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Old February 27th 20, 04:09 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Len Len is offline
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Default Need an inch of rain to cheat the record

If Storm Jorge gives 25 mm of rain over the next two days then my Feb record will be beaten.
However my record is 205.1 mm in Feb 1990.
This was not a leap year.

It was like 1st March 2018 during the Beast from the East being a new record cold day for March.
It would n't have been if it was a leap year.

How can one reconcile such things?

Len
Wembury

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Old February 27th 20, 08:09 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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In message , Len
writes
If Storm Jorge gives 25 mm of rain over the next two days then my Feb
record will be beaten.
However my record is 205.1 mm in Feb 1990.
This was not a leap year.

It was like 1st March 2018 during the Beast from the East being a new
record cold day for March.
It would n't have been if it was a leap year.

How can one reconcile such things?

Len
Wembury


I don't think you can. Something similar is when an exceptional spell
doesn't show up in the records as prominently as it merits because it
was partly in one calendar month and partly in the next. A classic
example is the hottest spell of the summer of 1976, which lasted from
around mid-June to mid-July. If that had happened two weeks later, I
suspect it would have been easily the hottest calendar month in the
British instrumental record.
--
John Hall
"If you haven't got anything nice to say about anybody, come
sit next to me."
Alice Roosevelt Longworth (1884-1980)
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Old February 27th 20, 11:14 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Need an inch of rain to cheat the record

How dare the Spanish name our storms - was Brexit in vain?

Seriously, the Spanish warning is just for their north coast, so barely warranted there quite apart from here. So why have we adopted it, even unofficially. Answer, to confuse the public!

Julian # worldgoesmad
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Old February 28th 20, 10:39 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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In message ,
Julian Mayes writes
How dare the Spanish name our storms - was Brexit in vain?

Seriously, the Spanish warning is just for their north coast, so
barely warranted there quite apart from here. So why have we adopted
it, even unofficially. Answer, to confuse the public!

Julian # worldgoesmad


It certainly confused me when I heard it used for the first time on the
radio this morning. But I was impressed by the speaker's impeccable
Spanish pronunciation.
--
John Hall
"If you haven't got anything nice to say about anybody, come
sit next to me."
Alice Roosevelt Longworth (1884-1980)
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Old February 28th 20, 12:27 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Need an inch of rain to cheat the record

On Thursday, February 27, 2020 at 8:20:16 PM UTC, John Hall wrote:
In message , Len
writes
If Storm Jorge gives 25 mm of rain over the next two days then my Feb
record will be beaten.
However my record is 205.1 mm in Feb 1990.
This was not a leap year.

It was like 1st March 2018 during the Beast from the East being a new
record cold day for March.
It would n't have been if it was a leap year.

How can one reconcile such things?

Len
Wembury


I don't think you can. Something similar is when an exceptional spell
doesn't show up in the records as prominently as it merits because it
was partly in one calendar month and partly in the next. A classic
example is the hottest spell of the summer of 1976, which lasted from
around mid-June to mid-July. If that had happened two weeks later, I
suspect it would have been easily the hottest calendar month in the
British instrumental record.
--
John Hall
"If you haven't got anything nice to say about anybody, come
sit next to me."
Alice Roosevelt Longworth (1884-1980)


What you can do is say something like 'The latest date for an ice day is 1st March or 29th Feb (just an example). The day of the year is the same in both cases even though the month is different..

In fact in my weather database I often use a macro, which calls the DOY function, to return the latest dates for things like that. Likewise I can easily identify the hottest '4 week period' Helps overcome the fact that most weather reports are based on months and can be mentioned in the monthly report.


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Old March 1st 20, 03:20 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Need an inch of rain to cheat the record

On Friday, February 28, 2020 at 12:27:44 PM UTC, Graham Easterling wrote:
On Thursday, February 27, 2020 at 8:20:16 PM UTC, John Hall wrote:
Len
writes
If Storm Jorge gives 25 mm of rain over the next two days then my Feb
record will be beaten.
However my record is 205.1 mm in Feb 1990.
This was not a leap year.

It was like 1st March 2018 during the Beast from the East being a new
record cold day for March.
It would n't have been if it was a leap year.

How can one reconcile such things?

Len
Wembury


I don't think you can. Something similar is when an exceptional spell
doesn't show up in the records as prominently as it merits because it
was partly in one calendar month and partly in the next. A classic
example is the hottest spell of the summer of 1976, which lasted from
around mid-June to mid-July. If that had happened two weeks later, I
suspect it would have been easily the hottest calendar month in the
British instrumental record.
--
John Hall
"If you haven't got anything nice to say about anybody, come
sit next to me."
Alice Roosevelt Longworth (1884-1980)


What you can do is say something like 'The latest date for an ice day is 1st March or 29th Feb (just an example). The day of the year is the same in both cases even though the month is different..

In fact in my weather database I often use a macro, which calls the DOY function, to return the latest dates for things like that. Likewise I can easily identify the hottest '4 week period' Helps overcome the fact that most weather reports are based on months and can be mentioned in the monthly report.

In fact my relational database is still in Lotus Approach, as it started in the early '80s using dBaseII & Approach uses the same file format as the dbaseIV. In fact it's amazing that the same dBaseIV file format is still in widespread use. I've felt no need to migrate to the inferior microsoft access, especially as I've hundreds of pages of macros & programs which I'd have to reconstruct.

Graham
Penzance Currently drizzly & miserable

----------------------------------------------------------------------
We got more than an inch here so the Feb. record was broken.
1. 2020 214.4 mm
2. 1990 205.1 mm
3. 2007 202.2 mm

record began 1985.

Sunshine and hail showers here atm.
April showers have arrived early.

Len
Wembury, SW Devon coast


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