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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. |
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#1
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Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of
heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? Cheers! John. |
#2
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Togless wrote:
Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? Cheers! John. --------------------- If you look at the radar stepwise you can see it is the result of the centre of the small LP being located such that the perimeter is rotating over that area perpetually replenishing the rainfall. |
#3
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On Jun 11, 11:56*am, Dave Cornwell wrote:
Togless wrote: Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. *A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. *Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? Cheers! John. --------------------- If you look at the radar stepwise you can see it is the result of the centre of the small LP being located such that the perimeter is rotating over that area perpetually replenishing the rainfall. On what would I guess be the western edge of this in Southampton. Since about 0900 it's been dark to the east and lighter to the west. Heavy but not exceptional rain here. Good job it's Monday not the weekend, that's all I can say! Nick |
#4
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"Dave Cornwell" wrote:
Togless wrote: Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? Cheers! John. --------------------- If you look at the radar stepwise you can see it is the result of the centre of the small LP being located such that the perimeter is rotating over that area perpetually replenishing the rainfall. Mmm, that makes sense - thanks Dave. |
#5
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On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 04:16:30 -0700 (PDT), Nick
wrote: On Jun 11, 11:56*am, Dave Cornwell wrote: Togless wrote: Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. *A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. *Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? If you look at the radar stepwise you can see it is the result of the centre of the small LP being located such that the perimeter is rotating over that area perpetually replenishing the rainfall. On what would I guess be the western edge of this in Southampton. Since about 0900 it's been dark to the east and lighter to the west. Heavy but not exceptional rain here. Good job it's Monday not the weekend, that's all I can say! A mere 27 mm of rainfall here so far today in West Fareham, and a maximum of 11.9. Five days in January were warmer than today here! -- Dave Fareham |
#6
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in 358352 20120611 203839 Dave Ludlow wrote:
On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 04:16:30 -0700 (PDT), Nick wrote: On Jun 11, 11:56�am, Dave Cornwell wrote: Togless wrote: Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. �A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. �Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? If you look at the radar stepwise you can see it is the result of the centre of the small LP being located such that the perimeter is rotating over that area perpetually replenishing the rainfall. On what would I guess be the western edge of this in Southampton. Since about 0900 it's been dark to the east and lighter to the west. Heavy but not exceptional rain here. Good job it's Monday not the weekend, that's all I can say! A mere 27 mm of rainfall here so far today in West Fareham, and a maximum of 11.9. Five days in January were warmer than today here! I'm away from home this week (in dry Notts) but my WS at home in Waterlooville was reporting 57 mm in the 24 hours up to 19:00 last night. Now (08:30) reading 36 mm for last 24 hours . |
#7
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In article ,
Togless writes: Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? If the station reports in the Telegraph are correct, Portsmouth was the wettest place in the country on the 11th, with 2.44 inches. -- John Hall Johnson: "Well, we had a good talk." Boswell: "Yes, Sir, you tossed and gored several persons." Dr Samuel Johnson (1709-84); James Boswell (1740-95) |
#8
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On Tue, 12 Jun 2012 08:31:20 BST, Bob Martin
wrote: in 358352 20120611 203839 Dave Ludlow wrote: On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 04:16:30 -0700 (PDT), Nick wrote: On Jun 11, 11:56�am, Dave Cornwell wrote: Togless wrote: Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. �A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. �Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? If you look at the radar stepwise you can see it is the result of the centre of the small LP being located such that the perimeter is rotating over that area perpetually replenishing the rainfall. On what would I guess be the western edge of this in Southampton. Since about 0900 it's been dark to the east and lighter to the west. Heavy but not exceptional rain here. Good job it's Monday not the weekend, that's all I can say! A mere 27 mm of rainfall here so far today in West Fareham, and a maximum of 11.9. Five days in January were warmer than today here! I'm away from home this week (in dry Notts) but my WS at home in Waterlooville was reporting 57 mm in the 24 hours up to 19:00 last night. Now (08:30) reading 36 mm for last 24 hours . Less over this way, it ended up as 31mm for the 24h, looks like you were inside that spike of intense rain, it was just mod-heavy here all day. No flooding. -- Dave Fareham (W) |
#9
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On Jun 11, 8:38*pm, Dave Ludlow
wrote: On Mon, 11 Jun 2012 04:16:30 -0700 (PDT), Nick wrote: On Jun 11, 11:56*am, Dave Cornwell wrote: Togless wrote: Looking at the rain radar, there has been a fairly persistent 'tail' of heavy rain running down roughly through Basingstoke, Winchester, Chichester kind of area, and a few miles out to sea. *A friend who lives in Bosham is unable to drive to work in Portsmouth due to flooding, and is looking nervously at the very full mill stream running past his house. *Any idea why this belt of heavy rain has been rather stuck over the same area for hours instead of moving across the country, as the rest of the rain in the South seems to be doing? If you look at the radar stepwise you can see it is the result of the centre of the small LP being located such that the perimeter is rotating over that area perpetually replenishing the rainfall. On what would I guess be the western edge of this in Southampton. Since about 0900 it's been dark to the east and lighter to the west. Heavy but not exceptional rain here. Good job it's Monday not the weekend, that's all I can say! A mere 27 mm of rainfall here so far today in *West Fareham, and a maximum of 11.9. Five days in January were warmer than today here! -- Dave Fareham More significantly perhaps, I'm wondering whether how our sunshine record this month compares to January's at the same time. From estimates I'd guess we're running at under 2 hours/day in Southampton so far, while January ISTR being sunnier than average, I'd guess 2hrs/day is about average for January. I think next week is looking rather better but the first half of June has been shockingly bad for a combination of cool, dull, wet here, even by the standards of recent times. Only late June 2007 in recent years was as bad, and I'd struggle to remember anything this bad in 1985-88: I don't think even the "Hurricane Charley"period in Aug 1986 had as little sunshine as this. Nick |
#10
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On 13/06/2012 09:04, Nick wrote:
More significantly perhaps, I'm wondering whether how our sunshine record this month compares to January's at the same time. From estimates I'd guess we're running at under 2 hours/day in Southampton so far, while January ISTR being sunnier than average, I'd guess 2hrs/day is about average for January. .... Using Hurn for this part of Dorset (and probably a close approximation for a wider area of SE Dorset/SW Hampshire), the figures of 'sunshine/day' (from their KZS output) give a *mean* for January of 67 hours over the 8 years of that instrument's use, or 2.2 hr/day. The figures of sunshine/day since last winter a- 2011 Dec 1.5 2012 Jan 2.3 Feb 2.3 Mar 5.4 Apr 4.3 May 6.3 2012 Jun 1.1 (so far/12 days) June of 2011, the figure was 5.8 hr/day. Martin. -- West Moors / East Dorset Lat: 50deg 49.25'N, Long: 01deg 53.05'W Height (amsl): 17 m (56 feet) COL category: C1 overall |
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