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Graham Easterling[_3_] January 11th 15 01:22 PM

Next Thursday!.
 
.. . is now looking very interesting indeed.

The forecast for Sennen at noon shows the surf height of 24' - 39' with a primary swell of 38' combined with a mean wind speed of 55mph (Storm F10)

Even in Penzance, relatively sheltered from the W-SW, F8 with gusts to 70mph are currently predicted.

Certainly one to watch, certainly be interesting to see what John Chappell records at Land's End.

Graham
Penzance

Richard Dixon[_4_] January 11th 15 08:58 PM

Next Thursday!.
 
Graham Easterling wrote in
:

The forecast for Sennen at noon shows the surf height of 24' - 39'
with a primary swell of 38' combined with a mean wind speed of 55mph
(Storm F10)

Even in Penzance, relatively sheltered from the W-SW, F8 with gusts to
70mph are currently predicted.


Very interesting indeed Graham. Models trying to settle on something. I
would be keeping a close look if I lived in Ireland as this seems to be in
the path no matter where the storm goes. Interesting that Met Eireann don't
have anything up for it yet - the Met Office do.

Richard

N_Cook January 11th 15 09:13 PM

Next Thursday!.
 
On 11/01/2015 13:22, Graham Easterling wrote:
.. . is now looking very interesting indeed.

The forecast for Sennen at noon shows the surf height of 24' - 39' with a primary swell of 38' combined with a mean wind speed of 55mph (Storm F10)

Even in Penzance, relatively sheltered from the W-SW, F8 with gusts to 70mph are currently predicted.

Certainly one to watch, certainly be interesting to see what John Chappell records at Land's End.

Graham
Penzance


Lucky the tidal regime is well in the neaps that day

Graham Easterling[_3_] January 12th 15 10:04 AM

Next Thursday!.
 
On Sunday, January 11, 2015 at 9:13:15 PM UTC, N_Cook wrote:
On 11/01/2015 13:22, Graham Easterling wrote:
.. . is now looking very interesting indeed.

The forecast for Sennen at noon shows the surf height of 24' - 39' with a primary swell of 38' combined with a mean wind speed of 55mph (Storm F10)

Even in Penzance, relatively sheltered from the W-SW, F8 with gusts to 70mph are currently predicted.

Certainly one to watch, certainly be interesting to see what John Chappell records at Land's End.

Graham
Penzance


Lucky the tidal regime is well in the neaps that day


Still looks generally as windy, particularly just ahead of the cold front in the south. However forecasts have changed in that the associated depression is now forecast to pass further north.

It is the rather more persistent westerly gales associated with this feature that was forecast to produce the large powerful swells. AS a result the latest forecast shows the swell considerably smaller for Cornwall & SW Ireland. Instead of Sennen at noon forecast to have primary swell height 38', it's now come down to a not uncommon winter height of 23'. That's not too dissimilar to the current swell height.

It's certainly still wild enough down here, http://magicseaweed.com/Live-Sennen-Webcam/65/ You wouldn't want to venture out in that unless you had to, east of the Lizard it's different world at the moment.

Interesting stuff, still last year at this time, after the Jan 6th gale, the beach had done a runner. The difference then was the low was deeper, slow moving & further south http://www.turnstone-cottage.co.uk/J...14%20Swell.pdf That was the biggest swell of last winter. The February ones weren't quite as big, but came from a more damaging direction into populated south coast areas sheltered under more normal condition.

Graham
Penzance

Eskimo Will January 12th 15 10:14 AM

Next Thursday!.
 

"Graham Easterling" wrote in message
...
On Sunday, January 11, 2015 at 9:13:15 PM UTC, N_Cook wrote:
On 11/01/2015 13:22, Graham Easterling wrote:
.. . is now looking very interesting indeed.


Well I have got my eye on the little secondary low Thursday night into
Friday in cold air. That could easily dump a light fall of a couple of
inches of snow to quite low-levels in southern and SW England. Perhaps
heavier falls at altitude. 1000-850 thicknesses are marginal but the system
will come through overnight. Worth watching I think.

Will
--


N_Cook January 12th 15 11:48 AM

Next Thursday!.
 
On 12/01/2015 10:04, Graham Easterling wrote:
On Sunday, January 11, 2015 at 9:13:15 PM UTC, N_Cook wrote:
On 11/01/2015 13:22, Graham Easterling wrote:
.. . is now looking very interesting indeed.

The forecast for Sennen at noon shows the surf height of 24' - 39' with a primary swell of 38' combined with a mean wind speed of 55mph (Storm F10)

Even in Penzance, relatively sheltered from the W-SW, F8 with gusts to 70mph are currently predicted.

Certainly one to watch, certainly be interesting to see what John Chappell records at Land's End.

Graham
Penzance


Lucky the tidal regime is well in the neaps that day


Still looks generally as windy, particularly just ahead of the cold front in the south. However forecasts have changed in that the associated depression is now forecast to pass further north.

It is the rather more persistent westerly gales associated with this feature that was forecast to produce the large powerful swells. AS a result the latest forecast shows the swell considerably smaller for Cornwall & SW Ireland. Instead of Sennen at noon forecast to have primary swell height 38', it's now come down to a not uncommon winter height of 23'. That's not too dissimilar to the current swell height.

It's certainly still wild enough down here, http://magicseaweed.com/Live-Sennen-Webcam/65/ You wouldn't want to venture out in that unless you had to, east of the Lizard it's different world at the moment.

Interesting stuff, still last year at this time, after the Jan 6th gale, the beach had done a runner. The difference then was the low was deeper, slow moving & further south http://www.turnstone-cottage.co.uk/J...14%20Swell.pdf That was the biggest swell of last winter. The February ones weren't quite as big, but came from a more damaging direction into populated south coast areas sheltered under more normal condition.

Graham
Penzance


There is little fetch where we are, Southampton, so wave action is never
a problem, just sea-level surges.
My researches on historic surge events for the Solent area, goes against
a lot of academic , supposed research, including a few PhD thesis' reports

N_Cook January 12th 15 11:49 AM

Next Thursday!.
 
missing URL

http://www.diverse.4mg.com/solent.htm


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