On Apr 2, 7:35 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Apr 2, 7:26 am, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Apr 1, 12:50 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
In the Western North Atlantic there is a pretty well marked
region of not very low Low pressure. Whilst in the east the pressure
are more normal.
This flaccid pressure system has spread across the North Atlantic.
A deep low on the TLH of this map:
http://www.weatheroffice.gc.ca/data/analysis/947_50.gif
yesterday (1st April 08) spread out to cover half the northern neck of
the North Pacific by today (the 2nd.)
Is this indicative of further eruptions at Hawaii or is it a normal
characteristic of most Lows as they leave a continental land mass. The
pressure is still low 971mb but it was 954mb yesterday.
A copy of the map is posted he
http://www.mediafire.com/imageview.p...wtt3ms&thumb=4
I'm not sure of copyright issues but I dare say the owners will be
able to tell me off in their own due time if they see fit. I haven't
worked out how to add text yet so I can give credit to the site I got
it from (http://www.weatheroffice.gc.ca/data/analysis/947_50.gif)
There is an anticyclone now in almost exactly the same position the
low was in the other day.
I took a look at some of the synoptic charts for this spell and it
appears that there is an oscillation on all the bases where an High is
replaced by a Low and a Low by an High.
I never noticed that before. It may be that i am not an acute observer
of geophysical phenomena. Or it may be a phenomena peculiar to the
vulcanicity of the present cycle.
I would have noticed any peculiarities on the Atlantic Chart and I
did! So maybe this is a special.
Or maybe it is a reason why I have such problems with these times?
21:47 as near to 22:00 or 10 o'clock as damn it is to swearing.
I never liked them.
And there's loads this year, too, neither!
I'll put the rest up at the end of the spell. Or this particular part
of the run.