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Old January 25th 04, 04:02 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Tom Tom is offline
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Default South East England at risk?

The updated FAX charts continue to show a NE wind over South Eastern parts
of England with troughs and a polar? low near the coast.

48HR: http://weather.noaa.gov/pub/fax/PPVI89.TIF
60HR: http://weather.noaa.gov/pub/fax/PPVJ89.TIF

This resembles what often brings heavy snowfall across East Anglia and the
South-East. Recent examples 8th and 31st Jan last year.

Maybe tonight's BBC forecasts will reflect this risk.

Tom
Danbury, Essex (107m)



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Old January 25th 04, 05:27 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default South East England at risk?

I thought the cold spell on the 8th was caused by a strong easterly?

"Tom" wrote in message
...
The updated FAX charts continue to show a NE wind over South Eastern parts
of England with troughs and a polar? low near the coast.

48HR: http://weather.noaa.gov/pub/fax/PPVI89.TIF
60HR: http://weather.noaa.gov/pub/fax/PPVJ89.TIF

This resembles what often brings heavy snowfall across East Anglia and the
South-East. Recent examples 8th and 31st Jan last year.

Maybe tonight's BBC forecasts will reflect this risk.

Tom
Danbury, Essex (107m)




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Old January 25th 04, 05:55 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default South East England at risk?

I think there was more of an Easterly flow in the Isobars last year. Still,
the charts can change, and there could be some troughs\bands appear nearer
the time. Who knows.
----------------------------------------------------------
"Tom" wrote in message
...
The updated FAX charts continue to show a NE wind over South Eastern parts
of England with troughs and a polar? low near the coast.

48HR: http://weather.noaa.gov/pub/fax/PPVI89.TIF
60HR: http://weather.noaa.gov/pub/fax/PPVJ89.TIF

This resembles what often brings heavy snowfall across East Anglia and the
South-East. Recent examples 8th and 31st Jan last year.

Maybe tonight's BBC forecasts will reflect this risk.

Tom
Danbury, Essex (107m)






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