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knightstorm

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Posts posted by knightstorm

  1. Travelled to my auntie & uncle's place today who live in Little Chalfont and there where a few fleks of snow at 11am this morning, and further light flurries thoughout the afternoon although mostly clear and sunny. Comming back at between 5.30 and 6.30 this evening ran into the first quite heavy showers, drifting in crosswind. By the time I got home it was starting to settle and now has begun accumilating, already about an inch! Between 4 and 8 inches forecast for my area by tommorow morning, than the 2nd wave arriving tommorow afternoon it wouldn't surprise me if 1 or 2 spots got a foot or more. :doh:

  2. Without sounding pessimistic for Josephine's prospects, it's fair to say that she has a lot of ground to cover, and areas of cooler water, and certainly some windshear to overcome. When a storm forms this far east, it's rare to survive the whole journey across the Atlantic.

    I'm much more concerned about Ike, who is looking very organised at the mo'.

    Yeah I think your right there Steve, especially with the temperature of the sea it has to pass over. There isn't much tropical moisture between it's current location and where it needs to get to! :rofl::)

  3. http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/corporate/pres...02.html#content

    Hurricane season in full swing

    2 September 2008

    As Hurricane Gustav continues to weaken, attention turns to the east with Hurricane Hanna and Tropical Storm Ike strengthening over the Atlantic Ocean.

    The wind speeds associated with Gustav peaked at around 110 miles per hour as the eye of the storm passed over the Louisiana coast. Despite the easing wind, heavy rain is still falling with a continued risk of flooding.

    Early September usually marks the peak of the Atlantic tropical storm season and 2008 is proving no exception.

    Hanna is currently a Category 1 hurricane with wind speeds of near 80 miles per hour and higher gusts. The predicted path currently takes the storm through the Bahamas, then east of Florida and on towards the coast of Georgia and South Carolina.

    The Met Office provides forecast information of tropical storms and hurricanes from its unified model twice daily to its colleagues at the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami. This valuable information is used by forecasters in the NHC when compiling the official forecasts of track and landfall of hurricanes and tropical storms such as Gustav, Hanna and Ike and the issue of warnings to affected areas.

    The Met Office has a responsibility to protect the lives of British citizens abroad and issues regular briefings to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) for tropical cyclones around the globe throughout the year. In addition the Met Office provides forecast information to humanitarian agencies and the insurance industry, giving advanced notice for mitigating action.

    The latest forecast tracks can be found at the <A href="http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/" target=_blank>National Hurricane Center website.

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