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Old February 22nd 06, 10:15 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

Ron Button wrote:
Just noticed on the historical charts pages the remarkable similarity
between this week and the same in1965,
My eldest son was born on march 2nd accompanied by a remarkable snowstorm
,which lay many inches deep for several days ,with some very low temps at
night I seem to remember .Its events like that that helps one remember
birthdays and wedding aniversaries of course .


What were the NE-continental temperatures like in 1965? And the North
Sea surface temperatures?

--
Jonathan Stott
Canterbury Weather: http://www.canterburyweather.co.uk/
Reverse my e-mail address to reply by e-mail

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Old February 22nd 06, 10:18 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

Just noticed on the historical charts pages the remarkable similarity
between this week and the same in1965,
My eldest son was born on march 2nd accompanied by a remarkable snowstorm
,which lay many inches deep for several days ,with some very low temps at
night I seem to remember .Its events like that that helps one remember
birthdays and wedding aniversaries of course .
RonB

PS 4 weeks later by the by, there was a record March heatwave,followed by a
lousy summer......





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Old February 22nd 06, 10:24 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

A good question Jonathon,anybody know that ?

RonB
"Jonathan Stott" wrote in message
...
Ron Button wrote:
Just noticed on the historical charts pages the remarkable similarity
between this week and the same in1965,
My eldest son was born on march 2nd accompanied by a remarkable snowstorm
,which lay many inches deep for several days ,with some very low temps at
night I seem to remember .Its events like that that helps one remember
birthdays and wedding aniversaries of course .


What were the NE-continental temperatures like in 1965? And the North Sea
surface temperatures?

--
Jonathan Stott
Canterbury Weather: http://www.canterburyweather.co.uk/
Reverse my e-mail address to reply by e-mail



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Old February 22nd 06, 11:06 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

Ron Button wrote:
Just noticed on the historical charts pages the remarkable similarity
between this week and the same in1965,
My eldest son was born on march 2nd accompanied by a remarkable snowstorm
,which lay many inches deep for several days ,with some very low temps at
night I seem to remember .Its events like that that helps one remember
birthdays and wedding aniversaries of course .
RonB

PS 4 weeks later by the by, there was a record March heatwave,followed by a
lousy summer......


Hi, Ron,

I'm replying to you for the second successive day, must be something in
the air!

I remember that time very well. I was young and daft in those days (now
I'm just young) and we set off to do the 42 mile Lyke Wake Walk across
the North York Moors from Osmotherly to Ravenscar during that
snowstorm. There were no weather warnings that anyone took any notice
of, anyway we were a group of 17 year old lads, so we were young and
tough enough to know the lot!

Needless to say, we didn't make it! The best time to start the Lyke
Wake Walk is late evening, for those who don't know, so that the most
difficult part of the walk is made in daylight. It has to be completed
in 24 hours for the walker to become a "dirger" as the successful folk
are called! After we came out of the pub at Osmotherley at 10pm, we
were slightly disorientated and walked for a few hours on the hills,
apparently in circles. We couldn't see much because of the blinding
snow.

To cut a long story short, we arrived back in Osmotherly at some
unearthly hour, walked the ten miles to Thirsk along the A19 and got an
early morning bus back home to Scarborough. The bus then became stuck
in the Sutton Bank area. A tractor pulled the bus out and the bus
returned to Thirsk. Next we got a train to York where the money ran
out. The rest is history as they say, and way off topic!

The Durham record shows day maxima of 1C for the 1st, 2nd and 3rd March
1965 and night minima of -2C, -10C, -12C and -7C for the first four
days. Snow depth was 11in(28cm) on 1st. On the moors it could well have
been double that depth with, I recall, huge drifts and much lower
maxima.

As you say, a heat wave ended the month with 22C on 29th!

We did the walk several times before and after that event btw!

This morning's snow depth is 5cm slushy horrible stuff and a
temperature of 0C after a min of -1C. No doubt there are severe weather
warnings out but we're surviving!

Best wishes,

Ken
Copley 253metres asl, nr Barnard Castle, County Durham
http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/copley

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Old February 22nd 06, 11:51 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

I remember February 1965 very well indeed. Almost unbroken sun with
max temperatures of 28C day after day. I was very impressed.

After two years with temps up to 34C at times, hardly a drop of rain, I
had become less impressed.

In Feb 1965 I had just been posted to RAF Khormaksar, Aden (now Yemen)

Jack



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Old February 22nd 06, 12:06 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

In message , Jonathan Stott
writes
Ron Button wrote:
Just noticed on the historical charts pages the remarkable similarity
between this week and the same in1965,
My eldest son was born on march 2nd accompanied by a remarkable
snowstorm ,which lay many inches deep for several days ,with some
very low temps at night I seem to remember .Its events like that that
helps one remember birthdays and wedding aniversaries of course .


What were the NE-continental temperatures like in 1965? And the North
Sea surface temperatures?


Copenhagen 12z temperature/dewpoint

Feb 1965

22nd +0.1/-07.8
23rd +0.1/-03.9
24th missing
25th -02.2/-12.8
26th -02.2/-12.2
27th -05.0/-10.0
28th -06.1/-11.1

The temperature then stayed continuously below zero till 10th March.

At RAF Lakenheath the 12z temperature on 22nd Feb was +5.8. Colder
conditions gradually spread in during the following days and on 2nd
March Lakenheath reported mod/hvy snow all day. The temperature at 00z
on 3rd March was -9.8. The max on 3rd was +0.8 and on the 4th it was
+1.3. It didn't warm up until 8th March.

An interesting start to March :-)

Norman.
(delete "thisbit" twice to e-mail)
--
Norman Lynagh Weather Consultancy
Chalfont St Giles 85m a.s.l.
England
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Old February 22nd 06, 12:20 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

I was kindly pointed to the excellent Trevor Harley web-site the other day
and I was pleased to find just how common these heavy snowfalls were
throughout the 1960's, even in the warmer winters. This is another one of
those events. I managed to pin the one I had referred to down to one of
three. So it wasn't just a new grandad's nostalgia!

Dave
wrote in message
oups.com...
I remember February 1965 very well indeed. Almost unbroken sun with
max temperatures of 28C day after day. I was very impressed.

After two years with temps up to 34C at times, hardly a drop of rain, I
had become less impressed.

In Feb 1965 I had just been posted to RAF Khormaksar, Aden (now Yemen)

Jack



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Old February 22nd 06, 12:32 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

A colleague just sarcastically said "it's going to be the coldest
winter since 1947", I can't help but think we are clutching at straws
on this thread ;-)

Keith (Southend)
http://www.southendweather.net

Dave.C wrote:
I was kindly pointed to the excellent Trevor Harley web-site the other day
and I was pleased to find just how common these heavy snowfalls were
throughout the 1960's, even in the warmer winters. This is another one of
those events. I managed to pin the one I had referred to down to one of
three. So it wasn't just a new grandad's nostalgia!

Dave
wrote in message
oups.com...
I remember February 1965 very well indeed. Almost unbroken sun with
max temperatures of 28C day after day. I was very impressed.

After two years with temps up to 34C at times, hardly a drop of rain, I
had become less impressed.

In Feb 1965 I had just been posted to RAF Khormaksar, Aden (now Yemen)

Jack


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Old February 22nd 06, 12:35 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Posts: 797
Default 1965



Ron Button wrote:
Just noticed on the historical charts pages the remarkable similarity
between this week and the same in1965,

.................................................. .................................................. ..................

The temperature then stayed continuously below zero till 10th March.

.................................................. .................................................. ..................

An interesting start to March :-)

Norman.
Norman Lynagh Weather Consultancy
Chalfont St Giles 85m a.s.l.
England


Cf the GFS ensemble for this morning-
http://217.160.176.95/wz/pics/MT8_London_ens.png


--
regards,
David

add '17' to Waghorne to reply


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Old February 22nd 06, 01:08 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default 1965

No Keith! I didn't mean "this now" is one of those events I meant the 1965
above. Mind you with the same charts as now in 1965.... well that's another
story. ;-)

Cheers, Dave.
"Keith (Southend)G" wrote in message
ups.com...
A colleague just sarcastically said "it's going to be the coldest
winter since 1947", I can't help but think we are clutching at straws
on this thread ;-)

Keith (Southend)
http://www.southendweather.net

Dave.C wrote:
I was kindly pointed to the excellent Trevor Harley web-site the other

day
and I was pleased to find just how common these heavy snowfalls were
throughout the 1960's, even in the warmer winters. This is another one

of
those events. I managed to pin the one I had referred to down to one of
three. So it wasn't just a new grandad's nostalgia!

Dave
wrote in message
oups.com...
I remember February 1965 very well indeed. Almost unbroken sun with
max temperatures of 28C day after day. I was very impressed.

After two years with temps up to 34C at times, hardly a drop of rain,

I
had become less impressed.

In Feb 1965 I had just been posted to RAF Khormaksar, Aden (now Yemen)

Jack






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