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Iceni

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Posts posted by Iceni

  1. 2 hours ago, cyclonic happiness said:

    I can't believe are yet again watching America being buried by snow, and yet we struggle to get an inch.  

    3 years it'll be soon, 3 years without snow staying on the ground for more than 24 hours. Fair enough last week we had an inch, but it was slushy and was melting even as it fell.

    I really do hope the winter will get its finger out, according to the Met office, we should have between 5-10 days of lying snow per year!

    Very simple. They have a continental climate, we don't. Cold dry air meets warm moist Gulf air and bingo.

    We all have to get real. We live on the edge of an ocean which is like a radiator retaining heat. Unless it's blocked by GL/Scandi high pressure system, and the w-e jet stream is diverted south, we'll get warm moist air, winter or summer.

    • Like 6
  2. 52 minutes ago, markyo said:

    Disagree,arable farmers need the frost to breakup the ground,forced grows certainly need the cold and frost. Loss of those animals in 2013 was heart braking,but we do need the cold,your statement is imo so very wrong,Mild weather can be devastating to the one shot wildlife in their annual cycle. Lot more complicated then you think.

    The farmers break up the ground (plough it) in September. And in 2010, badgers got so hungry they attacked cjickens because they could forage for worms. Orchards need deep cold in order to have acdormancy period, but seemed the apple crop was better than ever last year and that was relatively mild.

    Birds are fine, voles are fine, they can still find insects.

    The only problem is the muddy fields, but cattle are usually over-wintered under cover these days. Sheep don't care. 

  3. 3 hours ago, Roy said:

    How anyone could wish the US storm is strange? At least twelve people dead. I bet the bereaved families will hate snow with a vengeance for ever more

    No one wants people to die. My friend is staying inside until the blizzard is over tomorrow - he's an artist/photographer - then he'll go out and take some shots. Apparently, it's not that cold ... yet. People adapt to this stuff, called a North Easterly and they've happened before and will happen again. Last year it was further north and NJ got a covering, but Boston had 6 FOOT. roofs were collapsing under the weight.

    I'm planning to relocate Stateside this/next year and had visions of living out in the back woods. Now I'm not so sure.  I couldn't manage this without huge logistic planning in the middle of nowhere. Yes it's bad when people miscalculate, but common sense comes into it. The worst thing you can do is leave your car. Clear it when the blizzard stops and just wait, don't set off without a blanket, thermos, chocolate and charged phone. 

    • Like 5
  4. Well this winter - sorry 'Spring'- has got interesting.

    Still need a fire at sunset, still not a single leaf out, still wearing winter jumpers, hats and gloves. And a big blow last night. Little tip, plant a hedge - they really don't take all that long if done properly, they're superb at filtering the wind and you'll have no more fence panel problems. Good for wildlife too. Ours get cut once a year in October.

    • Like 1
  5. Any news of Princetown, NJ? I have a friend who was travelling home from visiting his mother in Augusta yesterday. Hope he made it.

     

    He said if it snows, you've got to get out there and clear the snow off your car before it freezes, otherwise it's going to get damaged when you're removing it from the drift. Lesson: buy a house with a garage.

  6. Yup, thats true regarding dew points.

    It was 5C here in Manchester yesterday, and a dew point of -1C - it was snowing.

    Today it's been 2C and -1C dew point and as i'm sure you have seen, Manchester Airport had to close for a time due to pretty much 3-5 hours of heavy snow.

    Dew points is key.

    Agreed. My Nana used to say "It's too cold for snow" what she meant was the temp was cold, but the dew point wasn't, although she wouldn't have known what a dew point was. She was a country girl and could forecast snow just by sniffing the air.

    I remember her saying "Snow's coming" on Christmas Day lunch in 1962. We all know what happened the next day...

  7. Details of the earthquake now on BBC news website. Epicenter near Cottesmore, Rutland.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-31032930

    This is a great link worth bookmarking.... BGS map of earthquakes over the past 50 days in and around the British Isles. There are quite a few, sometimes as many as 20 over the period are recorded.

    http://www.earthquakes.bgs.ac.uk/earthquakes/home.html

    Bear in mind the Richter Scale is logarithmic. The 3.8 Oakham one would have been felt, but not too destructive. Mainland British earthquakes are caused by the natural settlement of sedimentary layers of rock - they just give- not by two tectonic plates moving past each other as on fault lines

  8. From a friend in Princetown NJ.

    We have a blizzard warning tonight so, as I mentioned in the previous e-mail, we'll get real snow over the next two days, an "Alberta Clipper" as they call it. We get Albertas and another kind of storm, a "Noreaster." The Norester is usually more moisture and we get at least one every year or two. I'll send you some shots, particularly New Jersey / NYC images after a Noreaster. What's amazing around here is how quickly the road crews clear the roads. They do it in the first day after a snow storm, even the back roads.

    And their forecast... 3' of snow from one storm 😳

    post-8078-0-89253000-1422313215_thumb.jp

  9. I cant get excited about a Northerly. They are generally rubbish for our region. Cold, sunny and dry. Add an element of East into it, then we are talking.

    Most of the snow I've had has been from a northerly, even a north westerly. In 2009 I watched it cross the whole country from Cheshire to my location. Gave a respectable covering too.

    Easterlies hardly ever happen, the coast gets it and then they fizzle out. As I was saying...

    post-8078-0-80924700-1422059116_thumb.jp

    • Like 2
  10. How did we cope before the net for weather ... Wasn't it nice to wake up to see a thick layer of snow without hunting for it.. Sometimes to much info is damaging, upsetting and damn well dissapointing :(

    I do so agree. I remember my brother and sisters running into my room to say, "It's snowed!" Then we'd wolf down our breakfast go up to the loft to get the sledge and play all day.

    • Like 1
  11. Well the power went off at 12.25am last night and isn't back on yet. Had to drive 5 miles to get a mobile signal too. Something quite nice about it though.

    Got this map from SSE and most of Scotland looks like one big power cut.

    https://www.ssepd.co.uk/powertrack/

    Whether this is still the case, I don't know... But emailed friends in Kinrossie, Perth this morning and they haven't replied so far which is unusual. They have iPads and mobiles, so perhaps that's the explanation if the signal's been knocked out as well. Thanks for the tip off - I was quite worried.

    Hope they get their act together and it's back to normal soon. It's quite breezy here in Suffolk tonight although this morning was nice and calm.

    • Like 1
  12. Absolutely outrageous. :(I know I'm hundreds of miles south of everyone in this thread, am all the way down in cider-land, I enjoy (trying) to help. :)I agree PP, I was going to say earlier, the best thing to do is what you always see on American documentaries about tornadoes (yes, I know this isn't, but the principle is the same), stay away from windows, go to the safest part of the house (room/cupboard/closet) with no windows and use as much padding as possible (blankets, pillows, etc..) and wait the storm out.

    My dog is terrified by thunder. I know exactly where to go if the same happened to me, he always tries to get into our little downstairs loo to shelter - no windows and no exterior walls.

    I can't imagine how scary it must feel. Take a torch and read a nice story to your little one. Might make her sleep and it will take your mind off what's going on.

    • Like 1
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