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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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Lat N 56° 06' 05"
Long W 4° 50' 15" National Grid NS236935 82m ASL The Snowdon Horseshoe from the north-east, taken mid-morning of the 17th:- https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...4/P1020267.jpg (%)= percentage of twelve year mean. (+ or -)= difference from twelve year mean. (...)= since August 2002 TEMPERATURE (°C) Mean Max: 22.1 (+1.5) Mean: 17.0 (+0.9) Mean Min: 11.9 (+0.3) Highest Max: 31.7 (+3.8), (25th), the highest temperature... Highest Min: 15.7 (+0.3), (19th) Lowest Max: 15.0 (0.0), (4th) Lowest Min: 6.8 (-0.5), (5th) No. of Days max =0: 0 No. of Days min =0: 0 Warmest Day Mean: 22.9 (+2.2) (31.7/14.1, 25th) Coolest Day Mean: 11.4 (-1.0) (15.0/7.9, 4th) PRECIPITATION (mm) Total: 137.0, (108%) Wettest Day: 31.4 (+6.2) (12th) Days 20mm: 3 (+2) Days 2mm: 11 (-2) Days 0.2mm: 19 (-2) Days 0.2mm: 12 (+2), (6th, 9th-11th, 15th, 17th, 18th, 21st-25th) Year to 31.07: 1274.6, (129%), the most for any year... BAROMETRIC PRESSURE (mb) Max: 1024.2, (-1.4, 22nd) Mean: 1008.7 (-0.6) Min: 993.2 (+0.1, 4th) WIND (mph) Avge Wind: 2.3 (-0.5) Max Gust: 31 (0), (19:00, 18th) Windiest day avge: 5.8 (-0.8), (4th) Calmest day avge: 0.6 (0), (22nd) Davis Weather Monitor II and Davis WeatherLink 6.0.0 -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. By Loch Long, twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
#2
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Alan White wrote:
Lat N 56° 06' 05" Long W 4° 50' 15" National Grid NS236935 82m ASL The Snowdon Horseshoe from the north-east, taken mid-morning of the 17th:- https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...4/P1020267.jpg (%)= percentage of twelve year mean. (+ or -)= difference from twelve year mean. (...)= since August 2002 TEMPERATURE (°C) Mean Max: 22.1 (+1.5) That must be one hell of a micro-climate you've got going up there if your mean July max is 20.6°C and mine is only around 19°C! -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl Snow videos: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3QvmL4UWBmHFMKWiwYm_gg |
#3
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Col wrote:
Alan White wrote: Lat N 560 06' 05" Long W 40 50' 15" National Grid NS236935 82m ASL The Snowdon Horseshoe from the north-east, taken mid-morning of the 17th:- https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...4/P1020267.jpg (%)= percentage of twelve year mean. (+ or -)= difference from twelve year mean. (...)= since August 2002 TEMPERATURE (0C) Mean Max: 22.1 (+1.5) That must be one hell of a micro-climate you've got going up there if your mean July max is 20.60C and mine is only around 190C! I haven't done the final July figures for here yet, Col, but the mean daily max is going to be around 22 deg. Your 19 deg looks to be very low. -- Norman Lynagh Tideswell, Derbyshire 303m a.s.l. http://peakdistrictweather.org |
#4
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Norman wrote:
Col wrote: Alan White wrote: Lat N 560 06' 05" Long W 40 50' 15" National Grid NS236935 82m ASL The Snowdon Horseshoe from the north-east, taken mid-morning of the 17th:- https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...4/P1020267.jpg (%)= percentage of twelve year mean. (+ or -)= difference from twelve year mean. (...)= since August 2002 TEMPERATURE (0C) Mean Max: 22.1 (+1.5) That must be one hell of a micro-climate you've got going up there if your mean July max is 20.60C and mine is only around 190C! I haven't done the final July figures for here yet, Col, but the mean daily max is going to be around 22 deg. Your 19 deg looks to be very low. Sorry, Col. I misread your post. I thought you were referring to the figures for July this year, not the July averages. Please disregard!!!!!!!!!!!!! -- Norman Lynagh Tideswell, Derbyshire 303m a.s.l. http://peakdistrictweather.org |
#5
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Norman wrote:
Col wrote: Alan White wrote: Lat N 560 06' 05" Long W 40 50' 15" National Grid NS236935 82m ASL The Snowdon Horseshoe from the north-east, taken mid-morning of the 17th:- https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...4/P1020267.jpg (%)= percentage of twelve year mean. (+ or -)= difference from twelve year mean. (...)= since August 2002 TEMPERATURE (0C) Mean Max: 22.1 (+1.5) That must be one hell of a micro-climate you've got going up there if your mean July max is 20.60C and mine is only around 190C! I haven't done the final July figures for here yet, Col, but the mean daily max is going to be around 22 deg. Your 19 deg looks to be very low. 19°C is what I would expect as the average for around here, I do not have enough data to give a meaningful figure for my location. The average max for July this year was 21.5°C. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl Snow videos: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3QvmL4UWBmHFMKWiwYm_gg |
#6
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On Fri, 1 Aug 2014 13:11:01 +0100, "Col"
wrote: That must be one hell of a micro-climate you've got going up there if your mean July max is 20.6°C and mine is only around 19°C! Er, yes. -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. By Loch Long, twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
#7
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Alan White wrote:
On Fri, 1 Aug 2014 13:11:01 +0100, "Col" wrote: That must be one hell of a micro-climate you've got going up there if your mean July max is 20.6°C and mine is only around 19°C! Er, yes. Well care to explain?? -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl Snow videos: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3QvmL4UWBmHFMKWiwYm_gg |
#8
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On Fri, 1 Aug 2014 14:02:54 +0100, "Col"
wrote: Well care to explain?? I think the best I can do is to refer you to my post of the 25th of July which was queried by Will but I only retain posts for 48 hours so I don't have his reply to hand. A search of the archives should find it. I've done a bit of digging but can find nothing authoritative which gives a confirming or better explanation but I can only report what I record. Our nearest official reporting stations are Glasgow Airport and Glasgow Bishopton both of which have a much more open aspect than do we. In sunny weather in the summer our recorded temperatures are consistently higher than both. Having said that, they are currently 20°C and 19°C respectively and we are 19.8° For what it's worth, here are our recorded mean max temperatures for the last twelve Julys:- 2003 20.9 2004 18.8 2005 20.0 2006 23.6 2007 19.5 2008 20.2 2009 20.8 2010 18.6 2011 21.4 2012 18.3 2013 22.9 2014 22.1 It would be interesting to see yours. Next time we have an extreme, I'll post both the Glasgow's and ours. HTH but it would be nice to have some 'official' confirmation. -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. By Loch Long, twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
#9
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![]() I think the best I can do is to refer you to my post of the 25th of July which was queried by Will but I only retain posts for 48 hours so I don't have his reply to hand. A search of the archives should find it. Here is Will's resonse to that post I thought the idea of a walled garden was to give shelter from wind and also allow growing space for climbers etc like peaches. It will also give some added warmth in the evenings due to conduction from the walls. But hot air rises so I'm not sure the idea of warm air becoming "trapped" is correct? More likely is that the surrounding land is re-radiating and is more of a "bowl" effect where there is less mixing and a lot of heat going in? I have certainly been in western Scotland when the heat has been amazing looking out over an azure blue sea - just like the Med, which I too have never visited :-) Graham |
#10
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On Fri, 1 Aug 2014 11:17:13 -0700 (PDT), Graham Easterling
wrote: I think the best I can do is to refer you to my post of the 25th of July which was queried by Will but I only retain posts for 48 hours so I don't have his reply to hand. A search of the archives should find it. Here is Will's resonse to that post I thought the idea of a walled garden was to give shelter from wind and also allow growing space for climbers etc like peaches. It will also give some added warmth in the evenings due to conduction from the walls. But hot air rises so I'm not sure the idea of warm air becoming "trapped" is correct? More likely is that the surrounding land is re-radiating and is more of a "bowl" effect where there is less mixing and a lot of heat going in? I have certainly been in western Scotland when the heat has been amazing looking out over an azure blue sea - just like the Med, which I too have never visited :-) Graham Thanks, Graham. -- Alan White Mozilla Firefox and Forte Agent. By Loch Long, twenty-eight miles NW of Glasgow, Scotland. Webcam and weather:- http://windycroft.co.uk/weather |
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