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Mark Bayley

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Posts posted by Mark Bayley

  1. Off topic a bit but hear is what i think

    January-Febuary winter

    March-middle of may spring

    middle of may-September Summer

    October-December Autum

    I do think that winter will become shorter (weather terms) but much worse

    e.g. beguining mid Jan- middle end of Feb cold and snowy. perhaps some wintery weather in the beguing of march or the middle of december depending on the conditions

    summer and autum to become hotter and stommier

    and spring to be warm and pleasent wich is actualy my second favorite tye of weather (snow being first)

    21c-25c during the day 4c-9c during the night (not humid) :blush: Perfect

  2. yes mark. The only thing i fear is that next year will be a very poor season for a;ll wild life. Ive seen spiders still making webs, flowers blooming! When winter arrives inJanuary i think many plants and wildlife will suffer severly!

    SM06

    Yes i agrea with you. This mild weather has especially effected the hedgehogs and also other wildlife.

  3. My call is 3.9C. I expect a major change to colder conditions to take place by the end of the first week of December.

    I favour northerly episodes and settled anti-cyclonic weather thereafter before we see the Atlantic return before Xmas.

    I agree with you i think we should see very cold temps and a big snowfall around the second week with mild weather returning for the last week

  4. The metoffice have now moved from below average to above temperature <_< in there winter forecast however they still say it could turn much colder around the end of winter (February) They still say we will have above average precipitation. I have copied there forcast and put it on this post.

    Forecast for Winter 2006/7

    Temperature

    Following the finely balanced situation of last month, probabilities now slightly favour temperatures warmer than 1971-2000 averages over much of northern and central Europe.

    For the UK, warmer-than-average or near-average temperatures are the more likely outcomes for the winter period as a whole. However, later in the season, there remains a signal for lower temperatures (relative to average) and an increase in the frequency of cold snaps.

    Note that even an average winter is likely to include some notable cold snaps and snowfalls.

    Precipitation

    Signals have changed since last month, with wetter-than-average conditions now favoured over parts of northern Europe and drier than average favoured in some southern and eastern regions.

    For the UK as a whole, a winter with average or above-average precipitation is the more likely outcome.

    Last winter saw much drier-than-average conditions across northern Europe and all parts of the UK - much as last autumn's forecast had suggested. In the south-east of England this was the continuation of a long period of dry weather starting in November 2004, continuing through to the summer of 2006.

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