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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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![]() "John Hall" wrote in message ... In article , Lawrence13 writes: There wasn't a lot of snow in the SE in the 30's either even though a cold decade. Going by your next two sentences, did you mean the 1970s? If my memory serves me well I can only remember 1970 at Christmas and 78/79. There may have been some falls in rural areas in other years but only those two years stand out for snow in SE London. And in Surrey too. The winters from 1970-1 to 1975-6 were all mild, and 1974-5 was exceptionally so. Then the winters turned successively colder over the next three years. February 1978 had a notable blizzard in the SW (probably the worst in that region since March, 1891), but the snow didn't reach Surrey or London (even though the forecast on the preceding evening had been for it to do so). Yes, I've heard about that. It's a good job this group didn't exist back then, Lawrence would have been on suicide watch when that one failed to happen ![]() -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#2
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On Oct 19, 7:09*pm, "Col" wrote:
"John Hall" wrote in message ... In article , Lawrence13 writes: There wasn't a lot of snow in the SE in the 30's either even though a cold decade. Going by your next two sentences, did you mean the 1970s? If my memory serves me well I can only remember 1970 at Christmas and 78/79. There may have been some falls in rural areas in other years but only those two years stand out for snow in SE London. And in Surrey too. The winters from 1970-1 to 1975-6 were all mild, and 1974-5 was exceptionally so. Then the winters turned successively colder over the next three years. February 1978 had a notable blizzard in the SW (probably the worst in that region since March, 1891), but the snow didn't reach Surrey or London (even though the forecast on the preceding evening had been for it to do so). Yes, I've heard about that. It's a good job this group didn't exist back then, Lawrence would have been on suicide watch when that one failed to happen ![]() -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - How do you know I wasn't and I'm talking from beyond the grave whooooooo. and no replies saying that you sound like you are ;-) |
#3
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Lawrence13 wrote:
On Oct 19, 7:09 pm, "Col" wrote: Yes, I've heard about that. It's a good job this group didn't exist back then, Lawrence would have been on suicide watch when that one failed to happen ![]() -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - How do you know I wasn't and I'm talking from beyond the grave whooooooo. and no replies saying that you sound like you are ;-) Just the one foot, just the one ![]() -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#4
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On Wed, 19 Oct 2011 19:09:02 +0100, Col wrote:
"John Hall" wrote in message ... And in Surrey too. The winters from 1970-1 to 1975-6 were all mild, and 1974-5 was exceptionally so. Then the winters turned successively colder over the next three years. February 1978 had a notable blizzard in the SW (probably the worst in that region since March, 1891), but the snow didn't reach Surrey or London (even though the forecast on the preceding evening had been for it to do so). Yes, I've heard about that. It's a good job this group didn't exist back then, Lawrence would have been on suicide watch when that one failed to happen ![]() I recall a similar blizzard near that time but 1978 would have been too early. I reckon the one I'm thinking of would have happened a year later. Whatever year it was, I took wellington boots to work in the morning so as to be ready for the trudge home through the deep snow. As soon as I saw the charts in the Met Office entrance hall, I thought, "it ain't gonna happen!" According to the thickness pattern, the low appeared to be situated in the left exit of one jet and the right entrance to another and would be steered SE into France and miss us. Which is what happened. A while later, I reran analyses and forecasts, modifying data, and produced a report on what I'd found which, if I remember rightly, was very little. Although it was obvious to me from the charts that morning that the snow would miss us, I couldn't tweak the data going into the Rectangle model to provide the correct answer. -- Graham Davis, Bracknell Whilst it's true that money can't buy you happiness, at least you can be miserable in comfort. Newsreader for Windows, Mac, Unix family: http://pan.rebelbase.com/ |
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