Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
Reply |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 5, 11:40*pm, "Dave R." wrote:
"N.E Zephyr" wrote in message ... LOL in classic fashion your so called forecast has gone titicus verticus in a matter of hours. Yeah but so has Will LOL why shouldn't he get slated too? -- Dave R. [west London] Always judge a forecast at outcome. The dry and settled part for Tuesday still looks good, but I've been commenting on the way that forecast high has been moving on the models, and a settle to the West of us is quite possible. Still a few days to go. Will doesn't deserve any slating whatsoever. Nearly every agency, including the MetO were talking about a warm-up, with good summer weather last week, until the models changed yesterday lunchtime. Forecasting at 10 days is incredibly difficult to do an ever so easy to criticise - but leave criticism until the outcome date and I'll join in the inquest, as I'll always return to any forecast I've made. |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 6, 7:38*am, Dawlish wrote:
On Jun 5, 11:40*pm, "Dave R." wrote: "N.E Zephyr" wrote in message ... LOL in classic fashion your so called forecast has gone titicus verticus in a matter of hours. Yeah but so has Will LOL why shouldn't he get slated too? -- Dave R. [west London] Always judge a forecast at outcome. The dry and settled part for Tuesday still looks good, but I've been commenting on the way that forecast high has been moving on the models, and a settle to the West of us is quite possible. Still a few days to go. Will doesn't deserve any slating whatsoever. Nearly every agency, including the MetO were talking about a warm-up, with good summer weather last week, until the models changed yesterday lunchtime. Forecasting at 10 days is incredibly difficult to do an ever so easy to criticise - but leave criticism until the outcome date and I'll join in the inquest, as I'll always return to any forecast I've made. For my forecast for Tuesday, there is a fly in the ointment. Some models are, presently, showing a front producing light rain moving SE across England, but pressure is well over 1020mb and it could be shown to die as models change over the last few days. I'm not unconfident about this forecast; temps are being shown to be in the mid-20s, pressure is forecast to be high and many areas away from NE Scotland are likely to see some lovely, sunny, settled weather. That could change and the front shown today could remain to spoil Tuesday's weather, but the models have been building the high pressure again, for the last 2 days since Dave and my stalker rashly wrote it off on the basis of a couple of model runs and any further building of that high could completely kill that frontal ingress, or prevent it crossing England and Wales completely. Never judge a forecast until outcome - but then do have the grace to come back and judge it and judge it fairly against the original perameters. If the forecast doesn't do what you want it to, come back anyway and give credit, if credit is due. There's a measure to judge yourselves by. Paul |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dawlish" wrote in message ... On Jun 6, 7:38 am, Dawlish wrote: On Jun 5, 11:40 pm, "Dave R." wrote: "N.E Zephyr" wrote in message ... LOL in classic fashion your so called forecast has gone titicus verticus in a matter of hours. Yeah but so has Will LOL why shouldn't he get slated too? -- Dave R. [west London] Always judge a forecast at outcome. The dry and settled part for Tuesday still looks good, but I've been commenting on the way that forecast high has been moving on the models, and a settle to the West of us is quite possible. Still a few days to go. Will doesn't deserve any slating whatsoever. Nearly every agency, including the MetO were talking about a warm-up, with good summer weather last week, until the models changed yesterday lunchtime. Forecasting at 10 days is incredibly difficult to do an ever so easy to criticise - but leave criticism until the outcome date and I'll join in the inquest, as I'll always return to any forecast I've made. For my forecast for Tuesday, there is a fly in the ointment. Some models are, presently, showing a front producing light rain moving SE across England, but pressure is well over 1020mb and it could be shown to die as models change over the last few days. I'm not unconfident about this forecast; temps are being shown to be in the mid-20s, pressure is forecast to be high and many areas away from NE Scotland are likely to see some lovely, sunny, settled weather. That could change and the front shown today could remain to spoil Tuesday's weather, but the models have been building the high pressure again, for the last 2 days since Dave and my stalker rashly wrote it off on the basis of a couple of model runs and any further building of that high could completely kill that frontal ingress, or prevent it crossing England and Wales completely. Never judge a forecast until outcome - but then do have the grace to come back and judge it and judge it fairly against the original perameters. If the forecast doesn't do what you want it to, come back anyway and give credit, if credit is due. There's a measure to judge yourselves by. Paul ===== Well said Paul! I caught Rob McElwee on News24 at lunchtime and he predicts 26C in London tomorrow. He also talked of proper summer weather into next week. What really grates sometimes is that critics often don't understand atmospheric dynamics, I carefully explained the process whereby the sunshine and warmth would come from. i.e. disruption of the upper trough and a build of pressure across the neck over England and Wales. OK I forgot to mention that the reason I went for 28-30C "somewhere" was due to a combination of drying out of the atmosphere due to anticyclonic subsidence and strong insolation (sunshine) at this time of year. You cannot just go by model runs per se. You need to understand what is happening to fully make use of them and that takes years of training and experience. What the best forecasters do is kind of keep time-lagged ensembles in their heads, i.e. remember previous runs and spot trends and forecast accordingly but also understanding the processes that the models are telling them. FWIW I think Tuesday's cold front will be just a band of broken cloud in the SW. Will -- |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 7, 3:17*pm, "Will Hand" wrote:
"Dawlish" wrote in message ... On Jun 6, 7:38 am, Dawlish wrote: On Jun 5, 11:40 pm, "Dave R." wrote: "N.E Zephyr" wrote in message ... LOL in classic fashion your so called forecast has gone titicus verticus in a matter of hours. Yeah but so has Will LOL why shouldn't he get slated too? -- Dave R. [west London] Always judge a forecast at outcome. The dry and settled part for Tuesday still looks good, but I've been commenting on the way that forecast high has been moving on the models, and a settle to the West of us is quite possible. Still a few days to go. Will doesn't deserve any slating whatsoever. Nearly every agency, including the MetO were talking about a warm-up, with good summer weather last week, until the models changed yesterday lunchtime. Forecasting at 10 days is incredibly difficult to do an ever so easy to criticise - but leave criticism until the outcome date and I'll join in the inquest, as I'll always return to any forecast I've made. For my forecast for Tuesday, there is a fly in the ointment. Some models are, presently, showing a front producing light rain moving SE across England, but pressure is well over 1020mb and it could be shown to die as models change over the last few days. I'm not unconfident about this forecast; temps are being shown to be in the mid-20s, pressure is forecast to be high and many areas away from NE Scotland are likely to see some lovely, sunny, settled weather. That could change and the front shown today could remain to spoil Tuesday's weather, but the models have been building the high pressure again, for the last 2 days since Dave and my stalker rashly wrote it off on the basis of a couple of model runs and any further building of that high could completely kill that frontal ingress, or prevent it crossing England and Wales completely. Never judge a forecast until outcome - but then do have the grace to come back and judge it and judge it fairly against the original perameters. If the forecast doesn't do what you want it to, come back anyway and give credit, if credit is due. There's a measure to judge yourselves by. Paul ===== Well said Paul! I caught Rob McElwee on News24 at lunchtime and he predicts 26C in London tomorrow. He also talked of proper summer weather into next week. What really grates sometimes is that critics often don't understand atmospheric dynamics, I carefully explained the process whereby the sunshine and warmth would come from. i.e. disruption of the upper trough and a build of pressure across the neck over England and Wales. OK I forgot to mention that the reason I went for 28-30C "somewhere" was due to a combination of drying out of the atmosphere due to anticyclonic subsidence and strong insolation (sunshine) at this time of year. You cannot just go by model runs per se. You need to understand what is happening to fully make use of them and that takes years of training and experience. What the best forecasters do is kind of keep time-lagged ensembles in their heads, i.e. remember previous runs and spot trends and forecast accordingly but also understanding the processes that the models are telling them. FWIW I think Tuesday's cold front will be just a band of broken cloud in the SW. Will --- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - My own thinking is that forecasting at 10 days is usually not possible with any real degree of accuracy, even using all the excellent forecasting techniques you refer to Will. I've been frustrated for years by the lack of accuracy at that distance. Out to a week, I agree wholeheartedly, that a combination of models, plus the ensembles, plus a good mental schema of how the 3D situation is developing and training and experience in meteorological processes, is how trained forecasters should (and do) operate. Using these techniques, measurable success out towards a week (well, at least at 5/6 days, using the NASA model comparison output) can be achieved. Further than that, everyone struggles. Early last week, I saw the same as you; an extension of the Azores high NE, warming uppers and building pressure over a 4/5 day period to the middle of next week, but we see things like that daily. The thing that convinced me of the possibility of the "start of summer" (no idea how long it will last!) and to issue a forecast, was the coincidence of 5 consecutive gfs runs showing very similar output at T240+. Initial conditions were changing; indeed we were in some extremely difficult forecasting conditions when I issued the forecast and conditions were changing every 6 hours, in an Easterly flow. Why would the gfs keep the similar 10-day output when the initial conditions were changing? That "time delayed coincidence" is what I look for in my forecasts. Only the gfs runs charts out past T240 and is therefore the only one I am able to use, so I use the gfs. It's no better and is perhaps worse, than other models at T240, but there are no stats. At 10 days+, the ensebles are spaghetti - almost all the time. Any one run coming to outcome is probably as unlikely as any other, so I use the operational run, as that is what the model feels is most likely to achieve outcome. That was the basis of me issuing that forecast and I've been doing that for 2 years now, publishing every forecast on the Internet and coming back to judge every one of 50 odd forecasts. To 50 forecasts, I'd achieved 77% accuracy, but I've stopped monitoring the forecasts really, as even I have difficulties with exactly how to set the perameters and judge the outcome properly. The technique doesn't suit everyone, as you've probably seen (I'd love the critics to try something they believe will work and monitor the forecasts that they make to show they could do better - that's a vain hope!), but maybe there's an element within the technique that could add to how numerical model based forecasts are compiled. From email contact, I know some professional forecasters are interested and have been influenced, but I don't think it is the be-all and end-all of forecasting at 10 days, which remains awfully difficult on a daily basis - for anyone, or any agency. You don't try to forecast all the time, Will, but you do issue forecasts on an occasional basis. Why don't you do this on a more regular basis? I suspect you feel the same as me, that much of the time, there is no model/ensemble agreement and to issue a forecast would end up as little more than an educated guess. Paul |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
What you think dawlish paul is in the same league as Will?
Dawlish is a internet wanna-be weather forecaster, and a crap one at that too. Paul your forecast was crap. It still is now. Nothings changed. Dawlish wrote: On Jun 5, 11:40 pm, "Dave R." wrote: "N.E Zephyr" wrote in message ... LOL in classic fashion your so called forecast has gone titicus verticus in a matter of hours. Yeah but so has Will LOL why shouldn't he get slated too? -- Dave R. [west London] Always judge a forecast at outcome. The dry and settled part for Tuesday still looks good, but I've been commenting on the way that forecast high has been moving on the models, and a settle to the West of us is quite possible. Still a few days to go. Will doesn't deserve any slating whatsoever. Nearly every agency, including the MetO were talking about a warm-up, with good summer weather last week, until the models changed yesterday lunchtime. Forecasting at 10 days is incredibly difficult to do an ever so easy to criticise - but leave criticism until the outcome date and I'll join in the inquest, as I'll always return to any forecast I've made. |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK. It's obviously a poor forecast if doesn't work and it's a poor
forecast if it is spot on for you, my stalker. N.E Zephyr wrote: What you think dawlish paul is in the same league as Will? Dawlish is a internet wanna-be weather forecaster, and a crap one at that too. Paul your forecast was crap. It still is now. Nothings changed. Dawlish wrote: On Jun 5, 11:40 pm, "Dave R." wrote: "N.E Zephyr" wrote in message ... LOL in classic fashion your so called forecast has gone titicus verticus in a matter of hours. Yeah but so has Will LOL why shouldn't he get slated too? -- Dave R. [west London] Always judge a forecast at outcome. The dry and settled part for Tuesday still looks good, but I've been commenting on the way that forecast high has been moving on the models, and a settle to the West of us is quite possible. Still a few days to go. Will doesn't deserve any slating whatsoever. Nearly every agency, including the MetO were talking about a warm-up, with good summer weather last week, until the models changed yesterday lunchtime. Forecasting at 10 days is incredibly difficult to do an ever so easy to criticise - but leave criticism until the outcome date and I'll join in the inquest, as I'll always return to any forecast I've made. |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
complete bollox forecast.
does anyone agree? Dawlish wrote: Still pretty confident about that forecast. The high is shifting about on the models and Roger may be spot on with his 10-day forecast of temperatures in the SE. 25C doesn't look as widespread, as it did, but I'm confident it will be warm and dry across much of the UK. Not for everyone; the NW of Scotland looks plagued by fronts next week, from today's output and not as warm, but to forecast that the whole of the UK to be completely dry would be guessing and I certainly didn't forecast that! I'm also confident that dry and settled weather will now extend a day further than the 14th, to mid June. It'll be a fine and dry start to the summer for many areas away from the NW. I think, in hindsight, we'll look back and say that summer started during the first week of June, for areas away from the far NW, at least - but whether "summer" will continue through June, July and August, or when it will ebb and flow throughout that period, is anybody's guess. Paul |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Next week (from Sep. 27th.) is looking settled. | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
Forecast: settled weather and high pressure for most at 10 days. | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
Forecast: settled weather and high pressure for most at 10 days.(Original version) | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
Warm and settled at 10 days. | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
Warm and settled at 10 days. | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) |