On Oct 8, 10:04 am, "Michael" wrote:
"Weatherlawyer" wrote in message
ups.com...
Oct 3 10:06.
http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclips...se2001gmt.html
Apart from the British weather enjoying the first real summery spell
of the year, this pattern seems to be a repeat of last weeks spell.
Even down to a super cyclone in the Asian Pacific.
Next weeks spell should be a classic anticyclone with the time of the
phase at 05:01 on Oct 11th.
Unfortunately, if there is another super cyclone, the weather will be
wet.
(If it is a super-cyclone involved, the chances are that the time of
the phase the harmonic knocks back to will be 1 o'clock. But then
again the present cyclone has not knocked the harmonic back 4 hours.
10:06 should read 04:06. But wait.... that's another one of those
tricky harmonies.)
Good 'ere innit!
God dammit, summer started here in April and still hasn't ended. Tomorrow's
high temperature is expected to reach 95 degrees (just 24 degrees above
average.) The month of August was the hottest ever recorded, a full 8.9
degrees above normal, the month of September was 6.8 degrees above the mean
temperature. We hit 105 degress with a heat index of 115+ on four seperate
occasions in August, making it the hottest month in over 150 years of record
keeping. You want some summer weather, come sleep stay on my sun deck for a
few days, I'll ever provide a TV (although no cable for you and certainly no
internet access as the pollution in this group has became neck-deep.) I
will provide you with sound reading material though and give meteorology
classes for two hours, every day. After all, living in the UK can't give
one a real taste of what weather is all about. I will also provide you with
an autobiography of George Bush's life which you will be forced to read at
least 50 pages a day, out loud. You want a free summer vacation? It's a
small price and it will keep your fingers quiet for a spell.
Call me and I'll book a passage for you,
A passage where exactly?
The United Kingdom is the centre of the world at the moment. There
isn't a place under the sun that is finer for studying all earth's
sciences and as far as hot weather goes, wherever you are, you can
keep it.
By the way a small matter for your cogitation whilst you are thinking
about weather:
How hot does it get at night where you live and why?
How much does the air between you and the sun get heated during the
day and how?
The Gulf Stream sweeps away millions of cubic miles of seas surface
water every hour, day and night. The warmer end of the solar spectrum
can reach down as much as 100 feet in clear water and the blue end can
go 200 in similar circumstances (if I remember correctly.) So how does
the Gulf Stream work exactly and why does the water under that surface
remain so cold so long?
Simple stuff for a teacher of your calibre but I think it's best we
stick to basics for now if you are going to educate me. Thank you for
your consideration.
And now I must go and look out the window for it is Tuesday. I await
the gathering storm with eager trepidation.