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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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Susan Powell, R4 1257 pm, mentioned there may well be 2 to 3
inches of rain over southern England tomorrow and Monday. We'll see. Also, it is certainly going to be cold early next week and I wouldn't bet against a max below 9°C here. MSF are now making a little less of it than UKMO with the Low less deep and a different distribution of rain compared to what one could expect from the Met Office charts. Meanwhile, in NW Russia, eg St Petersburg, temperatures will probably exceed 35°C. There has been little comment here on this potentially very interesting spell, more people being interested in MSF clocks, which is a little sad, in both senses of the term. Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey. |
#2
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On 26 May 2007 07:21:31 -0700, Tudor Hughes wrote in
oups.com Susan Powell, R4 1257 pm, mentioned there may well be 2 to 3 inches of rain over southern England tomorrow and Monday. We'll see. Also, it is certainly going to be cold early next week and I wouldn't bet against a max below 9°C here. MSF are now making a little less of it than UKMO with the Low less deep and a different distribution of rain compared to what one could expect from the Met Office charts. Meanwhile, in NW Russia, eg St Petersburg, temperatures will probably exceed 35°C. And those high temperatures looks set to continue for the foreseeable future. http://wxmaps.org/pix/temp4.html Currently only about 9C here with very unstable air aloft. -- Mike Tullett - Coleraine 55.13°N 6.69°W posted 26/05/2007 15:38:38 GMT |
#3
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![]() On 26 May 2007 07:21:31 -0700, Tudor Hughes wrote Susan Powell, R4 1257 pm, mentioned there may well be 2 to 3 inches of rain over southern England tomorrow and Monday. We'll see. ... Just tried to work out what sort of rainfall we'd get here (Bracknell) based on latest output as far as I can see them: GFS deterministic implies ~15mm by end Monday GFES (ensemble) ~10 mm average, with a 'high' in one member of ~15 mm (based on 06Z) UKMO ~ 20 mm (all 'eye-balled' off charts, apart from the deterministic, so some 'play' must be allowed for. The GFS throws the strongest ascent across the west/central Channel into Normandy so the heaviest point rainfall will probably be in those regions (and adjacent - i.e. SW England), but the amounts for us I guess will be governed by where the rain-bands end up, their speed of translation as the low slips to the south of us etc. Still a lot to go wrong but the general story looks pretty solid - as you point out, the temperatures disappointing for many. (.. and my MSF clock still isn't updating!) Martin. |
#4
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![]() "Tudor Hughes" wrote in message ups.com... Susan Powell, R4 1257 pm, mentioned there may well be 2 to 3 inches of rain over southern England tomorrow and Monday. We'll see. Also, it is certainly going to be cold early next week and I wouldn't bet against a max below 9°C here. MSF are now making a little less of it than UKMO with the Low less deep and a different distribution of rain compared to what one could expect from the Met Office charts. Meanwhile, in NW Russia, eg St Petersburg, temperatures will probably exceed 35°C. There has been little comment here on this potentially very interesting spell, more people being interested in MSF clocks, which is a little sad, in both senses of the term. Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey. Interesting it certainly is, even if the timing and weather for this time ofyear is just about as bad as it could be for me personally, especially as the past week has been pretty nice down here. Come Sunday when I want the weather to behave for just a couple of days..... From the last MO Fax charts that I saw, it looks as if Monday might not be as bad as it was looking it would be a couple of days ago, if that low gets that little bit further east away from us... Jim, Bournemouth |
#5
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I have a battery clock in the kichen, the rest have to be wound up. Never heard
of MSF clocks till now! Will. -- "Tudor Hughes" wrote in message ups.com... Susan Powell, R4 1257 pm, mentioned there may well be 2 to 3 inches of rain over southern England tomorrow and Monday. We'll see. Also, it is certainly going to be cold early next week and I wouldn't bet against a max below 9°C here. MSF are now making a little less of it than UKMO with the Low less deep and a different distribution of rain compared to what one could expect from the Met Office charts. Meanwhile, in NW Russia, eg St Petersburg, temperatures will probably exceed 35°C. There has been little comment here on this potentially very interesting spell, more people being interested in MSF clocks, which is a little sad, in both senses of the term. Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey. |
#6
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In uk.sci.weather on Sat, 26 May 2007, Tudor Hughes
wrote : Meanwhile, in NW Russia, eg St Petersburg, temperatures will probably exceed 35°C. Where on earth would be the source for such hot weather in that location?? -- Paul Hyett, Cheltenham (change 'invalid83261' to 'blueyonder' to email me) |
#7
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![]() "Paul Hyett" wrote in message ... In uk.sci.weather on Sat, 26 May 2007, Tudor Hughes wrote : Meanwhile, in NW Russia, eg St Petersburg, temperatures will probably exceed 35°C. Where on earth would be the source for such hot weather in that location?? That huge land mass to the south, presumably. Given the right wind direction and suitably hot air from far to the south I can imagine it could get pretty hot up there. Don't temps sometimes get to 30C in Siberia in mid-summer? Still, above 35C that far north in late May seems pushing it a little..... -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#8
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![]() "Martin Rowley" wrote in message .. Just tried to work out what sort of rainfall we'd get here (Bracknell) based on latest output as far as I can see them: GFS deterministic implies ~15mm by end Monday .... latest run (12Z) has produced much higher totals - mainly because it thinks that the northern arc(s) of rain will stall somewhere in this neck of the woods! Whatever happens, not a particularly pleasant couple of days. Martin. -- Martin Rowley Bracknell |
#9
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Col wrote:
"Paul Hyett" wrote in message ... In uk.sci.weather on Sat, 26 May 2007, Tudor Hughes wrote : Meanwhile, in NW Russia, eg St Petersburg, temperatures will probably exceed 35°C. Where on earth would be the source for such hot weather in that location?? That huge land mass to the south, presumably. Given the right wind direction and suitably hot air from far to the south I can imagine it could get pretty hot up there. Don't temps sometimes get to 30C in Siberia in mid-summer? Still, above 35C that far north in late May seems pushing it a little..... I recall a three-week spell one June almost forty years ago when north Norway, Finland, Russia, had max temperatures into the 30s. Minima were in the mid-20s. Here, it was dull, wet, and temperatures struggled to get into double figures. -- Graham P Davis Bracknell, Berks., UK Send e-mails to "newsman" as mails to "newsboy" are ignored. |
#10
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In uk.sci.weather on Sat, 26 May 2007, Col
wrote : Meanwhile, in NW Russia, eg St Petersburg, temperatures will probably exceed 35°C. Where on earth would be the source for such hot weather in that location?? That huge land mass to the south, presumably. Given the right wind direction and suitably hot air from far to the south I can imagine it could get pretty hot up there. But on the pressure maps I've seen, the wind direction there is not from the south. -- Paul Hyett, Cheltenham (change 'invalid83261' to 'blueyonder' to email me) |
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