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Yozzer

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Posts posted by Yozzer

  1. Hi all,

    Well the snow storm started around 11am and we have a couple of inhes already, its just starting to get heavy and the winds are picking up. Looks like we are in for another blustery night tonight.

    Hope you all enjoyed the snow in the UK. I hear theres more on the way........excellent.

    TTFN

    Debs

    Look forward to the photos.

    South of England possibly in for a severe event Thurs/Fri with cold air meeting a low pressure system. Someone down south is going to get a lot of snow, wouldn't be surprised to see 12-18" somewhere due to this, on top of what's already there.

  2. Storm now really only for Canadian maritimes, so look out Debs. Not sure of your exact location, but expect up to 12" snow from this one, and could get pretty windy too.

    As you've probably heard, the whole of the south east of England has ground to a halt with a few inches of the white stuff. Even most of the underground didn't run today because of the snow! Work that one out if you can...

  3. We've actually had the first few flurries at ground level already today, although not lying yet. The hills are all white though (I can see Lochnagar(1155m) from my house and it's covered in snow) More please!

    Hi Saperlo, and welcome to the forum (i.e. the madhouse!).

    I lived in Ballater (the Pass) for a while, left about 2 years ago to move to Perthshire. Before that was in Huntly for over 20 years. Likely to move back to Ballater when house here is sold, so nice to have a fellow enthusiast locally. Keep in touch.

    You should get a decent dump of snow up there from this.

  4. yes i feel they really will get it bad for a time can see this one being mentioned for years to come in the media. wonder if Gordon brown

    will declare a emergency and claim to save the poor folks of eastern england

    Yes, send for Flash Gordon, Saviour of the Universe!!

    Anyway, to respond to a few posts on here about likely locations for snow, I feel that the immediate east coast might be disappointed due to the surface being warmed by the North Sea, temps are currently around 6 or 7C. Inland and with a little altitude however will be a different story as thicknesses, dew points and 850 temps are well suited to snowfall. I would say any land over 100m is at risk, and over 20 miles from the coast even lower ground would get it.

    As far as favoured locations and amounts, jury still out, but I would say the Eastern Grampians, as well as the Border hills and Perthshire Hills are near certs for a bit of a pasting.

  5. The way the models are now shunting the storm east, not sure it will have much impact at all apart from extreme eastern Canadian maritimes. The models, esp the GFS initially showed phasing of two systems which would have symbiotically 'bombed' along the east coast, but they are now pretty much out of sync, so unlikely to be much of an event at all really. Don't think 40cm is likely I'm afraid.

    Henry Margusity is back-tracking big style today. Ouef sur le visage methinks!

    Got a feeling the UK cold snap is being a bit over-egged as well, probably not surprising given that the worst will probably be hitting the South at rush hour Monday morning with drifts almost up to the top of the kerbstones! Gritters will arrive sometime in June no doubt.

    Prob 5-10cm for parts of Southern half of England, and later further north. We really shouldn't have the problems that we no doubt will south of the border...

  6. May be some fun and games in the Borders Mon/Tues, but I don't think the initial easterly will deliver much elsewhere apart from the Grampians. Scotland's chance may come later on IF, and it's a big IF, a cold plunge comes down from n or n/e, depending on the eventual position of the l/p to the south. If it trundles back east, ending up with the pv over Scandinavia, big time for many!

    Personally, I hope it doesn't 'cos I'm off to New England next weekend, and it would just be my luck for the flight from Edinburgh to get delayed or cancelled, missing out on the 78" of snow that's fallen at my house there this winter...

  7. All models, even the NAM and GEM now coming on board with a more easterly track with this storm. My interest is obviously New England, and initial concern was for rapid snowmelt, heavy rain on hard frozen ground resulting in flood risk. I think that risk is now receeding, but being replaced by risk of another dump of snow away from the immediate coastline, although not a huge one (12" poss?), as the storm will move more rapidly than the last one this past week.

    Interestingly, while all the other forecasters at Accuweather are keeping their powder dry on this for now, Henry Margusity has nailed his colours firmly to the mast and is going with the original track, and is being pretty bolshy about it too. Either he's very stupid or very wise. We'll know for sure in a couple of days whether he needs to bother turning up for work next week!!!

  8. Interestingly, there may be a link to this volcano and some of the met model troubles presently. Aircraft have been re-routed away from a wide vicinity around Redoubt, and as many of these aircraft are used for data collection, there may be some big gaps in the modelling, which may have some large effects especially later in the runs. As an example, it may be one reason why the models are so unsure of the track of the 'monster' storm progged to hit the Eastern US early next week.

  9. I don't have a strong feeling as to which model track will verify, but the GEM is also to the east of the GFS, so it seems to be the lone wolf for a track slightly west of NYC and up the Hudson into southern Quebec, all the others seem to prefer New England to eastern Quebec. So if that's the track that verifies, it will likely be a very strong wind and rain event for eastern New England and the Maritimes, a mixed storm near NYC and a heavy snowfall over most of NY state, VT and northern NH into Quebec. Potential for 20-30 inches of snow with this track, if you get the GFS track you might have some rain and some ice pellets before your snow begins, so more like 10 inches with that track. Either way it will turn very cold at the end of the storm for a day or two, but then the flow rapidly changes to a mild westerly.

    The storm reminds me more of the Feb 1-2 1976 storm which hit New Brunswick very hard with winds gusting to near 100 mph and a brief warmup to 12 C, even if not that extreme it may be one to watch carefully for Debs.

    Anyway, will keep watching it and post updated thoughts on how it is developing, would say Tues-Wed the impact days, Monday it should still be developing over the Gulf stream east of Hatteras.

    GFS now tending towards the Euros with the storm 'bombing' at the coast, which would still give a cold windy rain at the coast, but would pull the snow/rain line further East.

    Interesting to see deep into FI the GFS showing a retrogressing LP moving from Nova Scotia/NB back towards New England! Wonder when was the last time that happened?

  10. BIG east coast storm Mon/Tues. Lots of debate on exact track at the moment, gfs going for west of Appalachians giving big snowstorm for Great Lakes and Ohio Valley, but Euros tracking further East with the snow dropping on the Appalachians, but still heavy rain for I95 corridor.

    Question is will it rival the 'Storm of the Century' from '93, or even the Valentine's day Nor'easter from 2007? I doubt it, but the jury is still out.

    Whatever happens, it's going to be windy for most, snowy for some, wet for many, and followed by bitter winds for all...

    Roger, what's your expert eye on this one???

  11. It continues rather cold in the western half of Canada, and much of the central to northeast U.S. as well. But the coldest air is over the eastern third of Canada, again.

    A very slow-moving system is bringing a swath of freezing rain from OK to s MO and w KY with 3-6 inch snowfalls expected north of that. The system will take three days to reach New England on a very slow trajectory from n.e. TX to Long Island. Not much wind with the system, just the over-running precip bands.

    On the west coast we are expecting a brief return to the snow that we have not seen for three weeks now (although that load is still melting away in the shade). Only expecting about 10 cms turning to rain by Wednesday, and perhaps we are then going to be seeing a milder second half of winter (if there still is half a winter, we've already had what seems like two).

    Mets now calling for 12-18" in central/northern New England up into the Canadian Maritimes including much of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Due to rate of snowfall and slowness of system, I would think some spots may well get 2 feet from this one.

    Watch out Debs, another one on its way, although not as windy as the last big storm.

  12. Could we have an updated Ramp Status please, especially in view of the fact that over 200 users were spotted on the model discussion thread on a non holiday Monday morning. Is something afoot? I think we should be told...

  13. Just to put that reading in some sort of context for folk from Blighty who may not have experienced anything like it, the temp at the South Pole base currently is -27C, and Vostok (normally the coldest place on the continent) is -36C, although I do realize in the S. hemisphere it is midsummer!

    But still, -46C, at a similar latitude to southern France, that is impressive...

  14. How do you keep warm in your house with temps that cold.

    When it was -6c last week. our heating struggled to keep the house warm.

    Houses here are well insulated and make good use of timber which is also a good natural insulator. Snow generally covers the roof in winter so provides even more insulation. A major difference as well is that most houses have basements which again provides a thermal barrier to the main body of the house. The central heating furnace sits here, warming the basement and the heating to the rest of the house is usually by means of forced hot air from this unit.

    Don't worry, North Americans know how to keep warm...

  15. OK, just spoke with my neighbour who keeps a Radio Shack amateur weather station, and temp fell to -39.1C last night. Bear in mind his house sits about 150' above the river, and I reckon it would have been a little below -40 in the valley floor last night. Incidentally record low for NH is -47C, so cold is not too far off record values. Sure is cold enough though.

    Not many skiers out today, apart from the Brits of course...Mad dogs and Englishmen eh?

  16. Whats going on in Alaska ? Its cold even for them folk :)

    http://www.freep.com/article/20090108/NEWS07/90108032

    Absolutely, but that core of cold is now rapidly heading south east, to be replaced by a very mild surge with it's origins in the Pacific. Temps over central and eastern Laska could very well end up 50C above where they have been, and that would be above freezing, pretty unusual for this time of the year!!

  17. Blairgowrie: 30 inches of snow (13th), snow on the ground to the end of the month

    Wouldn't mind seeing that! Moved here about 18 mths ago and have seen at most 3" of snow, whereas in rural Aberdeenshire where I came from we were used to digging ourselves out of deep drifted snow on many occasions in most winters.

    BTW, the last time our place in New Hampshire had 30" of snow in one storm was on Valentine's day in 2007. That one storm produced more snow than the rest of the winter combined.

  18. Debs, for that planned vacation, it would be generally quite hot although it's a dry heat and if you have an A/C vehicle and plan your days well, you can handle it. Average highs would range from 30 C in higher parts of the southwest to 40 C in Las Vegas at that time of year, and you'll find the weather mostly sunny with a few days of brief thunderstorms mostly over mountains. Would recommend southern Utah for scenery as well as where you mentioned. Death Valley can be 5-8 deg hotter than even Las Vegas, might be an idea to go there only if the daily forecasts are moderate, it could be a real oven there if the region is in a warmer than average spell (the variability of the weather there in August is not great, however, I would imagine it is less than 5 deg from bottom 25% of data to top 25% and even records might only be 10 deg apart). So you can pretty much count on hot, dry weather in that region, as well as the odd thunderstorm perhaps every third or fourth day on the average, and those mostly in the evening hours.

    A few years ago a pal of mine and his girlfriend did a coast to coast trip in a rented mustang convertible. They made the fairly rudimentary mistake of driving along desert roads in mid summer with the top down. Came back looking like boiled lobsters...apart from white bits where they'd had their sunglasses on!

    You'll have a great time, be a nice change from shovelling snow eh?

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