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Old December 30th 07, 01:32 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Very cold easterly in the New Year?

In message , Dave
Cornwell writes
------------------------
Trouble is Denis - you miss the point. Our hobby is the weather - collecting
weather if you like. Are you telling me as a stamp collector you would go
round ripping 1st class stamps off every envelope you came across or if you
were a bird watcher you travel the country to get more pictures of robins?
We tend to like rarities, some like cold spells, others heatwaves, others
tornados. We don't decry your hobbies if you have any so let us have ours.

Cheers, Dave


Fair comment Dave, point taken. Whilst maybe not quite so keen as some
of you good people, I take more than a passing interest in the weather
too. It's just the obsession here with snow which I find amusing, most
of them too have not the slightest interest in extremes of hot weather,
which is to be cursed.

Must admit I dislike extreme cold but also there's much more of interest
in an average winter than mere extreme cold. People here moan about
westerlies, 'boring' is the usual response. Yet where I live in the
extremities of our islands' west coasts, Atlantic gales bring the most
exciting weather of the winter. A 60 knot or so storm is fantastic,
massive seas, literally breath taking airflow, there's nothing boring
about it. Far more exciting to me than snow flakes drifting down,
followed by a granted beautiful landscape but then comes the dreary bit
being cut off for days. Still don't suppose that sort of thing happens
too much in Greater London or Kent etc.. Don't suppose the excitement
of a southerly or westerly gale has much impact there either.

Cheers
--

Denis

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Old December 30th 07, 04:18 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Very cold easterly in the New Year?

On Dec 30, 1:32*am, Denis Allen wrote:
In message , Dave
Cornwell writes------------------------
Trouble is Denis - you miss the point. Our hobby is the weather - collecting
weather if you like. Are you telling me as a stamp collector you would go
round ripping 1st class stamps off every envelope you came across or if you
were a bird watcher you travel the country to get more pictures of robins?
We tend to like rarities, some like cold spells, others heatwaves, others
tornados. We don't decry your hobbies if you have any so let us have ours..


Cheers, Dave


Fair comment Dave, point taken. *Whilst maybe not quite so keen as some
of you good people, *I take more than a passing interest in the weather
too. *It's just the obsession here with snow which I find amusing, most
of them too have not the slightest interest in extremes of hot weather,
which is to be cursed.

Must admit I dislike extreme cold but also there's much more of interest
in an average winter than mere extreme cold. * People here moan about
westerlies, 'boring' is the usual response. *Yet where I live in the
extremities of our islands' west coasts, Atlantic gales bring the most
exciting weather of the winter. *A 60 knot or so storm is fantastic,
massive seas, literally breath taking airflow, there's nothing boring
about it. Far more exciting to me than snow flakes drifting down,
followed by a granted beautiful landscape but then comes the dreary bit
being cut off for days. Still don't suppose that sort of thing happens
too much in Greater London or Kent etc.. *Don't suppose the excitement
of a southerly or westerly gale has much impact there either.

Cheers
--

Denis


I find persistent easterlies both boring and nasty.
Persistent tropical maritime SW'lies can be boring, too, but are much
less nasty. Generally, however the weather is more active with a
westerly regime and there is more to keep the interest up. There is
no doubt that there is an overall assumption on this group that cold
weather, preferably with snow, is "good" or we wouldn't see words like
"exciting" and "promising" in its anticipation or "failure" and "damp
squib" if it fails to materialise. Considering the disruption to
transport that even a small amount of snow causes these days due to
the vast increase in road traffic plus the fact that most people like
to be warm rather than cold, it all seems a bit perverse to hope for
snow etc for anyone over the age of say 30. I have lived through a
number of cold winters (1947, though I don't remember it,
1963,1979,1985-7) and don't want another one. They are bloody
miserable. Hot weather is different. I can find it physically
uncomfortable but it can lend an exotic, almost sleazy feel to the
place which I rather like. Also, of course, it may go bang, and
nobody minds that, do they?

Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey.

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Old December 30th 07, 10:20 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Very cold easterly in the New Year?


"Denis Allen" wrote in message
...
In message , Dave
Cornwell writes
------------------------
Trouble is Denis - you miss the point. Our hobby is the weather -
collecting
weather if you like. Are you telling me as a stamp collector you would go
round ripping 1st class stamps off every envelope you came across or if
you
were a bird watcher you travel the country to get more pictures of robins?
We tend to like rarities, some like cold spells, others heatwaves, others
tornados. We don't decry your hobbies if you have any so let us have ours.

Cheers, Dave


Fair comment Dave, point taken. Whilst maybe not quite so keen as some of
you good people, I take more than a passing interest in the weather too.
It's just the obsession here with snow which I find amusing, most of them
too have not the slightest interest in extremes of hot weather, which is
to be cursed.

Must admit I dislike extreme cold but also there's much more of interest
in an average winter than mere extreme cold. People here moan about
westerlies, 'boring' is the usual response. Yet where I live in the
extremities of our islands' west coasts, Atlantic gales bring the most
exciting weather of the winter. A 60 knot or so storm is fantastic,
massive seas, literally breath taking airflow, there's nothing boring
about it. Far more exciting to me than snow flakes drifting down, followed
by a granted beautiful landscape but then comes the dreary bit being cut
off for days. Still don't suppose that sort of thing happens too much in
Greater London or Kent etc.. Don't suppose the excitement of a southerly
or westerly gale has much impact there either.

Cheers
--

Denis

------------------------
Fair point also ! I think the cold thing for some (me?) links back to the
variety added to everyday life by the 1962-3 winter and a few other snow
events.
" Don't suppose the excitement of a southerly or westerly gale has much
impact there either" - just a bit in 1987 !

Dave


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Old January 1st 08, 03:24 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Very cold easterly in the New Year?

In message , Dave
Cornwell writes
------------------------
Fair point also ! I think the cold thing for some (me?) links back to the
variety added to everyday life by the 1962-3 winter and a few other snow
events.
" Don't suppose the excitement of a southerly or westerly gale has much
impact there either" - just a bit in 1987 !

Dave




True in 1987 you did have a "bit". Thing is though in the north and
west the wind speeds you experienced in '87 have a tendency to blow in
most winters. It's just that a SE Centric media ignores what goes on
elsewhere.


Cheers
--

Denis
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Old January 1st 08, 07:52 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
Col Col is offline
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Posts: 691
Default Very cold easterly in the New Year?


"Denis Allen" wrote in message
news
In message , Dave
Cornwell writes
------------------------
Fair point also ! I think the cold thing for some (me?) links back to the
variety added to everyday life by the 1962-3 winter and a few other snow
events.
" Don't suppose the excitement of a southerly or westerly gale has much
impact there either" - just a bit in 1987 !

Dave




True in 1987 you did have a "bit". Thing is though in the north and west
the wind speeds you experienced in '87 have a tendency to blow in most
winters. It's just that a SE Centric media ignores what goes on
elsewhere.


Apart from in the most exposed places such as the Western/Nortern
Isles such a storm would be far from normal in Scotland.
No doubt there would be a hint of London centricity but had a
1987 style gale hit Glasgow for example it would still be a
massive national story.
--
Col

Bolton, Lancashire
160m asl




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