Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
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. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well! I can't ignore that, as my forecast criteria have been triggered
by cross-model agreement and consistency from both the gfs and the ECM today: ** At T240, on 3rd Sept, the UK will be bathed in a warm airstream, with a continental feed. Higher pressure will be over, or to the east of the UK and lower pressure will be kept out in the Atlantic, or towards Iceland, by the bocking high. This situation will have been preceded by a period of dry and settled weather, starting towards the end of the last week in August and including the Bank Holiday. ** Short and simple. I don't see an early autumn at all. The unsettled weather will continue this week, but by early September, there will be (questionable, for sure!) talk of an "Indian summer" (whatever that actually is!) . Autumn will have been postponed. T. On the 4th, Manchester will be experiencing warm and settled weather. |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() you cant postpone a season. u try forecasting it. oh wait u cant. can u? your not qualified not a forecaster no history no reputation no ****ing brains. back to school next week for you ****head? usw will be quiet. On 24/08/2010 10:18 PM, Dawlish wrote: Autumn will have been postponed. |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dawlish" wrote in message ... Well! I can't ignore that, as my forecast criteria have been triggered by cross-model agreement and consistency from both the gfs and the ECM today: ** At T240, on 3rd Sept, the UK will be bathed in a warm airstream, with a continental feed. Higher pressure will be over, or to the east of the UK and lower pressure will be kept out in the Atlantic, or towards Iceland, by the bocking high. This situation will have been preceded by a period of dry and settled weather, starting towards the end of the last week in August and including the Bank Holiday. ** Short and simple. I don't see an early autumn at all. The unsettled weather will continue this week, but by early September, there will be (questionable, for sure!) talk of an "Indian summer" (whatever that actually is!) . Autumn will have been postponed. T. On the 4th, Manchester will be experiencing warm and settled weather. Keep following the models Paul, when they change you change. Do you actually have a mind of your own? Things you will never see. "The models are talking rubbish, I think that this is going to happen" Paul Garvey Geography teacher Big 'ead market survey, mori pole, own mind, never follow the safe bet, all round original thinker and genius |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote in message ... Keep following the models Paul, when they change you change. Do you actually have a mind of your own? Surely looking at what the models are saying is an important part of weather forecasting? All Dawlish is doing is looking for consistency at T+240, for those relatively rare occasions when a 10 day forecast has a reasonable chance of being accurate. You can accuse him of 'cherry-picking' the easiest situations of course, but he has always been very upfront about what he is doing, and it simply indicates the fact that forecasting at that range is usually not possible with any degree of accuracy. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The problem is if Dawlish only forecasts when all the models agree at
T240 (which is very rarely), what happens all the other times? I’m off to Manchester on 4th September to watch Muse play in an open air arena at Lanchashire Country Cricket Ground, I need to know whether I need to purchase a full on Sou’wester, a pac-a-mac, shorts & Tshirt or sun cream? It’s no good saying, I can’t provide you with a forecast today because the models don’t agree. I can also look at the models and make a judgement of my own, even if the models don’t agree I would have a go at forecasting and, I’m dismissing the current model output and going for cool (15-17c) with a NW breeze & showers. |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Aug 25, 8:16*am, Teignmouth wrote:
The problem is if Dawlish only forecasts when all the models agree at T240 (which is very rarely), what happens all the other times? I’m off to Manchester on 4th September to watch Muse play in an open air arena at Lanchashire Country Cricket Ground, I need to know whether I need to purchase a full on Sou’wester, a pac-a-mac, shorts & Tshirt or sun cream? It’s no good saying, I can’t provide you with a forecast today because the models don’t agree. I can also look at the models and make a judgement of my own, even if the models don’t agree I would have a go at forecasting and, I’m dismissing the current model output and going for cool (15-17c) with a NW breeze & showers. What do you use as your forecast criteria? |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 25 Aug, 09:18, Dawlish wrote:
On Aug 25, 8:16*am, Teignmouth wrote: The problem is if Dawlish only forecasts when all the models agree at T240 (which is very rarely), what happens all the other times? I’m off to Manchester on 4th September to watch Muse play in an open air arena at Lanchashire Country Cricket Ground, I need to know whether I need to purchase a full on Sou’wester, a pac-a-mac, shorts & Tshirt or sun cream? It’s no good saying, I can’t provide you with a forecast today because the models don’t agree. I can also look at the models and make a judgement of my own, even if the models don’t agree I would have a go at forecasting and, I’m dismissing the current model output and going for cool (15-17c) with a NW breeze & showers. What do you use as your forecast criteria? Everything around me - the sun, the feel of the day the signs in the sky and gut feeling. Usually right for a day or two, which is about all the "scientific" forecasters can manage, and even then they're just as likely to be wrong, and it doesn't cost me anything. Same with alleged man-made climate change - just looking around, and thinking back says (glaringly) that it aint so. All bollox, all a flash in the pan like all the other self-generated scares in recent history. Gives some people a living, I suppose. CK |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wednesday 25 August 2010 08:16, Teignmouth scribbled:
The problem is if Dawlish only forecasts when all the models agree at T240 (which is very rarely), what happens all the other times? I?m off to Manchester on 4th September to watch Muse play in an open air arena at Lanchashire Country Cricket Ground, I need to know whether I need to purchase a full on Sou?wester, a pac-a-mac, shorts & Tshirt or sun cream? All of the above. ;-) It?s no good saying, I can?t provide you with a forecast today because the models don?t agree. If you were a paying customer, then you'd have a point. On my forecasting course, we were told to show certainty when briefing a customer when we secretly didn't have a clue what was going on. I soon broke this rule at an RAF briefing when the situation could have gone one of two ways. They agreed that they'd rather know when I had doubts instead of me mentally tossing a coin and coming down firmly for only one possible outcome. With medium and long-term forecasting, it has always been the case that you can sometimes be confident with a forecast whilst on other occasions, if you were honest, you'd have to admit "I don't know." When I joined te Met Office, that also applied to short-term forecasts. -- Graham Davis, Bracknell, Berks. E-mail: "newsman", not "newsboy". "It pays to keep an open mind, but not so open your brains fall out." - Carl Sagan Pakistan Floods Appeal: http://www.dec.org.uk/ |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Aug 25, 9:37*am, Graham P Davis wrote:
On Wednesday 25 August 2010 08:16, Teignmouth scribbled: The problem is if Dawlish only forecasts when all the models agree at T240 (which is very rarely), what happens all the other times? I?m off to Manchester on 4th September to watch Muse play in an open air arena at Lanchashire Country Cricket Ground, I need to know whether I need to purchase a full on Sou?wester, a pac-a-mac, shorts & Tshirt or sun cream? All of the above. ;-) It?s no good saying, I can?t provide you with a forecast today because the models don?t agree. If you were a paying customer, then you'd have a point. On my forecasting course, we were told to show certainty when briefing a customer when we secretly didn't have a clue what was going on. I soon broke this rule at an RAF briefing when the situation could have gone one of two ways. They agreed that they'd rather know when I had doubts instead of me mentally tossing a coin and coming down firmly for only one possible outcome. With medium and long-term forecasting, it has always been the case that you can sometimes be confident with a forecast whilst on other occasions, if you were honest, you'd have to admit "I don't know." When I joined te Met Office, that also applied to short-term forecasts. -- Graham Davis, Bracknell, Berks. *E-mail: "newsman", not "newsboy". "It pays to keep an open mind, but not so open your brains fall out." - Carl Sagan Pakistan Floods Appeal:http://www.dec.org.uk/ Absolutely true. I wish the MetO had that honesty; the relationship with it's customers would improve. A month ago, the outlook for the end of August was dry, warm and settled for England, especially for the SE. They couldn't foresee this short breakdown to zonal in the south and they'd have been much better off being honest about their lack of any kind of certainty. What's hoped for, at the MetO is that people will have forgotten the original forecast and no records are kept. There are certainly no records of forecast accuracy, at a month's distance, in the public domian, which is odd, as the MetO said that a shorter, 1 month forecast, was exactly what the public were wanting, when they abandoned the seasonal forecasts following last summer's debacle. The MetO treats it's audience with an expert's contempt for the view of a backward pupil. Unfortunately the pupil, in this case, knows it is being treated that way, as it is not quite as backward as the MetO would like to think it is. This attitude really gets in the way of customer relations, which is a shame, because the great British public then feel that the single foremost forecasting agency, for the North Atlantic, bar none. is somehow not very good. That's just rubbish, as the UKMO is very, very good. It's just limited in it's accuracy by present numerical modelling. No- one could, or does, do better and it does the very best that is possible with the present information. So tell the public that! Every now and then, like Graham did, tell the customer there are real doubts in the forecast that has been issued, instead of constantly covering those doubts up with an immense and continuing show of hubris. |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 25 Aug 2010 at 00:16:21, Teignmouth wrote
in uk.sci.weather : The problem is if Dawlish only forecasts when all the models agree at T240 (which is very rarely), what happens all the other times? I’m off to Manchester on 4th September to watch Muse play in an open air arena at Lanchashire Country Cricket Ground, I need to know whether I need to purchase a full on Sou’wester, a pac-a-mac, shorts & Tshirt or sun cream? What, no ear plugs? ![]() -- Paul Hyett, Cheltenham (change 'invalid83261' to 'blueyonder' to email me) |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
** Forecast: Warm and settled for much of the UK at T+240 on Wed 21st August.** | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
Attention! Forecast out to T240, becoming more settled generally | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
High pressure at T240. Quiet and settled. | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
Forecast; Warm and settled at T240 for many. | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) | |||
Forecast for 3rd August at T240. Cool, showery and low pressure incharge. | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) |