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Old October 29th 05, 10:29 AM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default grey weather @- Johnmajorville

Bjorn Viaene wrote:
http://users.telenet.be/weathersite/...s-Belgium.html

A fine set of overcasts. Unfortunately it has been too radical over
here* to corroborate a forecast of hurricane activity in the Gulf of
Mexico.

There has been some devastation further south I believe and of course
the usual in the Bay of Bengal.

So... will it get worse?

Yoobecha!

*We have just had a beautiful Thursday. It was produced by the Low
pressure area stationed off the west of the UK. This Low brought warm
breezes up from south western Europe.

(Those more interested in meteorology by numbers rather than
determining exactly what causes weather, have chosen all the right
numbers again, well done.)

Of course it was soon followed by more rain and a blustery, though
still very warm -if precipitous, Friday.

For the one or two who might just possibly be interested in
weatherlore, the centre of the Low was over Iceland and moved south
over the next few days with the concomitant rain and strong winds
hitting us in the Midlands (UK; OK? #)

Still; worthy of note is the fact that the warm sunny weather was after
all (despite record high temperatures in Scotland -of all places)
caused by a rain spell.

So for future reference, a spell that is somewhat more than half an
hour past a wet spell, is inclined to produce fine weather in between
some exceptionally wet stuff.

All told; an interesting occasion.

# If you really want to push the boat out with this weatherlore stuff,
it might "freak you out" to plot the movement of the centre of the Low
against the movement of the Lunar Declination as viewed from the
surface of the earth (Nautical Almanack) over the last few days:

+15° to +4° in 48 hours -at the time of writing, according to:
http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/uncgi/Solar

So now it is in that interesting belt 5° either side of the equator
for a day or two.

Even more "all told" and still more interesting; to be sure, to be
sure.

cackles off


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Old October 29th 05, 10:49 AM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default grey weather @- Johnmajorville

I wonder what it's gonna be in november...

"Weatherlawyer" schreef in bericht
oups.com...
Bjorn Viaene wrote:
http://users.telenet.be/weathersite/...s-Belgium.html

A fine set of overcasts. Unfortunately it has been too radical over
here* to corroborate a forecast of hurricane activity in the Gulf of
Mexico.

There has been some devastation further south I believe and of course
the usual in the Bay of Bengal.

So... will it get worse?

Yoobecha!

*We have just had a beautiful Thursday. It was produced by the Low
pressure area stationed off the west of the UK. This Low brought warm
breezes up from south western Europe.

(Those more interested in meteorology by numbers rather than
determining exactly what causes weather, have chosen all the right
numbers again, well done.)

Of course it was soon followed by more rain and a blustery, though
still very warm -if precipitous, Friday.

For the one or two who might just possibly be interested in
weatherlore, the centre of the Low was over Iceland and moved south
over the next few days with the concomitant rain and strong winds
hitting us in the Midlands (UK; OK? #)

Still; worthy of note is the fact that the warm sunny weather was after
all (despite record high temperatures in Scotland -of all places)
caused by a rain spell.

So for future reference, a spell that is somewhat more than half an
hour past a wet spell, is inclined to produce fine weather in between
some exceptionally wet stuff.

All told; an interesting occasion.

# If you really want to push the boat out with this weatherlore stuff,
it might "freak you out" to plot the movement of the centre of the Low
against the movement of the Lunar Declination as viewed from the
surface of the earth (Nautical Almanack) over the last few days:

+15° to +4° in 48 hours -at the time of writing, according to:
http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/uncgi/Solar

So now it is in that interesting belt 5° either side of the equator
for a day or two.

Even more "all told" and still more interesting; to be sure, to be
sure.

cackles off


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Old November 1st 05, 10:52 PM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default All quite on the western front?


Bjorn Viaene wrote:

I wonder what it's gonna be in november...

A small change in the weather on Wodins day? 2nd Nov 01:24.

Funny that it is moving east. I would have put it a little further
west:
25th Oct 01:17.

Looks like the Low is moving over the UK and an occluded front is going
to reach Norway. What is interesting about it is that it is slated to
run all the way along the coastline.

That should be interesting.

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Old November 2nd 05, 03:50 PM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default All quite on the western front?


Weatherlawyer wrote:
Bjorn Viaene wrote:

I wonder what it's gonna be in november...

A small change in the weather on Wodins day? 2nd Nov 01:24.

Funny that it is moving east. I would have put it a little further
west:
25th Oct 01:17.

Typhoon Kai-Tak was a powerful typhoon when it was observed by the
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on the Terra
satellite at 10:10 a.m. local time on October 30, 2005. At that time,
Typhoon Kai-Tak had sustained winds of 140 kilometers per hour (85
miles per hour), and the storm continued to gather strength as it moved
northeastward toward a projected landfall on the northern Vietnamese
coast.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/New...3?img_id=17080

Something to bear in mind -unless you are of a Gretna, Louisiana
persuasion:

The steep mountains of northern Pakistan came tumbling down when a
powerful 7.6-magnitude earthquake rocked the region on October 8, 2005.
The earthquake isolated already hard-to-access villages and cities in
both Pakistani and Indian Kashmir when roads crumbled or were covered
with landslides. Fifty-seven thousand people had died in Pakistan as of
November 1, a number that could grow as winter settles over the
Himalayas, stranding survivors without food or shelter.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/New...3?img_id=17081

Lots more stuff on there of course.

OT

Gretna is the white middle-class suburb of New Orleans that was spared
the worst of it but extended the problems for those who bore the brunt
of the hurricane known a Katrina.

Its mayor and police force are either Klansmen or direct decendants.

It will be interesting to see if there is a god.

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Old November 21st 05, 11:12 PM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default All quite on the western front?

There seems tohave been a doubling of the original quake he
Mag 6.0 2005/11/20 12:53:06 UNIMAK ISLAND REGION, ALASKA
Mag 6.0 2005/11/20 12:53:05 UNIMAK ISLAND REGION, ALASKA

Easily missed I suppose given the timing.

And the Japanese have had another:
Mag 6.2 2005/11/21 15:36:32 31.000 130.069 147.7 KYUSHU, JAPAN

NOV. 16 0 57 NOV. 23 22 11

So now we have thick fogs reminescent of the Hollywood version of
Victorian London. It is to be hoped that New Labour (TB Liar's answer
to truth and frankness in politics) and it's dependence on the spiv
Paul Drayson (the wheeler dealer who owned and covered up the
innoculation scandal in the USA last year (2004)) will not be supplying
cack to us when the cold winds do blow.

Yes folks there is a nascent payola scandal every bit as bad as the US
one, just waiting for an English Michael Moore to run expose's on.

Lets have a look at Mark Thomas Experience:

We have (or, had) a more eccentric version of Michael Moore but he
seems to have become defunct:
http://www.outandoutnutter.co.uk/mtcp/index.htm

So, down to business:

Bjorn Viaene wrote:


I wonder what it's gonna be in november...

Weatherlawyer wrote:

It will be interesting to see if there is a god.

Columbia, well known for some of its infamous crops has a vocano
threatening them. The Smithsonian report on it will be out first thing
Thor's day.

But isn't that within striking distance of the region Gamma was
threatening a few days back?



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Old November 22nd 05, 10:25 PM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default All quite on the western front?


Weatherlawyer wrote:
There seems to have been a doubling of the original quake he
Mag 6.0 2005/11/20 12:53:06 UNIMAK ISLAND REGION, ALASKA
Mag 6.0 2005/11/20 12:53:05 UNIMAK ISLAND REGION, ALASKA

Easily missed I suppose given the timing.

And the Japanese have had another:
Mag 6.2 2005/11/21 15:36:32 31.000 130.069 147.7 KYUSHU, JAPAN

But what might prove more interesting is the behaviour of the imagery
on the east of this planisphe

http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/comp/cmoll/cmoll.html

NOV. 16th 00:57 The present spell is running in here. NOV. 23rd 22:11

Coincidence?

Highly likely.

But I have only seen it twice before and both times there was an
interesting seismic disturbance involved.

Check out the magnitudes of earthquakes prior to the date this anomaly
appears in the Wisconsin site:

http://earthquake.usgs.gov/recenteqs...uakes_all.html
http://neic.usgs.gov/neis/qed/

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Old November 23rd 05, 03:11 PM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default All quite on the western front?

Weatherlawyer wrote:
Weatherlawyer wrote:

There seems to have been a doubling of the original quake he
Mag 6.0 2005/11/20 12:53:06 UNIMAK ISLAND REGION, ALASKA
Mag 6.0 2005/11/20 12:53:05 UNIMAK ISLAND REGION, ALASKA

Easily missed I suppose given the timing.

And the Japanese have had another:
Mag 6.2 2005/11/21 15:36:32 31.000 130.069 147.7 KYUSHU, JAPAN


But what might prove more interesting is the behaviour of the imagery
on the east of this planisphe

http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/comp/cmoll/cmoll.html


If you're referring to the freezing of the clouds in the loop,
that's likely the result of goes9 being replaced by mtsat. I'm
guessing the machine that generates the loops doesn't know of
the change yet.


Scott
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Old November 23rd 05, 06:58 PM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Scott wrote:

But what might prove more interesting is the behaviour of the imagery
on the east of this planisphe

http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/comp/cmoll/cmoll.html


If you're referring to the freezing of the clouds in the loop,
that's likely the result of goes9 being replaced by mtsat. I'm
guessing the machine that generates the loops doesn't know of
the change yet.

Thanks Scott. I had been told it was unlikely to have any correlation
from a previous correspondance with the website holders. It all just
seemed one hell of a coincidence.

What really threw me was that I had been looking at it earlier in the
week looking to see if it would actually occur but looking at cloud
scapes over the N Atlantic. I was miffed that I suddenly appeared and
was back dated.

Oh well, back to the drawing board. Good job I like egg. Hell of a
thing to get out of a beard though.

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Old November 24th 05, 06:49 AM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default All quite on the western front?


Weatherlawyer wrote:
Scott wrote:

But what might prove more interesting is the behaviour of the imagery
on the east of this planisphe

http://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/comp/cmoll/cmoll.html


If you're referring to the freezing of the clouds in the loop,
that's likely the result of goes9 being replaced by mtsat. I'm
guessing the machine that generates the loops doesn't know of
the change yet.

Thanks Scott. I had been told it was unlikely to have any correlation
from a previous correspondance with the website holders. It all just
seemed one hell of a coincidence.

What really threw me was that I had been looking at it earlier in the
week looking to see if it would actually occur but looking at cloud
scapes over the N Atlantic. I was miffed that I suddenly appeared and
was back dated.

Oh well, back to the drawing board. Good job I like egg. Hell of a
thing to get out of a beard though.

Hell of a good timing that. They wouldn't have picked on that phase for
any particular reason of astrometry by any chance?

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Old December 1st 05, 05:15 AM posted to alt.fr.meteorologie,alt.talk.weather,sci.geo.meteorology,uk.sci.weather
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Default All quite on the western front?


Weatherlawyer wrote:

So now we have thick fogs reminescent of the Hollywood version of
Victorian London.
Columbia, well known for some of its infamous crops has a vocano
threatening them. The Smithsonian report on it will be out first thing
Thor's day.

Overcast but the mist soon cleared. Nowhere near the warm and clammy
weather we get before an huricane hirts the 'States, though. Fun, eh?

23-29 November 2005
New Activity: | Augustine, USA | Galeras, Colombia | Karthala, Comoros
Islands | Piton de la Fournaise, Reunion Island



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