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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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#11
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In article ,
Bob Martin writes: in 237524 20100304 101958 John Hall wrote: In article , Bob Martin writes: For sheer depth of snow this year's was beaten on 6th April 2008. We had over 20cm in 3 hours but it had all gone by late afternoon. I'm just north of Waterlooville. Wow! That's impressive. In Cranleigh, Surrey, for a short while the snow was some of the most intense I've seen. It was also remarkable for being powdery snow blowing in the wind, rather than the large, wet flakes one might expect at that time of year. But it only lasted for about an hour here, between 8am and 9am, so we only had about a third as much as you, and the last traces had gone by about 2pm. Just checked my photos and it started at 8:05 and 70% of it had fallen by 9am. So almost the same as you, except it continued at a reduced rate until 10:30 So the first 14cm or so fell in just under an hour. That's truly remarkable. -- John Hall "Acting is merely the art of keeping a large group of people from coughing." Sir Ralph Richardson (1902-83) |
#12
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in 237527 20100304 104430 John Hall wrote:
In article , Bob Martin writes: in 237524 20100304 101958 John Hall wrote: In article , Bob Martin writes: For sheer depth of snow this year's was beaten on 6th April 2008. We had over 20cm in 3 hours but it had all gone by late afternoon. I'm just north of Waterlooville. Wow! That's impressive. In Cranleigh, Surrey, for a short while the snow was some of the most intense I've seen. It was also remarkable for being powdery snow blowing in the wind, rather than the large, wet flakes one might expect at that time of year. But it only lasted for about an hour here, between 8am and 9am, so we only had about a third as much as you, and the last traces had gone by about 2pm. Just checked my photos and it started at 8:05 and 70% of it had fallen by 9am. So almost the same as you, except it continued at a reduced rate until 10:30 So the first 14cm or so fell in just under an hour. That's truly remarkable. Yes, probably heaviest I've ever seen and I remember '63. My son lives 2km away from me, just east of Waterlooville, and in April 2008 and January this year he had less than half the snow that we had. Altitude difference is just 10m. |
#13
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On Mar 4, 11:48*am, Bob Martin wrote:
in 237527 20100304 104430 John Hall wrote: In article , Bob Martin writes: in 237524 20100304 101958 John Hall wrote: In article , Bob Martin writes: For sheer depth of snow this year's was beaten on 6th April 2008. We had over 20cm in 3 hours but it had all gone by late afternoon. I'm just north of Waterlooville. Wow! That's impressive. In Cranleigh, Surrey, for a short while the snow was some of the most intense I've seen. It was also remarkable for being powdery snow blowing in the wind, rather than the large, wet flakes one might expect at that time of year. But it only lasted for about an hour here, between 8am and 9am, so we only had about a third as much as you, and the last traces had gone by about 2pm. Just checked my photos and it started at 8:05 and 70% of it had fallen by 9am. So almost the same as you, except it continued at a reduced rate until 10:30 So the first 14cm or so fell in just under an hour. That's truly remarkable. Yes, probably heaviest I've ever seen and I remember '63. My son lives 2km away from me, just east of Waterlooville, and in April 2008 * * and January this year he had less than half the snow that we had. Altitude difference is just 10m. I remember that one as well, only a small amount in Southampton and indeed in Portsmouth, however it was much heavier up near Petersfield. Don't remember a lot in the Rowlands Castle area - I travelled by train to Liphook that day, again deliberately to see the snow. Being April though it was already melting fast by 11am and mostly gone by about 2. Well before sunset it had just about all disappeared. Nick |
#14
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On Thu, 4 Mar 2010 05:33:53 -0800 (PST), Nick
wrote: On Mar 4, 11:48*am, Bob Martin wrote: in 237527 20100304 104430 John Hall wrote: In article , Bob Martin writes: in 237524 20100304 101958 John Hall wrote: In article , Bob Martin writes: For sheer depth of snow this year's was beaten on 6th April 2008. We had over 20cm in 3 hours but it had all gone by late afternoon. I'm just north of Waterlooville. Wow! That's impressive. In Cranleigh, Surrey, for a short while the snow was some of the most intense I've seen. It was also remarkable for being powdery snow blowing in the wind, rather than the large, wet flakes one might expect at that time of year. But it only lasted for about an hour here, between 8am and 9am, so we only had about a third as much as you, and the last traces had gone by about 2pm. Just checked my photos and it started at 8:05 and 70% of it had fallen by 9am. So almost the same as you, except it continued at a reduced rate until 10:30 So the first 14cm or so fell in just under an hour. That's truly remarkable. Yes, probably heaviest I've ever seen and I remember '63. My son lives 2km away from me, just east of Waterlooville, and in April 2008 * * and January this year he had less than half the snow that we had. Altitude difference is just 10m. I remember that one as well, only a small amount in Southampton and indeed in Portsmouth, however it was much heavier up near Petersfield. Don't remember a lot in the Rowlands Castle area - I travelled by train to Liphook that day, again deliberately to see the snow. Being April though it was already melting fast by 11am and mostly gone by about 2. Well before sunset it had just about all disappeared. Same here in Fareham, my notes say "soft hail then heavy snow 7 - 8 am - 2.5 inches. 100% snow cover at 9 am GMT - slowly melting to 5% in the shade at end of day." Maximum temperature was a mere 6 degrees C that day, pretty cold for April, hereabouts! -- Dave |
#15
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In article ,
Bob Martin writes: in 237527 20100304 104430 John Hall wrote: In article , Bob Martin writes: in 237524 20100304 101958 John Hall wrote: In article , Bob Martin writes: For sheer depth of snow this year's was beaten on 6th April 2008. We had over 20cm in 3 hours but it had all gone by late afternoon. I'm just north of Waterlooville. Wow! That's impressive. In Cranleigh, Surrey, for a short while the snow was some of the most intense I've seen. It was also remarkable for being powdery snow blowing in the wind, rather than the large, wet flakes one might expect at that time of year. But it only lasted for about an hour here, between 8am and 9am, so we only had about a third as much as you, and the last traces had gone by about 2pm. Just checked my photos and it started at 8:05 and 70% of it had fallen by 9am. So almost the same as you, except it continued at a reduced rate until 10:30 So the first 14cm or so fell in just under an hour. That's truly remarkable. Yes, probably heaviest I've ever seen and I remember '63. My son lives 2km away from me, just east of Waterlooville, and in April 2008 and January this year he had less than half the snow that we had. Altitude difference is just 10m. I've often noticed just have much difference there can be in snow accumulation over quite small distances. I suspect that the same thing sometimes happens with rainfall amounts, only then it's far less obvious. -- John Hall "Acting is merely the art of keeping a large group of people from coughing." Sir Ralph Richardson (1902-83) |
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