View Single Post
  #12   Report Post  
Old March 22nd 10, 03:00 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Weatherlawyer Weatherlawyer is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Feb 2005
Posts: 6,777
Default ... here we go again!

On 22 Mar, 14:03, "Martin Rowley"
wrote:
"Bonos Ego" wrote ...

I just don't see it being a hot summer this year, quite the opposite.


As mentioned by me before, following a cold winter we more often
than
not get a cooler than average summer and I see no reason for this
summer to be any different.


... has anyone got a source for this statement:-

" The firm also accurately forecast a "big freeze" lasting into March
last winter. "

The forecast as presented is quite bold - this is how the 'Daily
Telegraph' has presented it ...

" It now predicts that average temperatures this June, July and August
will beat those of 1976, the hottest summer ever recorded with a
sweltering average of 17.8C (64F)"

If they're really saying that we're going to beat that (in the CET
record), then that would be something. Even more dramatic in my view
than saying that we might exceed the 2003 individual highest screen
temperature.

The official forecast is apparently released tomorrow, so watch that
space ...

http://www.positiveweathersolutions.co.uk/


"Iceland is preparing for an even more powerful and potentially
destructive volcano after a small eruption at the weekend shot red-hot
molten lava high into the sky.

Freymodur Sigmundsson, a geophysicist, concluded that the immediate
danger was receding and that the lava was flowing along a one
kilometre-long fissure and in the darkness binding.

The original fear was that the volcano had erupted directly underneath
the Eyjafjallajokull glacier."

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle7070239.ece


According to NottheMetO, the charts show a significant chance of
further eruptions tomorrow afternoon.

(WetterZentrale Tuesday afternoon, 23rd March 2010.)

A year without summer might be on the cards too, so don't put all your
money on the other.