On Jul 12, 5:42 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Jul 12, 2:21 pm, "Bernard Burton" b.j.burton-
wrote:
OK Ron, you obviously prefer them closer to home. Nevertheless, here is a
picture of MAN-YI, which is currently a cat4 typhoon.
http://www.woksat.info/etcpg12/pg12-...on-MAN-YI.html
Satellite images at:www.woksat.info/wwp.html
"Bernard Burton" wrote in message
...
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/tropic/re.../storm04W.html
BLOODY HELL !!
I thought there was something wrong with my methods. Bugger all on
here.http://satellite.ehabich.info/hurricane-watch.htm
I should have known when the Pacific storm failed to move:
I'm still not an happy chappie but it does explain a thing or two.
There is a plethora of absent huricani at the moment and no excuses
too neither.
Which leaves me to surmise that the weather (floods not withstanding)
for 7th July, with the time of the lunar phase at 16:54 is most like
the weather for 22nd June, where the time (and the somewhat similar
phase?) was at 13:15.
If I had a database (which I don't) I would be able to surmise for my
next trick that if the typhoon is still a super typhoon after
tomorrow, then the weather which should be dull and overcast (14th
July 12:04) will be more like the weather for 08:04.
Which by coincidence is somewhat similar to the weather for 30th June
(13:49, somewhere between wet and thundery.)
Or not as the case may be.
What an awful coincidence. I wonder where the floods will be next. The
one saving grace if the category 4 should continue, is that just
because one spoke in the wheel is pointing at those elongated dark
clouds, it doesn't necessarily follow that the fronts will on the
other points of the wheel.
Interesting times to be had by all then. God have mercy on us all.