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RobN
  • RobN
  • Advanced Member
25 January 2022 21:26:05


 


 


I'm 50 on Sunday  


Originally Posted by: Saint Snow 


Will you be sending Mrs. S. to the local Co-Op with a suitcase?


On my birthdays (which I no longer celebrate) I find that it is increasingly important to be mindful that I am only one day older than I was the previous day.


Rob
In the flatlands of South Cambridgeshire 15m ASL.
Taylor1740
25 January 2022 21:37:21


 Depressing for us coldies, but the evidence was there from the 90s - comparing stats and obs from my parents and grand-parents, but the Ostriches and the deniers - (how much were they paid by Saudi Arabia and Russia), and the disrupters, (as per the film “The Trick”) served to distract the worlds nations politicians and policy makers from acting on the inconvenient truth. The cost to us is the prospect of drought, biodiversity crisis, children who never grow up to know the beauty and magic of a snow day, snow balls, snow men or a white Christmas. That is a major cultural shift and massive loss of what makes up a part of our culture, history and Britishness. We pin our hopes now on the Gulf Stream shut down, just to take us back to the 90s for a decade.


Originally Posted by: BJBlake 


The 90s had cold Winters? πŸ˜‚


As for children not knowing snow I think there was a climate 'scientist' that said around 2007 time that basically it would never be properly cold again in the UK and then we all know what happened 2009 -2013.


Let's keep things in perspective as it seems every winter we get with little snow (which certainly wasn't the case last year) we get these ridiculous comments where people say it will never snow again in the UK.


Just look at what's happening in Greece at the moment if you truly believe it can't ever snow again in the UK.


NW Leeds - 150m amsl
David M Porter
25 January 2022 22:09:09


 


The 90s had cold Winters? πŸ˜‚


As for children not knowing snow I think there was a climate 'scientist' that said around 2007 time that basically it would never be properly cold again in the UK and then we all know what happened 2009 -2013.


Let's keep things in perspective as it seems every winter we get with little snow (which certainly wasn't the case last year) we get these ridiculous comments where people say it will never snow again in the UK.


Just look at what's happening in Greece at the moment if you truly believe it can't ever snow again in the UK.


Originally Posted by: Taylor1740 


Good post.


If a certain Ian Brown had been correct in what he said in the few years prior to 2009 about proper cold spells no longer being possible in the UK because of the 'modern era' effect, then the freezes of Dec 2009/Jan 2010, December 2010 and even the 'Beast from the East in late Feb/early March would never have come about according to his reasoning.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
BJBlake
25 January 2022 22:15:51


 


The 90s had cold Winters? πŸ˜‚


As for children not knowing snow I think there was a climate 'scientist' that said around 2007 time that basically it would never be properly cold again in the UK and then we all know what happened 2009 -2013.


Let's keep things in perspective as it seems every winter we get with little snow (which certainly wasn't the case last year) we get these ridiculous comments where people say it will never snow again in the UK.


Just look at what's happening in Greece at the moment if you truly believe it can't ever snow again in the UK.


Originally Posted by: Taylor1740 

Did I say, it would never snow again? No. But the frequency will be less and less with each decade. My Father leaned to ice skate on ponds on his dads farm in Sussex, near the coast. He hadn’t seen a stoat turn white in winter once the 60s were past. Can you imagine any if that happening today. Snow was an expected norm, but now it is an exception and a phenomenon. That has happened in one short life time, (2 generations). In the Thames Valley, south west London, my god daughter was 9 years old before she saw a flake of snow, born in 1993. That kind of thing will get more common. That, I am sorry to say, is a sad fact. I wish it were not so. Of course - given ideal Synoptics, snow will happen, but the Synoptics being right, with enough cold air to advect here, is getting rarer. Some of this is climate change, and some synoptic frequency change. We get less Scandi-highs.


Brecklands, South Norfolk 28m ASL
David M Porter
25 January 2022 23:06:57


Did I say, it would never snow again? No. But the frequency will be less and less with each decade. My Father leaned to ice skate on ponds on his dads farm in Sussex, near the coast. He hadn’t seen a stoat turn white in winter once the 60s were past. Can you imagine any if that happening today. Snow was an expected norm, but now it is an exception and a phenomenon. That has happened in one short life time, (2 generations). In the Thames Valley, south west London, my god daughter was 9 years old before she saw a flake of snow, born in 1993. That kind of thing will get more common. That, I am sorry to say, is a sad fact. I wish it were not so. Of course - given ideal Synoptics, snow will happen, but the Synoptics being right, with enough cold air to advect here, is getting rarer. Some of this is climate change, and some synoptic frequency change. We get less Scandi-highs.


Originally Posted by: BJBlake 


I don't want to turn this into a climate change discussion for obvious reasons, I would say that your statement preceding the sentence I have bolded is your opinion/prediction, not a fact.


Just like when Ian Brown told us circa 15 years ago that as far as he was concerned, major cold winter spells in this country were pretty well consigned to the history books. He was proved to be wrong about that, at least for a few years at the turn of the 2000s into the 2010s, and again in early 2018. Even last winter, while never particularly severe, wasn't short of cold weather, at least as far as my neck of the woods was concerned.



Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
Gooner
25 January 2022 23:10:43


Did I say, it would never snow again? No. But the frequency will be less and less with each decade. My Father leaned to ice skate on ponds on his dads farm in Sussex, near the coast. He hadn’t seen a stoat turn white in winter once the 60s were past. Can you imagine any if that happening today. Snow was an expected norm, but now it is an exception and a phenomenon. That has happened in one short life time, (2 generations). In the Thames Valley, south west London, my god daughter was 9 years old before she saw a flake of snow, born in 1993. That kind of thing will get more common. That, I am sorry to say, is a sad fact. I wish it were not so. Of course - given ideal Synoptics, snow will happen, but the Synoptics being right, with enough cold air to advect here, is getting rarer. Some of this is climate change, and some synoptic frequency change. We get less Scandi-highs.


Originally Posted by: BJBlake 


December. The record for the warmest News Eve (31st) was set this year, at Great Yarmouth. Recorded then as 60 ºF, this could mean anything between 15.3 and 15.8 ºC.


That was 1901 .................I wonder if they ever thought they would see snow again 


 


February. Very mild (7.1C CET - the mildest of the century before 1990), with westerly winds throughout the month, but stormy, particularly in the north. 14C was recorded at Wick on the 10th, and 16C in London on the 20th. Probably the most spectacular dry dustfall of this century affected much of England and Wales on February 21. There was a severe gale on the 27th, causing widespread damage and deaths across the north of England, with a gust of 92 mph.


November. Mild and generally dry.


December. Mild and dull.


1903 


December. A very mild and wet first half. There were four days of continuous rain in parts of the south early in the month: for example, 170 mm of rain fell between the 4th and the 10th in parts of Devon. One and a half inches of rain fell at Nottingham on the 1st. There was a violent westerly gale in southern England on the 16th. The equal record highest maximum for Christmas Eve was set this month, with 15.6C at locations in North Wales.


1910


 


November. Wet and unsettled. There as a severe gale on the night of the 4-5th, with gusts of 70 mph reported from Blackpool. The gale coincided with a high tide, causing flooding in the Clyde. Many trees were blown over in Scotland. More than 50 mm of rain fell in the Western Highlands, and 93 mm at Seathwaite (Cumbria).


December. Unsettled, wet, and mild.


 


1911


 


January. Very warm (7.3C CET), and largely mild and wet - the last wet month for a while. It reached 15.6C (60F) at Llandudno on the 4th and 14.4C (58F) at London on the 9th. There was a severe gale across the night of the 17th and into the 18th.


February. Very mild and exceptionally dry: the driest of the twentieth century in England and Wales. It was also fairly sunny, and with generally light winds there was some fog. 17C recorded in parts of the SE on the 24th.


1921


January. There was a warm January day in London (approximately 16.0C on the 9th at Kensington). It was a very wet month.


February. Mainly mild with S and SW winds. 17C was recorded in Lincoln and Colwyn Bay on the 25th.


1922


 


My point being the UK has been through cycles of mild periods and cold ones  as well .............our time will come again , I could have posted many more examples but the above proves very mild weather hit our shores even back in the good old days 


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


DEW
  • DEW
  • Advanced Member
26 January 2022 06:45:16

Briefly this morning:


Wx summary temps scarcely changed since yesterday (W Europe nearly all above seasonal norm) pptn heavier in week 2 in NW Atlantic including W parts of UK


GFS op - HP south or over UK to Mon 7th, stronger W-lies at times than previously, then cooler with either N or NW-lies as LP dominates over Scandi (again!)


GEFS temps show a lot of variation in ens members, mean mostly near norm, perhaps a milder spell around the 2nd and cooler later, no rain in S until week 2 then not much; in the NW bits and pieces until the 2nd then more or less continual.


ECM (0z only up to Wed 2nd) like GFS but with addition of small active LP off NE Scotland Mon 31st


War does not determine who is right, only who is left - Bertrand Russell

Chichester 12m asl
BJBlake
26 January 2022 06:54:56


 


I don't want to turn this into a climate change discussion for obvious reasons, I would say that your statement preceding the sentence I have bolded is your opinion/prediction, not a fact.


Just like when Ian Brown told us circa 15 years ago that as far as he was concerned, major cold winter spells in this country were pretty well consigned to the history books. He was proved to be wrong about that, at least for a few years at the turn of the 2000s into the 2010s, and again in early 2018. Even last winter, while never particularly severe, wasn't short of cold weather, at least as far as my neck of the woods was concerned.



Originally Posted by: David M Porter 


The frequency of cold winters is diminishing  and the Cluster’s of cold winters around the Maunder Minimum are fewer. The 2009 - 2010 occurred after an 18 year gap, there being nothing much of note back to the Feb 1991 Scandi High. Then we get the short SSW event induced March phenomenon in 2018, and one winter at the Maunder Minimum last year. This is a different world from previous decades - a degree warmer world. Its a fact - not an opinion. 


On another note entirely, this morning’s GFS Op run shows the PV seems to be pooling in N canada and firing up the Jet, dumping pools of cold air into the North Atlantic, and setting up a staccato polar maritime conveyor - for February Fill Dyke, which may (against the stats for this month) prove worthy of its weather lore title.


Brecklands, South Norfolk 28m ASL
BJBlake
26 January 2022 07:08:45


 


December. The record for the warmest News Eve (31st) was set this year, at Great Yarmouth. Recorded then as 60 ºF, this could mean anything between 15.3 and 15.8 ºC.


That was 1901 .................I wonder if they ever thought they would see snow again 


 


February. Very mild (7.1C CET - the mildest of the century before 1990), with westerly winds throughout the month, but stormy, particularly in the north. 14C was recorded at Wick on the 10th, and 16C in London on the 20th. Probably the most spectacular dry dustfall of this century affected much of England and Wales on February 21. There was a severe gale on the 27th, causing widespread damage and deaths across the north of England, with a gust of 92 mph.


November. Mild and generally dry.


December. Mild and dull.


1903 


December. A very mild and wet first half. There were four days of continuous rain in parts of the south early in the month: for example, 170 mm of rain fell between the 4th and the 10th in parts of Devon. One and a half inches of rain fell at Nottingham on the 1st. There was a violent westerly gale in southern England on the 16th. The equal record highest maximum for Christmas Eve was set this month, with 15.6C at locations in North Wales.


1910


 


November. Wet and unsettled. There as a severe gale on the night of the 4-5th, with gusts of 70 mph reported from Blackpool. The gale coincided with a high tide, causing flooding in the Clyde. Many trees were blown over in Scotland. More than 50 mm of rain fell in the Western Highlands, and 93 mm at Seathwaite (Cumbria).


December. Unsettled, wet, and mild.


 


1911


 


January. Very warm (7.3C CET), and largely mild and wet - the last wet month for a while. It reached 15.6C (60F) at Llandudno on the 4th and 14.4C (58F) at London on the 9th. There was a severe gale across the night of the 17th and into the 18th.


February. Very mild and exceptionally dry: the driest of the twentieth century in England and Wales. It was also fairly sunny, and with generally light winds there was some fog. 17C recorded in parts of the SE on the 24th.


1921


January. There was a warm January day in London (approximately 16.0C on the 9th at Kensington). It was a very wet month.


February. Mainly mild with S and SW winds. 17C was recorded in Lincoln and Colwyn Bay on the 25th.


1922


 


My point being the UK has been through cycles of mild periods and cold ones  as well .............our time will come again , I could have posted many more examples but the above proves very mild weather hit our shores even back in the good old days 


Originally Posted by: Gooner 

Your point doesn’t change the fact that the frequency of cold winters and the duration of cold interludes is declining rapidly. There are indeed many inter relating cycles. Notwithstanding the clustering of cold winters around the Maunder Minimum, and the 40 year cycle of how many cold winters that populate the decadal cluster, and perhaps a longer 100 year plus cycle - as described and illustrated by an American forecaster who used to Blog under the pseudo name of Dr. Dew Point, (cant remember his real name - but it has mentioned  this year in this thread), the 1 degree increased global temperature - since the 1960s, which is sadly a fact, has significantly decreased the severity, the frequency and the extent of cold outbreaks in the UK, from both temperature and synoptic patterning - over my life time, and this is magnified if you look back at statistics from my father’s generation. Whilst there is no denying that cold weather is cyclical, the trend in numbers of cold spells, depth of cold, duration of cold and coverage across the UK, are all going south - much as I would love it not to be the case, as I am as big a cold weather fan as anyone on this forum.


Brecklands, South Norfolk 28m ASL
Brian Gaze
26 January 2022 08:24:35

Amazing statistics. Only 3 out of the last 33 winter months have been below the 1961-90 average.


 


 




Brian Gaze
Berkhamsted
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"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan
UncleAlbert
26 January 2022 08:57:28
Thought I would comment on the models, sorry off it's off topic😁😁

Whilst the general consensus seems to be a more unsettled theme going forwards with alternating mild and colder interludes (the latter especially north of course), the GEFS has a fair few members at least wanting to bring HP back after Feb 7th so I would not bet against this judging by the track record of this winter so far.
Hippydave
26 January 2022 09:44:52

Thought I would comment on the models, sorry off it's off topic😁😁

Whilst the general consensus seems to be a more unsettled theme going forwards with alternating mild and colder interludes (the latter especially north of course), the GEFS has a fair few members at least wanting to bring HP back after Feb 7th so I would not bet against this judging by the track record of this winter so far.

Originally Posted by: UncleAlbert 


 I did have to check the thread title after reading the last X amount of comments.


We do seem to have moved back in FI, and on the Ops at least, to a slightly more mobile pattern with HP still there but allowing more of an Atlantic influence. At the moment it's being shown as fairly cool zonality, more so for the north as you say.


Pressure IMBY on the ECM ens is generally pretty high in FI, possible blip around 5th Feb indicating greater chance of LP influence then. If that verified I imagine it'd be usual winter split, with weather fronts losing oomph by the time they get here and showery interludes generally impacting the west and maybe central parts.


There's no clear overall FI temp signal suggesting usual up/down as fronts pass through. Down here that often leads to above average temps overall, closer or just below average more likely as you head north.


All in all nothing exciting really, few mild days and a few cooler ones but nothing prolonged either way. I guess as some of the ens sets have been showing there's a small chance of some lengthy and notably mild stuff along with a small chance of a colder spell (i.e 4 days or more) but neither looks likely, with the chances best described as remote IMO.


Home: Tunbridge Wells
Work: Tonbridge
fairweather
26 January 2022 10:37:10


 


The 90s had cold Winters? πŸ˜‚


As for children not knowing snow I think there was a climate 'scientist' that said around 2007 time that basically it would never be properly cold again in the UK and then we all know what happened 2009 -2013.


Let's keep things in perspective as it seems every winter we get with little snow (which certainly wasn't the case last year) we get these ridiculous comments where people say it will never snow again in the UK.


Just look at what's happening in Greece at the moment if you truly believe it can't ever snow again in the UK.


Originally Posted by: Taylor1740 


Greece has often had more snow than the UK. Winter's can still bring large regional variations. There was zero snowfall here last year and except for the Beast (which was pretty much March) virtually none in the winter months since 2013. Even taking that into account, younger people's concept of a severe winter has been drastically diluted this century. You can make a strong case for December 2009-10 being an exceptionally cold month but in some regions there was little snow and it barely lasted a month. 1950-1990 there were at least 10 winters here with far more snow than 2010. People are getting excited about 10cm of snow these days as even that is a one in ten year occurrence in formerly snowy areas like East Anglia.


Perhaps the time has come for older people like myself to wipe the second half of the 20th Century from our memory banks and think of memorable winters and cold in the context of this century only which would be a more realistic bench mark given climate change.


S.Essex, 42m ASL
fairweather
26 January 2022 10:45:06

No major changes in GFS output. There seems to be a bit of a trend towards a more mobile and NW'ly feed which gives some hope of transient snow in the NW and on higher ground in the north. In general February looks like having around average temperatures, which of course is rather cold.


S.Essex, 42m ASL
Taylor1740
26 January 2022 12:09:59


 


Greece has often had more snow than the UK. Winter's can still bring large regional variations. There was zero snowfall here last year and except for the Beast (which was pretty much March) virtually none in the winter months since 2013. Even taking that into account, younger people's concept of a severe winter has been drastically diluted this century. You can make a strong case for December 2009-10 being an exceptionally cold month but in some regions there was little snow and it barely lasted a month. 1950-1990 there were at least 10 winters here with far more snow than 2010. People are getting excited about 10cm of snow these days as even that is a one in ten year occurrence in formerly snowy areas like East Anglia.


Perhaps the time has come for older people like myself to wipe the second half of the 20th Century from our memory banks and think of memorable winters and cold in the context of this century only which would be a more realistic bench mark given climate change.


Originally Posted by: fairweather 


I don't think this is going to be the mildest winter on record though is it, unless February turns out extremely warm.


I think people just need to put things in context a bit, I'm sure you will be able to find plenty of milder Winters and snowless winters even going back 100 years.


Sometimes our expectations of winter weather are unrealistic in the UK when it is not the norm to have deep snow and several sub zero days.


NW Leeds - 150m amsl
Gandalf The White
26 January 2022 12:10:59


 


January 2011 to Dec. 2021, eh? A pity the cut-off point isn't one month earlier. Because that was "a sobering slap in the face" if there ever was one.


 ... it was the second-coldest December in the narrower Central England Temperature (CET) record series which began in 1659, falling 0.1 °C short of the all-m record set in 1890.[1] Although data has never officially been compiled, December 2010 is thought to be colder than December 1890 over the United Kingdom as a whole, as Scotland was up to 2 °C warmer than England. Hence, it is thought to be the coldest December across the UK as a whole since before 1659.[2]


Originally Posted by: some faraway beach 


Yes, it was memorable - but clearly very much against the trend.


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Spring Sun Winter Dread
26 January 2022 12:57:26
I am always surprised at how we have so many mild winters these days but still can't top 1868/69.
That must have seemed as anomalous and mad to the Victorians as Dec 2010 did to us.
Can't see this winter coming anywhere close. By my calculations we would need an 8.5C February to be in with a ghost of a chance and that's more than 1C above the amazing 1998 edition.
Will take some synoptics to reach that...
UncleAlbert
26 January 2022 15:31:32


 


Yes, it was memorable - but clearly very much against the trend.


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


 


Which of course fits in with the scenario where very cold spells in winter are still possible but less frequent.  This ties in with what Brian was saying the other day ref. a survey he had done saying that there is simply less cold air available in winter, so of course that's not to say there is very little, just less.

Spring Sun Winter Dread
26 January 2022 16:27:09
It would be useful if someone had some kind of study which incorporated the flow anomaly versus temp in winter (as I understand that in winter the Airmass is the most important determinant with the sun being so weak ).
This would remove all the "noise" in the data that lets people cherry pick whatever data fits the point they are trying to put across (as I see happening here alot).
Philip Eden wrote about how the 1990s winter warming could be explained by an unusual dominance of westerly winds but the continued warming in the 2000s could not for instance, as the westerliness of winters sharply declined after this point.
David M Porter
26 January 2022 17:28:07


 


I don't think this is going to be the mildest winter on record though is it, unless February turns out extremely warm.


I think people just need to put things in context a bit, I'm sure you will be able to find plenty of milder Winters and snowless winters even going back 100 years.


Sometimes our expectations of winter weather are unrealistic in the UK when it is not the norm to have deep snow and several sub zero days.


Originally Posted by: Taylor1740 


For this winter to be the mildest on record, I reckon you would need a spell of exceptionally high temperatures along the lines of those recorded in mid-late February 2019 or the mildness of mid-Feb 1998 for virtually the entire month. It is one thing to get such exceptional spells lasting for a number or days or a week or two, but quite another for it to go on for vitually the entire month.


To draw an analogy with the summer, it would be a bit like expecting a month like July 2006 to turn up every so often. The all-time maximum temperature record was beaten again in July 2019, but one day or even a series of days in isolation is a different matter to a month or longer though.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
nsrobins
26 January 2022 17:31:40
Brian’s post tells you all you need to know. Just 3 of the last 33 winters have been below the 60-91 mean. Incredible.
On topic, and the outlook remains decidedly boring and snow-free for the majority.
Neil
Fareham, Hampshire 28m ASL (near estuary)
Stormchaser, Member TORRO
Hippydave
26 January 2022 17:32:32

Could be some interest for parts of Scotland at the end of the week (something that's been signalled for a while, even if it's not going to last long):-


Chart image


 


Home: Tunbridge Wells
Work: Tonbridge
MRayner
26 January 2022 17:52:37

If it actually happens , it might help the ski resorts !! There’s not even a frost forecast here for the foreseeable future , unreal stuff


Location Whisky πŸ₯ƒ country, Cragganmore ,Moray, 440 AMSL
Charmhills
26 January 2022 18:44:33


 


December. The record for the warmest News Eve (31st) was set this year, at Great Yarmouth. Recorded then as 60 ºF, this could mean anything between 15.3 and 15.8 ºC.


That was 1901 .................I wonder if they ever thought they would see snow again 


 


February. Very mild (7.1C CET - the mildest of the century before 1990), with westerly winds throughout the month, but stormy, particularly in the north. 14C was recorded at Wick on the 10th, and 16C in London on the 20th. Probably the most spectacular dry dustfall of this century affected much of England and Wales on February 21. There was a severe gale on the 27th, causing widespread damage and deaths across the north of England, with a gust of 92 mph.


November. Mild and generally dry.


December. Mild and dull.


1903 


December. A very mild and wet first half. There were four days of continuous rain in parts of the south early in the month: for example, 170 mm of rain fell between the 4th and the 10th in parts of Devon. One and a half inches of rain fell at Nottingham on the 1st. There was a violent westerly gale in southern England on the 16th. The equal record highest maximum for Christmas Eve was set this month, with 15.6C at locations in North Wales.


1910


 


November. Wet and unsettled. There as a severe gale on the night of the 4-5th, with gusts of 70 mph reported from Blackpool. The gale coincided with a high tide, causing flooding in the Clyde. Many trees were blown over in Scotland. More than 50 mm of rain fell in the Western Highlands, and 93 mm at Seathwaite (Cumbria).


December. Unsettled, wet, and mild.


 


1911


 


January. Very warm (7.3C CET), and largely mild and wet - the last wet month for a while. It reached 15.6C (60F) at Llandudno on the 4th and 14.4C (58F) at London on the 9th. There was a severe gale across the night of the 17th and into the 18th.


February. Very mild and exceptionally dry: the driest of the twentieth century in England and Wales. It was also fairly sunny, and with generally light winds there was some fog. 17C recorded in parts of the SE on the 24th.


1921


January. There was a warm January day in London (approximately 16.0C on the 9th at Kensington). It was a very wet month.


February. Mainly mild with S and SW winds. 17C was recorded in Lincoln and Colwyn Bay on the 25th.


1922


 


My point being the UK has been through cycles of mild periods and cold ones  as well .............our time will come again , I could have posted many more examples but the above proves very mild weather hit our shores even back in the good old days 


Originally Posted by: Gooner 


Can't argue with that.


Loughborough, EM.

Knowledge is power, ignorance is weakness.

Duane.
Chunky Pea
26 January 2022 18:46:08


 


Extrapolating, there are likely to be none at all below the 1961-90 average in the decade from 2041-2050.


A sobering slap in the face about what’s ahead.


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


If there is any comfort in it, there has been a slight uptick in the number of colder than average months using the criteria Syran (an incredible statistician ) set above since 2000 within the CET region. As it stands (up to the end of 2021 anyway) the number of months within a ten year period that was equal to or below -0.5c  (61-90 average) stands at 18. Small fry compared to anything pre mid 90s era, but significantly above the all time 10 year low of just 8 up to the end of 2005. 


Current Conditions
https://t.ly/MEYqg 


"You don't have to know anything to have an opinion"
--Roger P, 12/Oct/2022

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