Fatfreek wrote:
To email reply, eradicate all threes in my SPAM guarded address.
"Weatherlawyer" wrote in message
oups.com...
Looks warm in the
http://ocean.dmi.dk/satellite/index.html
The loop doesn't work for me but I need to sort my disputer out. Click
back and count the days rather than expect to see the dates. (At least
that's what I had to do.)
Beautiful. I got the looping to work in Firefox (not I.E.). Had to
temporarily enable scripts.
(sigh) If I could only get something like this in archived Radar Images for
Syracuse N.Y.
I have it working properly after a reinstall. Looks like the 9th was
the hottest dish of the day. I'll have to keep an eye on it. I am sure
the Baltic is one of the most revealing features of the weather
systems that strike the European mainland.
For the UK it is the run of cyclones from Canada to Scotland and
Norway. But the Baltic is what happens to the weather after northern
western Europe has finished with it. Consider how many rivers drain
into it.
It is one of the shallowest drains on the coast and the meteorological
equivalent of the Gulf of Mexico.
I'm pretty certain that the way it behaves controls how much ice cover
the Arctic has. All the warm, fairly low salt water that pumps out of
that sea in the summer floats north and forms the ice that drifts down
as far as Boston in good years.
That won't be happening for a while. It's the equivalent of an El Nino
event as regards the fishing industry. So take all your stocks and
shares out of that market.