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Soaring Hawk

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  1. Sunny: 12 degrees

    Wind: SW 24mph

    Humidity: 97%

    Pressure (mB): 1002 falling

    Visibility: Very good

    Calm after a wild evening and night. Beautiful day. Local weather forecast predicting "70-80mph gusts" with the graphics showing the track directly over us. Do hope its downgraded as have to drive back from relatives in Hertfordshire to north east Suffolk this evening.

  2. Cloudy 0°C

    Wind N/A (0 mph)

    Relative Humidity (%): 100,

    Pressure (mB): 1042, Falling,

    Visibility: Very poor

    After the last few days it feels positively mild out there. We have large piles of what looks like thick snow under the trees, where the frost has been falling off through the night.

  3. Misty

    Temp: -1 degree

    Relative humidity: 95%

    Pressure mB: 1036 Rising

    Visibility: Moderate

    The pond (diameter 60') is frozen; the ground, hedgerows and skeletal tree branches are white; mist is hanging over the surfaces; the view down the hill is pure Dickensian. Absolutely beautiful.

  4. Are you driving around with studded snow tyres or chains fitting on normal ones? When I used to live in Canada we had to have snow tyres fitted by a certain date. Does that apply where you are, or do you pop them on when snow/ice is forecast.

    This question was prompted by the casual way you mentioned driving on the freeway. Even 3" in the UK would cause complete gridlock but then we don't invest in snow tyres or chains unless we're skiers and go up mountains in Scotland or Europe.

  5. Roger said this

    'big shove west'

    If you shove it that way mate there will not be much left by the time its travelled all across the States, Asia, and Europe to here. Even the TEITS easterly would see little of it left!

    Assume you meant shove it east?

    John

    I'm glad someone with your gravitas asked that question John. I was wondering the same thing but unsure because I know so much less about the physics of weather than Roger!

  6. Morning. At 9am today :

    Cloudy: 8 degrees

    Wind: S 10mph

    RH: 95%

    Pressure mB: 994 R

    Visibility: Good

    The old fashioned method of looking out of the window shows sun now obscured by heavy, dark cloud and the wind has really picked up and is considerably more than 10mph.

  7. I think it was the emphasis on the type of coal that was burned both domestically and industrially. There was a higher reliance on coal powered industries compared to recent decades and in the 50's and 60's not many people had central heating so most houses needed fires to provide heat and/or solid fuel boilers to produce hot water. The Clean Air Act was bought in to reduce pollution. As a very small child I can remember my parents talking about the difference in price of smokeless coal (it cost more) compared to what they used in previous years. Can also remember thick fogs when I was very young in the 60's.

    And, am being slightly provocative here, the weather was colder then so coal was used for longer in the year than we can imagine now......

    However, what about those multi vehicle pile ups in thick fog we used to have on the motorways not that many years ago? Wasn't that in the 80's? And does that blow my theory above out of the water?

  8. I can recall the winter of 78-79. I used to peer out of the bedroom window watching the heavy snow falling which was, and still is, something I love doing. I was living in the centre of Winchester at the time and I can remember the traffic problems because of so much snow on the roads. The dual carriageway (now the M3) was impassable several times with people living in Winchester being unable to get to work in Southampton. I can also remember the cold. It was bitterly cold and recall news reports about elderly people dying of hypothermia. I can't remember much about the late 70's but have particularly clear recollections of 78-79, most probably because of all the snow and the way it reminded me of living in Canada.

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