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KevBrads1
05 October 2013 20:39:35

October 1926 was a very interesting month with a burst of Indian Summer warmth in the first week to winter frost and snow during the last few days. This resulted in a spectacular crash in the CET
CET trackometer
1. 11.8


2. 12.8


3. 13.7


4. 14.4


5. 14.3


6. 14.3


7. 14.2


8. 14.2


9. 13.8


10.13.3


11. 12.9


12. 12.8


13. 12.8


14. 12.8


15. 12.4


16. 12.1


17. 11.8


18. 11.3


19. 10.8


20. 10.5


21. 10.1


22. 9.9


23. 9.6


24. 9.3


25. 9.1


26. 8.9


27. 8.7


28. 8.6


29. 8.5


30. 8.3


31. 8.1


 


18th October-2nd November 1926 CET: 3.5
23.3C was record at Worksop on the 2nd and 23.9C on the 3rd at Killarney


 


The Indian summer weather broke down with widespread thunderstorms on the 5th and 6th.


The cold spell started when pressure increased over the Icelandic/Greenland region  and this favoured a NEly airstream across the UK. Indeed, pressure anomalies for this month were in the +ve for this area and below average for most of Europe and the Azores




 


For the second half of the month, maxima temperatures were generally below 10C and there were sharp frosts at night (-7.2C at Usk on the 18th; -10C at West Linton on the 30th and -10.6C at Wolfelee on the 31st)
Rain sleet and snow fell at times to the months end with snow lying almost daily for parts of Scotland and NW England from the 22nd to the 30th. Sleet and snow was reported even as far south as Kent and the Isle of Wight


 




From the Times of 26th October 1926



MANCHESTER SUMMER INDEX for 2021: 238
Timelapses, old weather forecasts and natural phenomena videos can be seen on this site
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgrSD1BwFz2feWDTydhpEhQ/playlists
Hungry Tiger
05 October 2013 22:36:30


Amazing stats there. The CET fell by 6C - that is amazing from peak to trough. Must be close to a record a 6C drop in the running CET in one month like that.


The CET this month so far is 15C at the moment.


I wonder what will happen with that.


 


 


Gavin S. FRmetS.
TWO Moderator.
Contact the TWO team - [email protected]
South Cambridgeshire. 93 metres or 302.25 feet ASL.


SydneyonTees
05 October 2013 22:49:35

The only truely cold winter of the 1920's was 1928/29 though wasn't it? I think that had the really cold Feb.


The 20's were a bit like the 90's.

glenogle
06 October 2013 13:09:40

I love these reports, although i never comment much on them.


Is there any chance you could put a wee summary at the bottom of them to indicate any highlights/low lights of the following season?  It is a pattern matching game afterall.


UserPostedImage LLTNP 105m aslĀ 
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