Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
alt.talk.weather (General Weather Talk) (alt.talk.weather) A general forum for discussion of the weather. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 28, 4:20 pm, Weatherlawyer wrote:
The high that is lingering along the coast of eastern USA, now entering Canada: http://weather.unisys.com/images/sat_sfc_map_loop.html It has now slid up to Newfoundland and is part of an huge ridge that extends from NW Canada over Quebec and out toward a deep trench in the Atlantic some 15 degrees east of Florida. It's centre is a ring of high pressure some 1032 mb just east of the Hudson Bay: http://www.weatheroffice.gc.ca/ensem...me=00&Type=pnm According to the GEM modles underneath the main diagramme, it looks to increse in pressure over the next few whatevers. I am not sure of the scope of them. I am sure that things are going to change in the next few days as the spell changes. (The next lunar phase is on the 31st but I ain't certain what it's going to do. Far from it!) It seems to correspond closely to the behaviour of the low lingering off the coast of Scandinavia he http://meteonet.nl/aktueel/brackall.htm If they don't fill, they must break away to the sound of some seriously impressive P and S waves. But the Low off Scandinavia is behaving strangely in not broaching and dissipating on land. Instead, it is standing off on a luff shore. I can't explain that. It is a standing wave that is slowly filling. It's scheduled to gain 10 millibars of air pressure in the next 24 hours. Apart from their direction, the other common factor with them is that they are hovering on a massive geological break in the landscape. If I was an expert I'd call them faults. Well, that's changed. I must have missed something in expectation. Fortunately I am not hampered by peer conditioning. Still a ****er, though. |