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microclimate

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Posts posted by microclimate

  1. 12 minutes ago, Richard Fisher said:

    A lot of IMBY posts this morning. Huge upgrade for Snow and Blizzards for SW this morning for Thurs/Fri. BBC now fully on board and stating snow to continue into Saturday. Why the negativity?

     

     

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    Because the graphics on their website don't match what they are saying then.  I checked for my location this morning and I was underwhelmed by the forecast.

    • Like 2
  2. My Jack Russell is 15 tomorrow and for 13 of those years he had been a complete nightmare if we have any thunder or lightning, to the point where we have had to drive him off in the car to get away from it as he is having a doggy equivalent of a panic attack.  As a absolute storm-lover it has always been hard as I am desperate for a good storm but know it will upset my lad.  He has been deaf for the last two years now and not a sniff of good humdinger of a storm, bl**dy typical!

  3. Well we've just had our first Sunday libation outside, a nice glass of Cava sat in the garden and only needed a woolie on.  As much as I love the snow I can't help but look forward to spring.  And whilst I have been very jealous of others snow this winter I'm definitely not jealous of the horrible winter fog which lasts all day that some have got today.

    • Like 1
  4. Give me last winter any day - this winter has so far been the most drab/boring/dull nothingness I've know for a while. Last winter at least had the excitement of some decent storms - will never forget the trips to Chesil Beach to watch some pretty impressive swells barrelling in

    Yes agreed and at least we didn't have to put the heating on last year.  If It ain't snow it may as well be mild in my book because it's cheaper.

    • Like 6
  5. As the current cold spells looks likely to deliver far less snow than many of us southern snow lovers were hoping.

     

    I am trying to think of some crumbs of comfort for the rest of the winter and it has come to me in the form of The best spell of cold and snowy  winter weather I have lived through( Dec 2010 aside). Way back in February 1978 After a week and half of bitterly cold days and nights with the odd snow shower, heavy snow (6ins) fell on my Dorset home from a west country slider on the the night of wed 15th Feb, the following night another west country slider did exactly the same thing again. Then on the sat 18th feb after a bitterly cold and cloudy day an easterly gale started to blow during the evening giving a blizzard which lasted for 30 hours in some place here in the southwest. Drifts of between ten and thirty feet were common place in exposed rural locations. This huge snowfall fell with uppers  of just minus 2°C ( You don't always need minus 5 for heavy prolonged snow).  The winter prior to this had been pretty non descript in southern England not unlike the current affair.

     

    The point of all this is that by far and away the best snow storm I have ever lived through came in a cold spell that didn't start until the 8th of February in a winter that is not even in the top 25 coldest of the twentieth century. Hang on in there snow lovers the best snow doesn't always have to come in January.

    I remember it well. as a child it was brilliant being cut off, not so great for my parents though.  The fact is that no snow event has ever come close to it and as it was over 30 years ago we must be due another event like this at some point.  I just hope it happens before I get to old to stick me bum on sledge and shriek!

    • Like 1
  6. Well after many years of reading the Mod thread I have now finally come to the conclusion that it's best to stick to the Met 15-30 dayer for a basic idea and sod the rest.  I'm fed up with the constant highs followed by the invariable lows of looking at the runs on a daily basis.  And I certainly won't miss seeing the expression 'going forward' being typed as well as being heard a miilion times a day!!

    • Like 1
  7. Its the fact the BBC and media as a whole is describing things as warm nationwide which is not the case. I probably sound pedantic but they should be saying warm under the sunshine and light winds in southern parts only, rather than a headline saying 'warm sunshine', which is what the BBC have just stated as a summary for the weekend. anyone who may have just read this a summary statement without seeing the actual forecast is being very misled, the weekend for the northern half of the country will see no 'warm sunshine' indeed plagued by cloud drizzle and wind with temps average at best. A case of southern bias I think...

    Apologies, I actually only took in the last para of your original post. Yes, you are quite right to get annoyed when the main BBC forecast is for warm weather generally when the reality is far from it.
  8. "I do think the word 'warm' is being applied far to liberally in describing current conditions. It is used in June to describe temps in low 20's yet the sun is far stronger then. Indeed I'd hardly describe today as warm here, we maxed out at 8 degrees after a cold foggy morning with temps still languishing around 4-5 degrees at lunchtime! Also how can you call a spell of weather with successive nights below freezing as 'warm'.."

    A bit of a sweeping statement as it obviously depends where you are. Currently 9c outside with clear skies after a balmy day and we've had no temperatures below freezing for a while. If the northerly happens in the next 10 days I doubt it will impact much on us soft southerners!

  9. Ah OK. I just need a few totals from around Dorset to compare with, so I can see if I'm far out or not

     

    Just had a 20 second downpour here,  large convective drops, also, some hefty drizzards at times. Up to 20.4mm Posted Image

    New Year resolution is to keep better records! Forgot to empty my gauge so I can't help but looking at your total and the radar which I have been following all day it wouldn't surprise me to see an inch recorded around the Poole area.
    • Like 2
  10. If it was being progged more severe than it is, i might agree, but at the moment, i don't.I don't know exactly know how many died during the 87 storm but i don't think there were many that died in their sleep? There's being safe, then there's bordering on being over the top, and not going to sleep tonight because of some strong winds, constitutes being over the top.

    During the '87 storm a chimney crashed through the roof of property not far from here and nearly killed the occupants, luckily although they were trapped and badly injured they did survive.
  11. Are you off to Bridport market? If so the further west will be best, if you are going east then that might be dodgy. In my experience these kind of set ups often drag there heels a bit if they happen at all, i'm not expecting rain until after 2pm....................

    Yes, Met now has one rain drop at 10.00 so I won't bother to go. That said it's amazing how different the weather can be within a few miles
  12. From past experience, it Depends on which local area and forecaster you have to be honest. Sounds like you're either Points West or South today? Lunchtime forecasts tend to be either recorded or use old charts. National BBC forecasts are always generally better and use the latest data from the MetO SM

    Cheers, we're on the cusp of south/south west. I'll go with the national then..............no day off for me then!
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