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#1
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Temperatures here in the Ohio River Valley are running a good 5 to 10
degrees above normal and have been for the last 45 days with no cooler weather in site. This weekend's forcast is for beautiful weather, clear skies, lite winds and temeratures in the mid 70's during the day and the upper 40's to lower 50's at night. The forcast for next week doesn't change, not even slightly. Average high temperatures for mid October are in the upper sixties with lows in the mid 40's. 20 and 7 centigrade. What's fall been like in Europe so far, France, Germany, UK? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#2
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![]() Mike Fenderson wrote: Temperatures here in the Ohio River Valley are running a good 5 to 10 degrees above normal and have been for the last 45 days with no cooler weather in si(gh)t[e]. This weekend's forcast is for beautiful weather, clear skies, lite winds and temeratures in the mid 70's during the day and the upper 40's to lower 50's at night. The forcast for next week doesn't change, not even slightly. How about that? http://groups.google.com/group/alt.t...f4bf7203f1eb08 Sheer guesswork of course. But I dare say you should be wary. Be VERY careful! Average high temperatures for mid October are in the upper sixties with lows in the mid 40's. 20 and 7 centigrade. What's fall been like in Europe so far, France, Germany, UK? We have had some flooding in regions that get a fair bit of rain all year around (UK style.) And another tornado (in regions that get tornadoes (UK style.)) |
#3
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![]() Weatherlawyer wrote: Mike Fenderson wrote: The forcast for next week doesn't change, not even slightly. How about that? http://groups.google.com/group/alt.t...f4bf7203f1eb08 Sheer guesswork of course. But I dare say you should be wary. Be VERY careful! According to one BBC weatherman earlier today, the weather is stuck att he moment until Tuesday or Wodin's day. How appropriate is that I wonder? Apparently it is all due to a Scandinavian igh and a mid N Atlantic Low allowing us a corridor of uneventful weather. Uneventful? A warm sunny hazy almost misty October spell is a precursor of something rather interesting, if I ever heard of one. Season of mellow fruitfulness and erm... rather devastating weather? Or not, as the case may be. |
#4
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![]() "Weatherlawyer" wrote in message ups.com... Mike Fenderson wrote: Temperatures here in the Ohio River Valley are running a good 5 to 10 degrees above normal and have been for the last 45 days with no cooler weather in si(gh)t[e]. This weekend's forcast is for beautiful weather, clear skies, lite winds and temeratures in the mid 70's during the day and the upper 40's to lower 50's at night. The forcast for next week doesn't change, not even slightly. How about that? http://groups.google.com/group/alt.t...f4bf7203f1eb08 Sheer guesswork of course. But I dare say you should be wary. Be VERY careful! Average high temperatures for mid October are in the upper sixties with lows in the mid 40's. 20 and 7 centigrade. What's fall been like in Europe so far, France, Germany, UK? We have had some flooding in regions that get a fair bit of rain all year around (UK style.) And another tornado (in regions that get tornadoes (UK style.)) Interesting, I didn't know they got tornados in England, always loads of fun! Well, you are correct in the sense that the system that is mentioned produced an unusually early blast of cold air and a lot of snow. However, that system is long gone and never made it this far south. The snow fell in areas close to Canada and areas above 3000 feet in elevation. There was a cold front associtated with the storm that eventually moved through southern Indiana and Kentucky but it weakened quite a bit and simply brought the temperatures from warm to seasonal. Temperatures are forcasted to be in the low 80's (25-27c) next week, more like early Semptember than mid to late October. Here's an interesting link about the unusually warm fall: Regards, http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/...sep/sep05.html ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#5
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![]() Mike Fenderson wrote: Interesting, I didn't know they got tornados in England. The UK has the largest number of tornadoes in the world if you go by tornadoes/sq mile. If you are looking for size though, you had best stay home. Also due to the highly built up infrastructure of one of the most densly populated countries in the world, storm chasing is a no-no here. Well, you are correct in the sense that the system that is mentioned produced an unusually early blast of cold air and a lot of snow. What I have been posting over the last few years over the internet, concerns what amounts to an explanation of the so called "oscillations" first proposed as the ENSO. Whilst the phases of the moon produce the low pressures we get around the Caribbean and the NW Atlantic (at the times stated elsewhere) it would seem that they produce att he same time, the droughts felt on the western coast of the USA and in Australia. (Not that I have gone into any detail about that last part.) I dare say there may turn out to be a sonic effect induced by it all somehow, producing standing waves. That may well go some way to explain the Icelandic Low and the Azores High. I find it interesting that the cyclones around the outer edges of where the Azores high reaches from time to time are also phenomenae related to higher than normal temperatures. Contemporary explanations on that subject lead nowhere past 4 or 5 days. My own feeling is that a study of the duality of chords might be more productive in the long run. (Duality is the counterpoint of geometric shapes, where the centre of each face of a polyhedron produces the corners of another polyherdron as in -for example: a cube and an octohedron. But it sounds too Keppleresque to be true. There is another (as far as I know) non-Euler concept of duality where the chords of the tangents of a distant object -such as for example: the moon on the earth; run out to a curve in -or near, the surface of the earth. But I'd have to learn CAD before I shall be able to get my head around that sort of thing.) |
#6
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![]() Mike Fenderson wrote: Temperatures here in the Ohio River Valley are running a good 5 to 10 degrees above normal and have been for the last 45 days with no cooler weather in site. This weekend's forcast is for beautiful weather, clear skies, lite winds and temeratures in the mid 70's during the day and the upper 40's to lower 50's at night. The forcast for next week doesn't change, not even slightly. Average high temperatures for mid October are in the upper sixties with lows in the mid 40's. 20 and 7 centigrade. What's fall been like in Europe so far, France, Germany, UK? How are you after the storm? I hope you are OK. |
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