal norm across many parts. The weak ridge offers something a little warmer for southern areas of both England and Wales towards the end of the week. Rain will drift across all parts early in the week. Southern Britain will turn muh drier from mid-week whilst much of northern Britain will be a little wetter for longer, either from rain early and late on in the week or from copious showers midweek. Monday 16 August 2010 to Sunday 22 August 2010 Cheerier prospects as pressure builds High pressure will remain slow-moving to the southwest of the British Isles, with a strong ridge of high pressure becoming established across all areas. Given their proximity to the high, southern parts of England will benefit most from above average amounts of sunshine. Temperatures will be well above average in this region and above average across many other areas. Rainfall, not surprisingly, will also fall well short of the seasonal norm, and even in the north of Britain, where conditions will be a little more unsettled, rainfall will be below par. Monday 23 August 2010 to Sunday 5 September 2010 Low close to northern Britain threatens summer High pressure to the southwest will again exert a significant influence across many areas at the start of the period. A developing area of low pressure close to Iceland will unsettle things for Scotland and Northern Ireland. The southern half of Britain will see temperatures and sunshine levels well above the seasonal norm. Scotland and Northern Ireland will also benefit from the high until low pressure begins to dominate. Rainfall rates will increase across northern parts as the Icelandic low deepens. Next week What will the weather bring to the start of the new school year? http://news.bbc.co.uk/weather/forecast/10209
  15. lol yes up to my sister for the evening up on the bus
  16. The metoffice have have a weather warning out for thunderstorms up the Highland Outbreaks of rain over parts of Moray and North Highland will become heavier this afternoon and this evening, leading to accumulations of 15mm within 3 hours and overall totals may exceed 25mm in places. The public are advised to take extra care and refer to the latest Scottish Environment Protection Agency Live Flood Warning Information, and also to Traffic Scotland for further advice on road conditions. Issued at: 0953 Mon 9 Aug http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/he/he_forecast_warnings.html
  17. Raining here right now:doh:
  18. sure is coast but no good today i am going up to my sister and comeing on tue but i back down here on tue afternoon just in times for the late afternoon storms :blush:
  19. well still all looking good for me on tue and wed if things dont Change:D
  20. UK Outlook for Monday 23 Aug 2010 to Monday 6 Sep 2010: The north and northwest of the UK will continue to see further spells of rain or showers, perhaps extending further south at times, whilst an emphasis on mainly dry, bright and warm weather is expected for the south. Rainfall amounts should be mainly average or below average across most of England, Wales and southern Scotland, but may end up being above average in the far north and west of Scotland. Temperatures are likely to continue to be average or above average for much of the UK. Sunshine will follow a similar pattern with more sun likely in the south, and rather less in the north. Updated: 1219 on Sun 8 Aug 2010 http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/uk_forecast_weather.html
  21. UK Outlook for Friday 13 Aug 2010 to Sunday 22 Aug 2010: There should be a good deal of dry weather for much of England and Wales into the weekend, but across northwest Scotland it may turn cloudier with an increased chance of rain. This will gradually spread to remaining northwestern parts of the UK, turning heavy and persistent at times. For the following week, southern parts of the UK should remain dry with sunny spells. Further north, it is likely to be cloudier with a chance of rain or showers, especially in the northwest. This more unsettled weather may spread into southern parts of the UK by the end of the period. Winds will remain light in the south, but stronger across northern parts of the UK. Temperatures will stay close to normal, but should be warmer in southern parts. Updated: 1219 on Sun 8 Aug 2010 http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/uk/uk_forecast_weather.html
×
×
  • Create New...