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Stormchaser
04 June 2014 18:40:12

UKMO has brought back the upstream Atlantic phasing, meaning a nod to GFS, though some way west of that model with the positioning by day 6.


http://www.meteociel.fr/ukmo/archives/2014060412/UW120-21.GIF


The main question arises on day 5; will there be any energy undercutting the weak ridge to the east?


It's a tricky one to resolve, as small shifts in the positioning of the trough in the W. Atlantic make the difference between a single trough/ridge across the Atlantic (lows phasing) or a trough/ridge/trough pattern (lows not phasing) in which the latter undercuts that weak ridge.


 


ECM is rolling out and is close to UKMO to day 6; sorry heatwave hunters, but the 00z looks to have been a bit of a fluke with the W. Atlantic trough modelled as moving too slowly!


 


The no-phase solution could arise again through adjustments during the coming 24-48 hours, but for now the safest bet seems to be on the E. Atlantic trough (the one influencing our weather over the weekend) to gradually ease away to the NW, allowing a ridge to build in from the SW.


To what extent is not clear, but the recent trend has been towards a stronger ridge, and the ECM 12z is taking that a little further as of the day 7 chart:


http://www.meteociel.fr/modeles/ecmwf/runs/2014060412/ECM1-168.GIF?04-0


No heatwave there, but very pleasant conditions for many 


 


A notable outlier tonight is GEM, which barely makes anything of the ridge and produces some undesirable charts soon after. It does tie in with hints from GFS of the HP pulling back west for a time from day 8 or 9, though. Fair to say I'm relieved that it looks only temporary!


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Ally Pally Snowman
04 June 2014 18:59:54
Great post from SC as usual. And the ECM does give us a heat wave in the end via a different route.
28c+ there

http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/Recm2162.html 

http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/Recm2402.html 
Bishop's Stortford 85m ASL.
Hungry Tiger
04 June 2014 19:15:27

Great post from SC as usual. And the ECM does give us a heat wave in the end via a different route.
28c+ there

http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/Recm2162.html

http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/Recm2402.html


Originally Posted by: Ally Pally Snowman 


Lets hope that lot slowly build into the Continent rather than retrogressing to the NW as happens all too often.


 


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


Ally Pally Snowman
05 June 2014 06:59:16
The signs are still there that Summer is on the way. Some proper heat building by day 9 as well.


http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/Recm1441.html 
http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/Recm1681.html 
http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/Recm2161.html 



Ukmo looks good also.
http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/Rukm1441.html 
Bishop's Stortford 85m ASL.
GIBBY
05 June 2014 07:28:56

HERE IS MY LATEST ANALYSIS FROM THE OUTPUTS OF THE WEATHER COMPUTER PREDICTION MODELS FOR TWO WEEKS FROM TODAY THURSDAY JUNE 5TH 2014.


THE CURRENT GENERAL SITUATION. Low pressure is moving away slowly North from NE England with a ridge of High pressure drifting slowly North over England. A large Atlantic depression is then likely to lie well to the SW of Britain tomorrow with a trough approaching the West coast later becoming slow moving.


GFS The GFS Ensembles today show Low pressure to the SW over the weekend moving North and allowing pressure to build from the South next week with some warm settled weather likely for many. Later in the run the trend os for the High to recede back out over the Atlantic to allow cooler and more showery Low pressure to move down from the NE towards SE or eastern areas with a chillier North wind for many.


UKMO UKMO closes it's run today with a slow progression towards rather higher pressure moving up from the SW by midweek with the trend for showers early in the week to steadily become more isolated, especially over the South. Innitially rather humid it may cool down for a time as winds turn more Westerly at the end of the run.


GEM The GEM operational today is rather more reluctant in pulling High pressure up from the South until very much later next week which then proves futile as Atlantic West winds quickly regain control to end the run. So a sunshine and shower mix bookends the run with a drier and warm slot soon after midweek should this run verify.


NAVGEM NAVGEM is also rather slow to produce any meaningful rise of pressure from the South maintaining at least the risk of showers at times, especially in the North with the end of the run threatening cooler air behind a trough sinking South over Scotland.


ECM The ECM operational today looks the cream of the crop this morning with High pressure building strongly later next week with a warm settled spell developing for a time for many though by Day 10 with pressure slackening off it's persistence looks rather tenuous.


MY THOUGHTS  The general trend today is for the weather to slowly impreove from the South later next week as the showery Low innitially to the SW moves North and fills at the expense of High pressure ridging up from the Azores. Then models differ on how much and the extent that this High takes on influencing the UK weather with Southern areas likely to fair the best. Later in the period even ECM does show a weakening of High pressure at Day 10 so it may well be just a brief flirt with real Summer but despite all the charts this morning represent nothing disturbing with some pretty decent weather from OK synoptics likely between well scattered showers the most likely outcome.


Martin G
Kilmersdon Radstock Bath Somerset



Look up my New Facebook Weather Page  for all the latest up to the minute weather stories as they happen
Hungry Tiger
05 June 2014 08:15:25


Those look really good.


 


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


Stormchaser
05 June 2014 10:43:59

Regarding the model output from now until the middle of next week, not a lot has changed from last night really, with the warm (or very warm for the SE) and thundery Saturday followed by a pleasant Sunday and start to next week for many of us as HP ridges up from the southwest. Temperatures Monday-Tuesday have edged up a little on the GFS output, which is nice.


ECM and UKMO continue to show that ridge keeping a wider area settled than GFS and GEM show. The NW looks to be changeable or unsettled, unfortunately, and GEM has the Atlantic LP affecting most of the UK - it's some way out of line with the others, so hopefully just off on one.


 


Beyond that, we still have GFS and GEM driving energy NE more than ECM and UKMO, and this impacts on how the ridge from the SW behaves; if the LP heads quickly NE, the ridge is able to combine with one to our NW, with the new combined ridge sitting to the west of the UK. If the LP doesn't head NE so fast, the ridge remains aligned SW-NE through the UK, though as ECM shows, it may then slowly fade away.


 


I'm wondering if, like we saw many times in April and May, the LP will in the end be slowed down enough to allow high pressure to develop to our NE instead. This sort of thing has led to numerous mid-Atlantic/Greenland HP systems being predicted at range and then dropped in favour of something to our E/NE instead.


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Rob K
05 June 2014 12:38:41
Not a bad ensemble chart for early June: solidly above average temperatures and not too much rain around apart from a couple of thundery interludes.

http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/MT8_London_ens.png 

Not unbroken summer but I'd be happy with that kind of outlook persisting for the next three months!
Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
Medlock Vale Weather
05 June 2014 13:57:35

Saturday looking humid or very humid for some, look at these dew points, pretty much where we're likely to see thunderstorms develop too.


http://modeles2.meteociel.fr/modeles_gfs/runs/2014060506/57-101UK.GIF?05-6


 


Alan in Medlock Valley - Oldham's frost hollow. 103 metres above sea level.
What is a frost hollow? http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/reports/wxfacts/Frost-hollow.htm 
Osprey
05 June 2014 14:15:38
http://www.wetterzentrale.de/pics/MT8_London_ens.png  Not unbroken summer but I'd be happy with that kind of outlook persisting for the next three months!


Yes absolutely!


Nobody likes a smartass, especially another smartass...
If it ain't broke, don't fix it!
Frost Hollow
05 June 2014 14:18:14


Saturday looking humid or very humid for some, look at these dew points, pretty much where we're likely to see thunderstorms develop too.


http://modeles2.meteociel.fr/modeles_gfs/runs/2014060506/57-101UK.GIF?05-6


 


Originally Posted by: Medlock Vale Weather 


dp of 8c here that will do for me 

Whether Idle
05 June 2014 18:08:45
The met O 15 dayer performed a volte face breaking away from its "largely unsettled with brighter interludes" forecast under the increasing weight of model and ensemble evidence which has been building for a while now, that there is set to be a settled fine and warm period of weather away from the north and west of Britain. Good.
Dover, 5m asl. Half a mile from the south coast.
Stormchaser
05 June 2014 19:45:41

Looking pleasant across England and particular out to the latter stages of next week now, with temperatures ranging from the low to the mid 20's, a slight upgrade from the 00z runs, with Monday in particular starting to look more like a day in high summer featuring another thundery episode on top of the Fri-Sat affair 


 


Then, we can see the idea of a Scandi trough gaining more support tonight, which leaves the models with a bit of a conundrum:


 


Mid-Alantic trough + UK/Euro Ridge = warm signal


Scandi trough + Greenland Ridge = cool signal


 


Interestingly enough, the models are increasingly favouring the ridge from the Azores having the upper hand.


This occurs as a result of troughs developing in the mid Atlantic, amplifying the trough-ridge combination. This is the main difference to what we endured in 2012; that year, the troughs tended to develop close to the UK rather than out to our west.


It may just be pot luck as to where the region of favoured development ends up... but then again, models like CFS hinted at the mid-Atlantic trough from as much as 3 months ago. To me, that suggests a driving force behind the trough location, which I believe may at least in part be the SST pattern, as I've discussed previously in other threads.


This summer is an interesting case study for me in that regard - how it evolves will give some guidance as to how strongly the Atlantic SST pattern can determine the summer patterns across the Atlantic and NW Europe.


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Keep Calm and Forecast On
nouska
05 June 2014 20:18:31


Looking pleasant across England and particular out to the latter stages of next week now, with temperatures ranging from the low to the mid 20's, a slight upgrade from the 00z runs, with Monday in particular starting to look more like a day in high summer featuring another thundery episode on top of the Fri-Sat affair 


 


Then, we can see the idea of a Scandi trough gaining more support tonight, which leaves the models with a bit of a conundrum:


 


Mid-Alantic trough + UK/Euro Ridge = warm signal


Scandi trough + Greenland Ridge = cool signal


 


Interestingly enough, the models are increasingly favouring the ridge from the Azores having the upper hand.


This occurs as a result of troughs developing in the mid Atlantic, amplifying the trough-ridge combination. This is the main difference to what we endured in 2012; that year, the troughs tended to develop close to the UK rather than out to our west.


It may just be pot luck as to where the region of favoured development ends up... but then again, models like CFS hinted at the mid-Atlantic trough from as much as 3 months ago. To me, that suggests a driving force behind the trough location, which I believe may at least in part be the SST pattern, as I've discussed previously in other threads.


This summer is an interesting case study for me in that regard - how it evolves will give some guidance as to how strongly the Atlantic SST pattern can determine the summer patterns across the Atlantic and NW Europe.


Originally Posted by: Stormchaser 


Have you read any of Huug Van Den Dool's research on LR forecasting via lagged SSTs?


This is the forecast for JJA 500 anomalies - issued six months ago, it is not so far off what we are currently seeing.


http://i.imgur.com/v0tSeVY.gif


Main page.  http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/people/wd51hd/


 

Medlock Vale Weather
05 June 2014 21:56:26

Unsurprisingly somewhere around London is probably going to be the hotspot on Saturday, around 27C


http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/wrfnmm/runs/2014060512/nmmuk-0-49-0.png?05-19


 


Alan in Medlock Valley - Oldham's frost hollow. 103 metres above sea level.
What is a frost hollow? http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/reports/wxfacts/Frost-hollow.htm 
Stormchaser
05 June 2014 22:17:55



 


Originally Posted by: nouska 


Have you read any of Huug Van Den Dool's research on LR forecasting via lagged SSTs?


This is the forecast for JJA 500 anomalies - issued six months ago, it is not so far off what we are currently seeing.


http://i.imgur.com/v0tSeVY.gif


Main page.  http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/people/wd51hd/


 


Originally Posted by: Stormchaser 


 


Thanks, I'll try and dig up some of the papers, I'm sure they're on webofscience somewhere 


The favourism for mid-Atlantic trough development seems to be the most prominent response, this in turn supporting a ridge to the north of it i.e. across Greenland. It's quite amazing how close to the predicted JJA setup the current model outlook is for the coming week or so.


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GIBBY
06 June 2014 07:16:35

Good morning. Here is my assessment of the latest outputs of the main computer models outputs for today Friday June 6th 2014.


The General Situation. Low pressure lies to the SW of the UK with an increasingly warm and humid SE flow developing over all areas through the day. A cold front will move NE into this warm air across SW Britain later tonight and tomorrow.


GFS this morning offers a changeable regime over the next few weeks, bothe form it's operational and ensembles. The first week will largely be warm and quite dry for many as Low pressure to the SW of the UK moves North and fills slowly with warm and humid High pressure never far away from the SE. Later in the run the pressure pattern is trended to shift towards Low pressure over or to the NE of the UK with a much cooler and fresher Northerly aspect to the wind carrying some showers or rain at times for many later, especially in the North.


UKMO today shows Low pressure moving very slowly North just to the west of the UK next week. The warm and humid weather in Southern and Eastern Britain with some thundery rain looks likely to be edged away through the week in preference to a lot of dry and bright weather and temperatures still respectable. Northern and Western regions will then be at risk of further showers in the gentle SW winds as the belt of shallow Low pressure lies between Scandinavia to the mid Atlantic.


GEM today shows it's operational as very similar to the UKMO model with High pressure ridging NE across Southern Britain next week with a lot of dry and bright weather as a result while slack Low pressure to the North and NW keep the risk of some rain and showers going for these areas through the week in temperatures falling off a little and becoming less humid with time.


NAVGEM shows a slower route to higher pressure from the South leaving it to almost next weekend when pressure has risen sufficiently enough to eliminate a rain risk from Southern Britain at least as slack Low pressure finally releases it's grip to the North and West. Temperatures look like staying well up to average and it could become rather warmer again towards the South later next week.


ECM this morning shows a painfully slow process too in bringing the effects of High pressure to the South and SW to make a lasting and far reaching inpact on the UK weather next week. The South will end up with a largely dry week with just the chance of isolated showers and humidity levels should fall as winds turn more Westerly. Northern and Western areas will remain at threat of some showery rain at times as shallow Low pressure continues to meander around close to Northern coasts.


MY THOUGHTS. In Summary improvements remain in place through the models this morning but with limited effect for more Northern areas in particular. High pressure is today generally shown to be thwarted in it's attempts to move right up across the UK from the SW instead a ridge towards Southern Britain is more likely with these areas seeing the benefits as such with sunshine at times and spare the occasional shower a lot of dry and bright weather and less humid as we move through the week. Northern and some Western areas will see the greatest risk of rain on an Atlantic flow which longer term looks like it could extend back to Southern areas too in week 2 if the longer term models are to be believed.


Martin G
Kilmersdon Radstock Bath Somerset



Look up my New Facebook Weather Page  for all the latest up to the minute weather stories as they happen
ARTzeman
06 June 2014 07:31:52

Thank You Martin...    Going for the better parts of NAVGEM  and ECM........






Some people walk in the rain.
Others just get wet.
I Just Blow my horn or trumpet
Hungry Tiger
06 June 2014 08:59:39


Good morning. Here is my assessment of the latest outputs of the main computer models outputs for today Friday June 6th 2014.


The General Situation. Low pressure lies to the SW of the UK with an increasingly warm and humid SE flow developing over all areas through the day. A cold front will move NE into this warm air across SW Britain later tonight and tomorrow.


GFS this morning offers a changeable regime over the next few weeks, bothe form it's operational and ensembles. The first week will largely be warm and quite dry for many as Low pressure to the SW of the UK moves North and fills slowly with warm and humid High pressure never far away from the SE. Later in the run the pressure pattern is trended to shift towards Low pressure over or to the NE of the UK with a much cooler and fresher Northerly aspect to the wind carrying some showers or rain at times for many later, especially in the North.


UKMO today shows Low pressure moving very slowly North just to the west of the UK next week. The warm and humid weather in Southern and Eastern Britain with some thundery rain looks likely to be edged away through the week in preference to a lot of dry and bright weather and temperatures still respectable. Northern and Western regions will then be at risk of further showers in the gentle SW winds as the belt of shallow Low pressure lies between Scandinavia to the mid Atlantic.


GEM today shows it's operational as very similar to the UKMO model with High pressure ridging NE across Southern Britain next week with a lot of dry and bright weather as a result while slack Low pressure to the North and NW keep the risk of some rain and showers going for these areas through the week in temperatures falling off a little and becoming less humid with time.


NAVGEM shows a slower route to higher pressure from the South leaving it to almost next weekend when pressure has risen sufficiently enough to eliminate a rain risk from Southern Britain at least as slack Low pressure finally releases it's grip to the North and West. Temperatures look like staying well up to average and it could become rather warmer again towards the South later next week.


ECM this morning shows a painfully slow process too in bringing the effects of High pressure to the South and SW to make a lasting and far reaching inpact on the UK weather next week. The South will end up with a largely dry week with just the chance of isolated showers and humidity levels should fall as winds turn more Westerly. Northern and Western areas will remain at threat of some showery rain at times as shallow Low pressure continues to meander around close to Northern coasts.


MY THOUGHTS. In Summary improvements remain in place through the models this morning but with limited effect for more Northern areas in particular. High pressure is today generally shown to be thwarted in it's attempts to move right up across the UK from the SW instead a ridge towards Southern Britain is more likely with these areas seeing the benefits as such with sunshine at times and spare the occasional shower a lot of dry and bright weather and less humid as we move through the week. Northern and some Western areas will see the greatest risk of rain on an Atlantic flow which longer term looks like it could extend back to Southern areas too in week 2 if the longer term models are to be believed.


Originally Posted by: GIBBY 


Sounds like its struggling to settle down properly.


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


Stormchaser
06 June 2014 09:23:38

ECM and GEM continue to propose mid-Atlantic and Scandi troughs, with the UK for the most located under relatively weak ridges in between, this being most dominant across the south while the north (possibly Midlands too) experiences the influence of low pressure systems tracking west to east between the two trough complexes.


They suggest enough mobility to prevent a trough becoming slow moving across the UK, and in fact the Scandi trough also drifts eastward to become more of a Russian trough by days 9-10, which is a good sign.


 


GFS, though, is being a right spanner in the works, going with the idea of a cut-off low developing in the western Atlantic, which then supports a blocking high across Greenland and shuts down the Atlantic westerlies. This allows the Scandi trough to gain the upper hand for a time, though only the western flank actually reaches us - it turns unseasonably cool with some showers and rain at times too.


The Atlantic mobility does return late in the run, and we begin to see the ridge from the Azores pushing back towards the UK and Europe, but that's after a fairly rotten run of days for the eastern half of the UK in particular.


 


It won't surprise you, then, that I'm hoping GFS is barking up the wrong tree with that cut-off low in the W. Atlantic!


If you have any problems or queries relating to TWO you can Email [email protected]

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2023's Homeland Extremes:
T-Max: 30.2°C 9th Sep (...!) | T-Min: -7.1°C 22nd & 23rd Jan | Wettest Day: 25.9mm 2nd Nov | Ice Days: 1 (2nd Dec -1.3°C in freezing fog)
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Rob K
06 June 2014 12:51:16


Unsurprisingly somewhere around London is probably going to be the hotspot on Saturday, around 27C


http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/wrfnmm/runs/2014060512/nmmuk-0-49-0.png?05-19


 


Originally Posted by: Medlock Vale Weather 


 


Looks pretty toasty for the SE corner. Hopefully the thundery stuff will push off during the morning and gives us some decent sunshine. It will certainly feel pretty steamy if the sun does break through for any length of time. 


 


Even before the end of May we'd already clocked up more alfresco dining than we managed in the whole of 2012. Long may that continue...


Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
Gavin P
06 June 2014 12:52:28

Hi all,


Here's today's video update;


D-Day, JMA Friday + Saturday Thunderstorms


http://www.gavsweathervids.com


Longer range JMA is looking quite good for June, IMO.


Rural West Northants 120m asl
Short, medium and long range weather forecast videos @ https://www.youtube.com/user/GavsWeatherVids
Hungry Tiger
06 June 2014 19:30:06



Unsurprisingly somewhere around London is probably going to be the hotspot on Saturday, around 27C


http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/wrfnmm/runs/2014060512/nmmuk-0-49-0.png?05-19


 


Originally Posted by: Rob K 


 


Looks pretty toasty for the SE corner. Hopefully the thundery stuff will push off during the morning and gives us some decent sunshine. It will certainly feel pretty steamy if the sun does break through for any length of time. 


 


Even before the end of May we'd already clocked up more alfresco dining than we managed in the whole of 2012.


Originally Posted by: Medlock Vale Weather 


That wasn't hard to beat.  2012 was a complete and total atrocity. I've never known anything like it - Kevin Bradshaw's Manchester Summer index placed 2012 as the worst summer since 1956.


 


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


Stormchaser
06 June 2014 19:52:36

The 12z runs have some notable differences in the extent to which high pressure builds through the UK, and also how much energy heads to Scandinavia days 5-6.


ECM, UKMO, GFS and JMA all bring enough of a ridge days 3-6 to keep things largely settled in the SE but with more changeable conditions for the NW. Further detail is trivial at this stage, but it could be on the warm side in the SE with a bit of luck.


GEM and NAVGEM both make less of the ridge, the former particularly so, with more unsettled conditions dominating for most areas - still barking up the wrong tree I hope!


 


GFS has a reduced and slower transfer of energy to Scandinavia compared with this morning, falling more in line with ECM. A mid-Atlantic ridge still features from day 8 or 9 though, as it does in the ECM run.


ECM has found the dreaded sliding low tonight for day 10... but thankfully, a weak ridge and well mixed out trough means that it doesn't pack much of a punch.


UKMO still has a much bigger transfer of energy to Scandinavia. JMA follows that idea too, and develops a broad trough there by day 8, threatening to bring a markedly cool run of days, though not too unsettled.


There's not enough to work with for a decision on what's most likely to unfold, but at the very least a drop in temperatures looks likely for a time, with solutions ranging from near average to several degrees below.


 


Longer term, low pressure is signalled to be pushing into Greenland and sending the mid-Atlantic ridge toppling east. With a rather unstable looking setup over the W. Med. it seems we could end up with the ridge sitting above a trough across Central/Western Europe - but early days on that one!


If you have any problems or queries relating to TWO you can Email [email protected]

https://twitter.com/peacockreports 
2023's Homeland Extremes:
T-Max: 30.2°C 9th Sep (...!) | T-Min: -7.1°C 22nd & 23rd Jan | Wettest Day: 25.9mm 2nd Nov | Ice Days: 1 (2nd Dec -1.3°C in freezing fog)
Keep Calm and Forecast On
David M Porter
06 June 2014 20:13:35




Unsurprisingly somewhere around London is probably going to be the hotspot on Saturday, around 27C


http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/wrfnmm/runs/2014060512/nmmuk-0-49-0.png?05-19


 


Originally Posted by: Hungry Tiger 


 


Looks pretty toasty for the SE corner. Hopefully the thundery stuff will push off during the morning and gives us some decent sunshine. It will certainly feel pretty steamy if the sun does break through for any length of time. 


 


Even before the end of May we'd already clocked up more alfresco dining than we managed in the whole of 2012.


Originally Posted by: Rob K 


That wasn't hard to beat.  2012 was a complete and total atrocity. I've never known anything like it - Kevin Bradshaw's Manchester Summer index placed 2012 as the worst summer since 1956.


 


Originally Posted by: Medlock Vale Weather 


The only other summer I can recall that was anything like as persistently rotten for weather as 2012 in my area was 1998. The difference that year was that IIRC it was more northern & western areas that copped the wettest weather although it wasn't a great summer anywhere in the UK from what I remember. The really wet weather in 2012 seemed to be much more widespread, and caused flooding in some areas that not long before had been crying out for some rain!


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

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