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mackerel sky

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Posts posted by mackerel sky

  1. Certainly. I was woken at half one and and about 4.30, same as you say. First was dry, the second, very wet. First decent storm since last summer! Had a strike within a couple of hundred metres at about half 6.... Just seen the latest BBC Weather. Seems up north is looking good for some sferics and heavy rain.

    If I wasn't half asleep I would have been a bit scared. Spent the hours of 11pm-2pm reassuring the dog who doesn't get along well with loud noises from earlier T-storms. Those strikes were bloody close.
  2. Ok, first post, so be easy on me. Been watching this thread (and others on previous days) with great interest. Currently we have.. reasonably heavy rain in Cambridge, though it doesn't look like its going to last long. I was really looking forward to another Monday night/Tuesday morning, but, alas, I guess that's not going to happen. I really don't know what has happened to the t-storms of my childhood. They just don't happen any more. Last decent t-storm I witnessed was back in 91 in Miami.. Sad really. Here's to hoping tomorrow and Monday brings better luck for you all. Though not here.. Home grown t-storms in Cambridge are rare these days.

    40 miles west everyone I know was woken from their beds at 4.30-5am Tuesday morning. I certainly was. At the top scale.
  3. I heard the distant sound of someone mowing their lawn today - lunatics! One benefit of this cold weather is the grass isn't growing! To potentially get to mid-April and not have to get the mower out is quite something. Anyhow off to home in most northern North Yorks for Easter tomorrow. They got bog all last weekend! Did have light flurrys early this morning - left a tiny cover that disappeared by about 9am. Still drifts in the fields on the edge of town. Think I've got a few tiny bits of snow left against the fence! But bitterly cold tonight, already down to -3.6C.

  4. Thanks for everything. I don't even know how I stumbled across netweather, but I think I was member 500 or something. Back in the days of dial-up from home. For an amateur, who nearly became a Meteorologist, but went into seismic exploration instead it has maintained my hobby and enthusiasm!!! Here is to the next 10 years of the crème de la crème. And you don't sell stories to the Daily Express! Viva netweather!

  5. Well last summer when we had a truly awful time, the likes of mid and northern Norway had a fantastic summer. I remember being in Trondheim in a glorious 25C mid May one year (I think 2006) when the jet stream was bang over us. So if the jet never returns north - eventually good conditions will pursue - a gradual warming process. If we go from this, to a raging Atlantic (unlikely) - and May is usually a fairly benign month - but noted for easterlies - west is best - northeast sea mist (lovely in Lancaster, rubbish in Middlesbrough), the weather patterns are surely cocked up. A crappy summer will have us wanting to leave the UK!!!

  6. sst_anom.gif

    snag is about 2 degrees below average in the north sea

    and around 1 degree in the channel

    with no warm up signals how cold can this get?

    Hi John, I haven't looked at the SSTs for a while - probably not since the beginning of February, but I haven't seen an anomaly like that in the last ten years. It does explain some things though. Dependent on wind direction, and a shorter fetch in the southern north sea with cold SSTs and land temperatures its not great for convection! We haven't really had a classic streamer anywhere this winter - North Sea convection has favoured those areas from the Lincolnshire coast northwards - just purely because of a greater fetch of water. If you have little contrast between the land and sea temperature under fairly benign conditions not much is going to happen. I know people where banking on the very cold 850 temperatures, which is what - typically about 1200-1500m height under standard pressure conditions(?). If we had a mild winter, and the SSTs were high, with a sudden onset of weeks and weeks of cold weather it would be interesting. You can't have it all ways!

  7. Just one probably very silly question, but how on earth did the southern north sea get colder than the northern north sea, that has got to be unusual.

    The southern north sea is always colder, usually at it is coldest late Feb/early March because less influenced by the North Atlantic Drift. The English Channel is narrow and shallow, so the warmth of the Atlantic felt in the SW diminishes. A weak current - an offshoot of the North Atlantic Drift flows around the top of Scotland into the North Sea. Coldest Sea temperatures on our shores are usually observed from about the Tees down to the Wash usually. A bit further south this year. Had a snow flurry here at about 8pm! Complete surprise. Edited as the cold water that exits the Baltic goes via the Norwegian trough (the deepest part of the North Sea just of the southern Norwegian Coast). Anyway, the area described has the coldest SSTs as the warm currents of the North Atlantic Drift have to go around the length of British Isles. http://www.zeeinzicht.nl/vleet/index.php?id=3111&template=template-vleeteng&language=2&item=Sea-currents
  8. Still some drifts on the edge of town and in the surrounding countryside. Last dregs in the garden. Missed the event here, as was up in York where it was pants last weekend - about 1 inch at best early Sunday. Did have a very light snow flurry about 8pm tonight that left the very slightest of covering on car roofs. Wasn't expecting that.

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