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On Nov 11, 9:36 am, "Will Hand" wrote:
"Dave Cornwell" wrote in
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"Tony Powell" wrote in message
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wrote in message
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On 10 Nov, 13:18, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Nov 10, 10:34 am, "Jon O'Rourke"
wrote:
I'm still waiting for the severe earthquake that would occur as TS
Noel diminished.
Careful with the Lawyerman he'll eat you for breakfast, Crazy horse.
I'm also wondering what seismic and solar activity is needed to
change
these current weather patterns, interesting nevertheless!
It does indeed look like a different (pre 90's?) setup this late
autumn/winter at current time, what do you think chaps and chapesses.
Could this week be the start of something completely different?
Cheers
Monty Python
Tony Powell
c/o Corbyn Lawyers & Son Ltd --------------------------
My money's on HP situated to give SW 'lies. |This is based on:-
1. That's what usually happens
2. I'm a pessimist.
Dave
Hi Dave and others, I think the high will eventually sink south but will
inevitably be replaced probably by yet another one from the west. A mild
zonal
flow seems a long way away yet. GFS ensembles show predictability to be
zero
beyond T+168. It does look like we will eventually get a frosty high
establishing over UK during second half of next week. The continent is
cold and
any feed off there will be cold. The east will probably be colder than
the west
and I guess western Scotland could end up quite mild. If winds swing
southwest
more generally then obviously it will turn milder but cloudy, but as I
say, I
cannot see such an event lasting very long as we are not getting a
southwest jet
pushing into Iceland instead it is being diverted north to Greenland
round the
very persistent mid-Atlantic ridge. See GFS 300 HpA streamline charts on
Wetterzentrale - this gives a better broadscale view on what's happening
than
surface pressure patterns.
Will
--
Maybe too early to say but this could end up being a very dry autumn
in southern England, particularly from the point of view of number of
days with significant rainfall.
I get the impression there is a correlation between unusually wet
early/mid summers and unusually dry autumns - 1978/80/85 showing
similarities. No indications for the winter though with a mixture of
cold and mild following.
Nick
-----------------
What about dry summer, dry winter, quite dry summer and very dry autumn? I'm
hoping for some winter or at worst early spring sustained rainfall else I
will only be growing cacti next year :-(
Dave