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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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#41
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On Jun 9, 9:09*am, "Col" wrote:
"Dave Cornwell" wrote in message ... Dartmoor Will wrote: ================= Hull :-O That's not the north, north midlands maybe! Mind you I come from south Manchester and that's barely north either, but it is :-) Will -- ..... and Hull is a good way North of Manchester actually Will.;-) It always surprises me how far north places on that side are. It's something to do with East Anglia sticking out so much and being asociated with the S.E I think. And because of the alignnent of the so-called 'east' coast, just how far west some places are that are considered to be in the east. Edinburgh is on the same longitude as Liverpool. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl ============================ So is Oujda, more or less, but it's still in eastern Morocco. Stephen. |
#42
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On Jun 9, 12:06*am, "Dave Liquorice"
wrote: On Fri, 8 Jun 2012 22:12:48 +0100, Dartmoor Will wrote: Hull :-O That's not the north, north midlands maybe! Aye. Mind you I come from south Manchester and that's barely north either, but it is :-) I don't go south of Manchester if I can help it, it's well over 100 miles and needs 2 1/2 hrs driving. The map has "Here be Dragons" on it once you get past Stoke (160 miles, 3hrs+). Trouble is it gets mildy windy and rains a bit and the "southern poofters" go into panic the world is about to end mode. Meaning that they might get slighly wet when outside for the 30 seconds it takes to get from the front door to the car. When it gets windy up here, you have to be very careful to a) not get knocked off balance b) if opening a car door hang onto it very firmly or the wind will have damn good try at folding it right back against the side of the car or at the very least half drag you out. As for the rain, that hurts so much you really don't want to face it. -- Cheers Dave. Nr Garrigill, Cumbria. 421m ASL. ========================== Are we still doing this? We did make a bit of unnecessary fuss in the south about that breeze in '87, I suppose. The geographical consensus seems to be that most of Wales is in 'the south', so I guess those poor souls being airlifted from the floods today are a bunch of poofters, too. Shall I join in and start jeering about whippets and flat caps and stuff? Mind you, I can subvert that stereotype because I have both. I don't keep coal in the bath, though. Could we move on from this nonsense? Or are we to 'lighten up'? Stephen. Rochester, Kent. In the South. |
#43
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![]() "Stephen Davenport" wrote in message ... On Jun 9, 9:09 am, "Col" wrote: "Dave Cornwell" wrote in message ... Dartmoor Will wrote: ================= Hull :-O That's not the north, north midlands maybe! Mind you I come from south Manchester and that's barely north either, but it is :-) Will -- ..... and Hull is a good way North of Manchester actually Will.;-) It always surprises me how far north places on that side are. It's something to do with East Anglia sticking out so much and being asociated with the S.E I think. And because of the alignnent of the so-called 'east' coast, just how far west some places are that are considered to be in the east. Edinburgh is on the same longitude as Liverpool. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl ============================ So is Oujda, more or less, but it's still in eastern Morocco. Stephen. I was told as a lad that if you travel due north from Margate the first landfall would be Siberia,see you can fool 'some of the people some of the time ......' RonB |
#44
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![]() "Anne Burgess" wrote in message ... I consider 'The North' to start as you leave Staffordshire and cross into Cheshire. Col Acha, awa' wi ye! It's all relative. As far as I'm concerned 'The South' starts as you leave Inverness-shire and cross into Perthshire on the A9 at Drumochter. The North **of England** starts when you cross the Tweed, or Carter Bar, or pass Gretna heading southwards. :-) It is indeed all relative, but the term 'The North' tends to refer to northern England, rather than the UK as a whole. Scotland isn't in 'The North' at all, Scotland is just Scotland ![]() Still no sign of gales here. Almost flat calm, 8/8, 10ºC, boring. Heavy rain here, quite breezy. Very unpleasant to be 'out and about' in. One of those situations where the rain hangs on in this area of NW England for some hours after it has cleared from the rest of the country. Just driving in from the Irish Sea..... -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#45
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![]() I consider 'The North' to start as you leave Staffordshire and cross into Cheshire. When you drive north you regularly see road signs saying "The North" but you just keep going, they never tell you when you have arrived, so confusing! "The North" is like chasing rainbows you never reach it. Joe That's because north is a direction, not a place. Without a qualifier, like 'the North of England' or 'the North of Scotland', 'The North' doesn't exist. Neither, of course, does 'The South', which also appears on road signs. 'The South of England' or 'the South of France' or even 'the South of Scotland' all exist. I regard the North of England as comprising Cheshire, Lancashire, Yorkshire, Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmorland and County Durham. Being a survival of a bygone age, I don't do these newfangled modern counties. :-) Anne |
#46
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I consider 'The North' to start as you leave Staffordshire
and cross into Cheshire. Col Acha, awa' wi ye! It's all relative. As far as I'm concerned 'The South' starts as you leave Inverness-shire and cross into Perthshire on the A9 at Drumochter. The North **of England** starts when you cross the Tweed, or Carter Bar, or pass Gretna heading southwards. :-) It is indeed all relative, but the term 'The North' tends to refer to northern England, rather than the UK as a whole. Scotland isn't in 'The North' at all, Scotland is just Scotland ![]() Col That only applies if you are in England ! This is, as already mentioned **UK**.sci.weather :-) Anne |
#47
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![]() "Anne Burgess" wrote in message ... I consider 'The North' to start as you leave Staffordshire and cross into Cheshire. Col Acha, awa' wi ye! It's all relative. As far as I'm concerned 'The South' starts as you leave Inverness-shire and cross into Perthshire on the A9 at Drumochter. The North **of England** starts when you cross the Tweed, or Carter Bar, or pass Gretna heading southwards. :-) It is indeed all relative, but the term 'The North' tends to refer to northern England, rather than the UK as a whole. Scotland isn't in 'The North' at all, Scotland is just Scotland ![]() Col That only applies if you are in England ! This is, as already mentioned **UK**.sci.weather :-) It is indeed UK sci.weather but we are talking about the term 'The North' which is generally accepted as being in realtion to northern England, the road signs etc. And yes, it's 'generally accepted' as meaning this because far more people live in England, but rightly or wrongly, that's the way it is. If people in Scotland want to say 'The South' starts in Perthshire, fair enough but that would only make sense between two Scots who were clearly talking about their own country. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#48
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It is indeed all relative, but the term 'The North' tends to
refer to northern England, rather than the UK as a whole. Scotland isn't in 'The North' at all, Scotland is just Scotland ![]() That only applies if you are in England ! This is, as already mentioned **UK**.sci.weather :-) It is indeed UK sci.weather but we are talking about the term 'The North' which is generally accepted as being in realtion to northern England, the road signs etc. Col It's so delightful to talk to people who not only know that 'UK' and 'England' are not synonymous, but who actually understand the difference VBG Anne |
#49
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![]() "Anne Burgess" wrote in message ... It is indeed all relative, but the term 'The North' tends to refer to northern England, rather than the UK as a whole. Scotland isn't in 'The North' at all, Scotland is just Scotland ![]() That only applies if you are in England ! This is, as already mentioned **UK**.sci.weather :-) It is indeed UK sci.weather but we are talking about the term 'The North' which is generally accepted as being in realtion to northern England, the road signs etc. Col It's so delightful to talk to people who not only know that 'UK' and 'England' are not synonymous, but who actually understand the difference VBG You wouldn't like talking to Americans then, I'm sure some of them think that Scotland is *in* England ![]() -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#50
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On Jun 9, 11:43*am, "Anne Burgess"
wrote: It is indeed all relative, but the term 'The North' tends to refer to northern England, rather than the UK as a whole. Scotland isn't in 'The North' at all, Scotland is just Scotland ![]() That only applies if you are in England ! This is, as already mentioned **UK**.sci.weather :-) It is indeed UK sci.weather but we are talking about the term 'The North' which is generally accepted as being in realtion to northern England, the road signs etc. Col It's so delightful to talk to people who not only know that 'UK' and 'England' are not synonymous, but who actually understand the difference VBG Anne In Yorkshire's glory days-"there's more acres in't Yorkshire than words in't Bible!"- the entire county was most definitely up North. Since its truncation into three pointless little bits this may no longer be true. Any one remember that sham district "Humberside"?. It was designed to unify the Humber estuary with the building of the Humber Bridge. You might just as well have tried to unify the Lake District with Dumfriesshire. Although you could see S****horpe's blast furnaces from Hull, it was a sixty mile trip via Goole to get to it, and it showed- different accent, different SOH, and a rather self-satisfied approach to life. The "S****horpe Question" was not just relevant to computers! I'm delighted to say the Humber Bridge hasn't made the slightest difference, probably because no-one can afford to use it, and the Humber still marks the boundary between the North and the Midlands The other boundary is Swarkestone Bridge, crossing the Trent six miles S. of Derby. Look N. into the Peak District, look S. into the Midlands. It's no coincidence that Prince Charlie's Highlanders got to this point, looked across the fat flat arable Midlands, turned round and went home. As for Cheshire being in the North, it most definitely ain't! It's a Midland country and always has been, although now it is full of overpaid actors and footballers who regard themselves as gentry, one could say it is spiritually in the South. |
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