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Sunny Leith

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Posts posted by Sunny Leith

  1. 9 minutes ago, JoeShmoe said:

    18022712_2_2700.gif

    yep. -10 is the requirement for us i think, looks like uppers really drop this morning

    Looking at those ever colder uppers I'd be surprised, nay horrified, if we don't get widespread convective snow showers piling in from the east. It just wouldn't make sense not to. I'd have to give up any pretence of understanding anything at all about the way these setups work. Probably too early to pour a nerve settling drink... 

    • Like 4
  2. 8 minutes ago, Ruzzi said:

    Got a wee bit of a bad feeling about tomorrow just now for the central belt. Flow seems to have changed to bit more south of easterly, which to my eye would take the worst of it towards Stirling area? 

    Anyone want to give me some technical reassurance? 

    @CatchMyDrift ??? 

    I'm a wee bit twitchy on that as well. Would make me less coastal (just at the very point I want to be coastal!) and put me 40-50 miles away from potential convective landfall around Berwick-Upon-Tweed and with 1500ft of The Lammermuirs in between.

    If it goes wrong here I won't be able to show my face in Leith for weeks, even promised a pals wee girl that she'd definitely absolutely be able to go sledging. Oh the shame of it if I mess up... :wallbash:

     

    • Like 3
  3. 3 minutes ago, 101_North said:

    Have to say that the anticipation of how good this could be, alongside the fear of how disappointing it could be, is wrecking my head!

    Aye, ditto. I'm feeling some re-assurance now that the wind has just turned back to due East at Edin Airport. Previous 14 hours it's been WSW, NW, variable, NNE etc while this isobaric/frontal kink has worked it's way through (and given me nothing better than damp pavements). If it takes the rest of the day for the flow, uppers to get properly established then so be it.

    • Like 1
  4. 3 minutes ago, LomondSnowstorm said:

    Thanks Lorenzo for reminding me via 'sticky note' (I go away for a year and suddenly I feel like an old man trying to work out what 'the facebook' is) of the 500s - this is a helluva figure for an easterly: 

    daf.thumb.gif.aff8b6ef60ff11ece148a3eb84ab5cfa.gif

    Going to do a bit of archive searching to see the equivalent figures for notable beasts...

    Aye its aboot time ye put some focus back on this forum :nonono:

    • Like 1
  5. Feature to the north-east looking to be moving as much south as west which might still produce a more NE England landfall for the core of it. Early days... it might still correct more west. But would think Catch and SS might end up doing best from it. That said (Leith hat on) I'm viewing it chiefly as a nuisance feature and really only expecting the flow/coldest uppers and subsequent convection to kick in once it's out the picture.

     

    Screenshot from 2018-02-26 20-22-16.png

    • Like 3
  6. 1 hour ago, 101_North said:

    That's their punishment for the state of that thread these days!

    The way I view the MOD thread is that if you visited some of them on Xmas Eve expecting a great time, they'd immediately drag you down into a depressing discussion about how Xmas will all be over in a couple of days. They can just never enjoy whats right in front of them sometimes.

    • Like 3
  7. Joking aside, there's a reasonable chance that individually or collectively the Scottish Govt, the Police, local authorities/gritters, the MetOffice etc will all get "blamed" if there's any repeat of the 2010 M8 gridlock. But hee-haw they can do if the forces of nature overwhelm that road with multiple inches of snow per hour in whiteout conditions. Fundamental problem is of course that folk will travel when they shouldn't, can't adapt to the conditions, and won't even have a Mars Bar in the glove compartment. Fingers crossed we do avoid that scenario as my wife commutes to North Lanarkshire every day (NHS) and in 2010 it took 3 separate failed attempts to get from Edinburgh to her work during the M8 crisis, and days before she could even retrieve the car.

    • Like 3
  8. 1 minute ago, BurntFishTrousers said:

    Hope the Transport minister got his act together. Just sayin' :pardon:

    Aye, Humza better be ready. Anyway, he's much more of an action figure than Stewart Stevenson was in 2010. I remember him being interviewed on BBC Scotland News late at night on the day when folk were stranded on the M8. Political suicide for a transport minister to be sat in a warm TV studio saying everything was being taken care of, and his resignation was inevitable. Humza wouldn't repeat that kind of gaffe, he'd be out there in the snowplough drivers cabin with thermos flasks of soup :D

    • Like 6
  9. 26 minutes ago, Norrance said:

    BBC national forecast showed 4s and 5s as temps in Eastern Scotland tomorrow. Looks a bit high to me! Reporting Scotland had 3s which I hope is a bit high too.

    it was sub zero on the national for Wednesday though with heavy snow.

    That's the bog standard BBC build up to an easterly when it comes to Scotland. Can't see how 5C comes to pass widely tomorrow. Been fine snawflakes blawin aboot here in Leith for a while (wasn't even expecting that today) and no anxieties whatsoever about the coming few days. 

    • Like 1
  10. 19 minutes ago, jmp223 said:

    The probability of a Forth streamer is looking quite high for the middle of next week; my question is that being in Glasgow, does this have any bearing ofnour chance of snow.  Have heard of a "Forth-Clyde" streamer but I am unsure as to whether this is the same thing as a Forth streamer or Clyde streamer...thanks!  Im thinking its a Clyde-Forth streamer when the precip. comes W to E and Forth-Clyde when E to W.  Does this theory have any merit?

    Yes. Forth-Clyde streamer is a definite and repeatable phenomenon. The estuary acts as a further stretch of water allowing convection to push further west, making even "inland"  areas near/downwind of the estuary (West Lothian, West Fife, Stirling/Dunblane, North Lanarkshire) almost a part of the North Sea coast. Also with a bit of height in those areas you get decent dumps of snow. Glasgow profits in the same way (2010 case in point and in the easterly aspects of 2009/10). Doesn't work so well in reverse of course because there's no equivalent Clyde estuary reaching this far east but stuff can still barrel west to east through the central belt (but less dependably than in the setup we'll see this week).

    • Like 2
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