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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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Jim Green wrote:
1. Apart from extreme weather, hot or cold, meteorology is actually dead boring. I mean taking temperatures and rain fall readings are actually the metrological equivalent of train spotting. So the hankering for that elusive cold spell keeps you all going. Then you have successfully missed the whole point. Collecting the data, analysing them and identifying patterns in them IS the interesting point. Sudden changes or opposite extremes can seriously ruin a good trend. --- Gianna www.buchan-meteo.org.uk |
#2
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I have been a lurker here for a couple of years and I am truly
astonished about some of the participants obsession with cold spells. The excitement and anticipation seems very strange to me, who the hell wants a cold spell? Otherwise I can see no advantages only problems for: drivers, homeless people, the elderly who are too afraid to turn their heating up. I have come up with three reasons that might explain your obsession: 1. Apart from extreme weather, hot or cold, meteorology is actually dead boring. I mean taking temperatures and rain fall readings are actually the metrological equivalent of train spotting. So the hankering for that elusive cold spell keeps you all going. 2. You have a unhealthy desire to see people in distress: drivers, homeless people, the elderly etc. 3. A cold winter, like the ones long ago, would allow you to push your heads even further into the sand with regards to Global Warming. This probably applies more to the older user of this newsgroup, it stands to reason that as you have been around longer you have done more damage to the planet than the younger participants. Try pulling your head out of the sand, it may lead to tears and a few sleepless nights but the sooner you face facts the better. I also find unbelievable your dislike of the phrase "At least it will be mild" This is a good thing! The TV weather forecasters obviously think so. Who the hell wants to be cold? It is unnatural. Please include in your replies some advantages of a cold spell. I can think of none. Jim |
#3
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In article ,
Jim Green "nospam writes: snip Please include in your replies some advantages of a cold spell. I can think of none. Some of us still retain a child-like delight in snow, and the way it transforms an otherwise boring vista into a thing of beauty. Since our wishing for snow has no effect whatsoever on whether it will occur, we surely don't need to feel guilty about wishing for it. It's also true that extreme weather is more interesting than "normal" weather, if only by virtue of its rarity. I'm sure that if we lived in Lapland, say, most of us would soon lose our fascination with snow. As for advantages of a cold winter, it may help to kill off some pests, and also prevent some crops being tempted into precocious growth, when they may be at risk of being cut down by frosts in spring. Cold winters also are generally drier than mild ones, so the risk of flooding is probably reduced. -- John Hall "Distrust any enterprise that requires new clothes." Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) |
#4
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On Thu, 16 Dec 2004 11:04:05 +0000, Jim Green "nospam !!!" wrote:
I have been a lurker here for a couple of years If your first and only (hopefully) contribution to the newsgroup is to come in and criticise, well you can "lurk off". Martin Jim |
#5
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![]() "Jim Green" "nospam !!!" wrote in message ... I have been a lurker here for a couple of years and I am truly astonished about some of the participants obsession with cold spells. .... not long enough obviously ;-) Because one thing we can predict in this newsgroup at this time of year is ... (a) the threads discussing the prospect of cold/snowy weather multiply alarmingly as Christmas approaches and (b) there is always a counter-thread along the lines that you have just posted. As long as these constants are in place, we can all relax! Martin. |
#6
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On Thu, 16 Dec 2004 11:04:05 +0000, Jim Green wrote in
Please include in your replies some advantages of a cold spell. I can think of none. Very much personal, but I plucked up courage to ask my future wife to go out with me for the first time, ice skating on one of the frozen (and floodlit) ponds in a Birmingham park, during January 1963. -- Mike 55.13°N 6.69°W Coleraine posted to uk.sci.weather 16/12/2004 11:37:48 UTC |
#7
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Please include in your replies some advantages of a cold spell. I
can think of none. * I enjoy seeing economists bleating about how much it's costing British industry * I have an excuse not to go to work * Stupid and/or incapable drivers get found out * People falling over is always funny, fractured hip or not |
#8
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![]() "Jim Green" "nospam !!!" wrote in message ... I have been a lurker here for a couple of years and I am truly astonished about some of the participants obsession with cold spells. The excitement and anticipation seems very strange to me, who the hell wants a cold spell? Otherwise I can see no advantages only problems for: drivers, homeless people, the elderly who are too afraid to turn their heating up. Please include in your replies some advantages of a cold spell. I can think of none. With the advent of Christmas there is one very obvious advantage of cold and snow. How will Santa manage to bring the toys to the children if there is no ice for his sledge? The cost in replacement runners needed because of wear on the tarmac, which seem to be spreading at an alarming rate over the surface of this once green and pleasant land, must surely outweigh the hospital bills of those grannies whose tea trays hit obstacles and eject their occupants! Besides, as Mike has pointed out, it brings back a touch of nostalgia for those days in the sixties when snow was snow, and girls wore stockingsgrin Cheers, Alastair. Jim |
#9
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Weather lawyer wrote:
**** Gianna Stefanni expressed strong views for someone who chooses to live in a sheltered part of one of the UK's wildest regions: you have successfully missed the whole point. Collecting the data, analysing them and identifying patterns in them IS the interesting point. I expressed a view ... not sure that I did so in a way that would classify it as a 'strong' view. I do indeed live here from choice. There were several key factors in making that decision. One of these was the warmth, kindness, and generosity of the indigenous population, while another was ... the weather. I spent many happy hours researching the averages for the last 30 years, as well as (then) current data, before leaping into the housing market. I particularly remember coming to view my present habitat ... a fleet of fifteen gritters and snow-ploughs were fighting to keep the A90 open during a blizzard(that is one vehicle for every 2 miles or so) as I drove up from Aberdeen ... various vehicles had slithered off the road and down banks into fields. Happily mine was not among them. Much the same as northern Italy then ... home from home. -- Gianna Stefani www.buchan-meteo.org.uk |
#10
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While John Hall still hasn't realised that cold weather here in winter
is usually a spell with little precipitation: Some of us still retain a child-like delight in snow, and the way it transforms an otherwise boring vista into a thing of beauty. Since our wishing for snow has no effect whatsoever on whether it will occur, we surely don't need to feel guilty about wishing for it. ..... It is still a matter of debate and location about the saw: "Too warm to snow" **** JPG and Martin Rowley of course displayed their usual magnaminity, about which the least said the better. **** Gianna Stefanni expressed strong views for someone who chooses to live in a sheltered part of one of the UK's wildest regions: you have successfully missed the whole point. Collecting the data, analysing them and identifying patterns in them IS the interesting point. (That and the fact that winters cold spell are the same as summers hot ones, another cool/hot topic here) **** It took a dour Scot to bring a toutch of reality though: it brings back a touch of nostalgia for those days in the sixties when snow was snow, and girls wore stockings and took them off at the end of the year (if they believed in fairies) (grim) **** |
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