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Saint Snow
21 January 2015 19:58:11

I've realised that it matters not whether it's an easterly, northern blocking, slider low, cold NW zonality or whatever, they all have the same ability to deliver cock-all snow IMBY




Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
LeedsLad123
21 January 2015 20:06:49
25 January 1995 - Atlantic low colliding with cold air resulting in 40cm in Leeds, and thousands of stranded motorists and workers. We haven't come anywhere near to that since though, and I was only 7 years old at the time so it's not that clear in my memory.

Another good example, albeit less impressive, is 25 January 2013, which resulted in several inches falling within a few hours, from an Atlantic front. The following day had highs of around 6C and rain the following night. We had close to a foot of level snow though, due to the snow that had fallen days before.




Whitkirk, Leeds - 85m ASL.
JACKO4EVER
21 January 2015 20:14:20


I reckon we see les snow falling here than we used to 30-40 years ago. It still might not have settled but we used to get days of wet snow more often. Now it is nearly always rain unless we have a colder ,drier continental influence.


Originally Posted by: bledur 


have to agree. The 80's delivered huge amounts of snow at times to my village and surrounding hills- I remember snow drifts above hedgerows on more than one occasion. Now there are no snow drifts and when it does snow it's often light and patchy. Now I am getting older I can live with that!

Saint Snow
21 January 2015 20:23:00


I think people have to take into consideration that major Atlantic systems engaging cold blocks that stall rarely effect the whole country anyway


Originally Posted by: KevBrads1 


 


Very good point.


I often find that here in low-lying NW England is not the best place to be, as can remember a few occasions of the front stalling to our east, leaving us in the mild air after a period of snow. Remember this happening in 1994 or 1995. Heavy snow started around 10am; two hours later the depth was at least 15cm. We'd had a call in the morning from our neighbours to say our front door was wide open - they'd looked in and nothing looked stolen (the catch stuck, so we reasoned we hadn't closed it properly), but we decided to nip home at lunchtime to check anyway, only 5 miles away. It took us half an hour to get about half way, gave up, and drove back to work, where we were met by most of the office leaving as the bosses had decided to close due to the weather, with the snow still coming down and approaching 20cm. By 3pm, the snow had turned to rain, and pretty much all disappeared by early evening. Further east, I understand it continued as snow for hours.


Then again, we had the opposite issue on the second weekend of March 2006, when the front stalled just on the coastline of the southern half of NW England . Cumbria and western Scotland got enormous amounts of snow, we got light snow for about 4 hours giving a couple of cm's. I'd watched the radar from early morning as it marched toward us, then ground to a halt, an agonising 10/15 miles to our west.



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Russwirral
21 January 2015 21:06:45


 


 


Very good point.


I often find that here in low-lying NW England is not the best place to be, as can remember a few occasions of the front stalling to our east, leaving us in the mild air after a period of snow. Remember this happening in 1994 or 1995. Heavy snow started around 10am; two hours later the depth was at least 15cm. We'd had a call in the morning from our neighbours to say our front door was wide open - they'd looked in and nothing looked stolen (the catch stuck, so we reasoned we hadn't closed it properly), but we decided to nip home at lunchtime to check anyway, only 5 miles away. It took us half an hour to get about half way, gave up, and drove back to work, where we were met by most of the office leaving as the bosses had decided to close due to the weather, with the snow still coming down and approaching 20cm. By 3pm, the snow had turned to rain, and pretty much all disappeared by early evening. Further east, I understand it continued as snow for hours.


Then again, we had the opposite issue on the second weekend of March 2006, when the front stalled just on the coastline of the southern half of NW England . Cumbria and western Scotland got enormous amounts of snow, we got light snow for about 4 hours giving a couple of cm's. I'd watched the radar from early morning as it marched toward us, then ground to a halt, an agonising 10/15 miles to our west.


Originally Posted by: Saint Snow 


 


Aye - I remember that in 2006.  a very thin line of land along the north west coast delivered 5-6" snow for the Wirral.  Thats the last time i saw any snowfall over 10cm around these parts.


 


10cm seems to be our yearly limit.  Most ive ever seen was probably 6inches in 95 i think


Saint Snow
21 January 2015 21:12:47


 


 


Aye - I remember that in 2006.  a very thin line of land along the north west coast delivered 5-6" snow for the Wirral.  Thats the last time i saw any snowfall over 10cm around these parts.


 


10cm seems to be our yearly limit.  Most ive ever seen was probably 6inches in 95 i think


Originally Posted by: Russwirral 


 


We had 17cm in Jan 2010 and 15cm in Dec 2010.


Had 10cm twice in 2013 (once in Jan, t'other in Mar)



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Chiltern Blizzard
21 January 2015 21:26:20

Notwithstanding what I wrote at the start of this thread, reading through the posts there is clearly something that we have been missing.  It's not snow as such - half-a-dozen decent falls that stuck for a week or more since 2009 IMBY, and most others haven't had it too bad - but the lack of a true, sustained, deep cold easterly feed.  The last one I believe was in early 1997, some 18 years ago! 


OK, there as March 2013, but being March, the sun significantly reduced the impact.  As for 2005, the easterly flow lasted for nearly two weeks but it was hardly deep cold (in fact, it was one of the most dissapointing cold spells I can remember - I lived in Leamington Spa at the time and its must have snowed on 10 or so days, but any snow cover (when it did lie) was pathetically thin and melted within hours).   As for recent cold spells (i.e. 2009 onwards) they have been cold enough for decent snow for most, but coastal areas have tended to do very poorly... I have to say I feel sorry for those living in the likes of Bournemouth and Plymouth - often when 95% of use were celebrating cold and snow in the past few years the best they have had is a temporary slushy cover....  It's interesting to think that those under 20 living in the coastal south, west of say Southampton, may never have seen 'proper' snow, unless they happenned to venture inland during those snowy episodes.


I know there's no such thing as fairness when it comes to weather, but surely we're due a really easterly soon!


  


Rendlesham, Suffolk 20m asl
Andy Woodcock
21 January 2015 22:17:05


 


Yup, 2005 was the last decent easterly here - looking at my records 2012/3 delivered a little bit of slush but didn't even manage a covering of snow. 2005 was interesting here in that we had snow every single day for a fortnight, but as temperatures were above freezing during the day (and during most nights) it never managed to equal the classic easterlies of the mid 90s and earlier. The snow was heavy, wet stuff rather than dry powder snow.


Incidentally I asked at the post office earlier (as I've got the day off, I walked into the village) and the postmaster - who's been here longer than I have! - said that the council used to pay the farmers to put out snow fences each year, regardless of the long-term weather forecast. Funding for that stopped in the late 90s and as a result the farmers don't put them out. The council's been very lucky since then, as we've not had a proper easterly with drifting powder snow... but the next time we do, and there will be a next time, I'm sure, it won't be much fun on the roads!


1995 was the last time we had a foot of snow and was also the last time I saw icicles (which in one memorable case extended all the way from the eaves of a bungalow to the ground, creating a pillar of ice! I was really impressed by that). The winter of 96/97 was the last time a daytime high of -1C or less was recorded here.


It's remarkable that the UK can have such different weather within just 400 miles.


in Cumbria  February 2005 was a non event ( told you winter was over Lol) but in December 2010 we had the coldest MONTH ever recorded in a record going back to 1903 so here we can not say the old times were better.


However, between 1960 and 2000 the average number of days with snow lying per year in Penrith dropped from 21 to 12 so a massive reduction that continues (despite 2010) to this day.


andy


Originally Posted by: Retron 


Andy Woodcock
Penrith
Cumbria

Altitude 535 feet

"Why are the British so worried about climate change? Any change to their climate can only be an improvement" John Daley 2001
Russwirral
21 January 2015 22:24:48


Notwithstanding what I wrote at the start of this thread, reading through the posts there is clearly something that we have been missing.  It's not snow as such - half-a-dozen decent falls that stuck for a week or more since 2009 IMBY, and most others haven't had it too bad - but the lack of a true, sustained, deep cold easterly feed.  The last one I believe was in early 1997, some 18 years ago! 


OK, there as March 2013, but being March, the sun significantly reduced the impact.  As for 2005, the easterly flow lasted for nearly two weeks but it was hardly deep cold (in fact, it was one of the most dissapointing cold spells I can remember - I lived in Leamington Spa at the time and its must have snowed on 10 or so days, but any snow cover (when it did lie) was pathetically thin and melted within hours).   As for recent cold spells (i.e. 2009 onwards) they have been cold enough for decent snow for most, but coastal areas have tended to do very poorly... I have to say I feel sorry for those living in the likes of Bournemouth and Plymouth - often when 95% of use were celebrating cold and snow in the past few years the best they have had is a temporary slushy cover....  It's interesting to think that those under 20 living in the coastal south, west of say Southampton, may never have seen 'proper' snow, unless they happenned to venture inland during those snowy episodes.


I know there's no such thing as fairness when it comes to weather, but surely we're due a really easterly soon!


  


 


Originally Posted by: Chiltern Blizzard 


 


I thought Feb 2009 brought that?


 


http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/interesting/feb2009


 


I remember the snow arrived in Manchester approx a day before the forecasters expected it to.  A large swathe of light snow showers smattered all over the UK. which was quite unusual.  I remember expecting perhaps the chance of a snow flurry about 10pm on the sunday, and getting into the car at about 9am and it snowing quite heavily, in that typical very dry nature you get from easterly winds.  


 


 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzeZJUsT0UU


Rich mt
21 January 2015 22:43:42

Not True, 2 December 2010 delivered about 3-4 inches of snow to the Poole and Bouremouth area, which lasted on the ground for days.


Notwithstanding what I wrote at the start of this thread, reading through the posts there is clearly something that we have been missing.  It's not snow as such - half-a-dozen decent falls that stuck for a week or more since 2009 IMBY, and most others haven't had it too bad - but the lack of a true, sustained, deep cold easterly feed.  The last one I believe was in early 1997, some 18 years ago! 


OK, there as March 2013, but being March, the sun significantly reduced the impact.  As for 2005, the easterly flow lasted for nearly two weeks but it was hardly deep cold (in fact, it was one of the most dissapointing cold spells I can remember - I lived in Leamington Spa at the time and its must have snowed on 10 or so days, but any snow cover (when it did lie) was pathetically thin and melted within hours).   As for recent cold spells (i.e. 2009 onwards) they have been cold enough for decent snow for most, but coastal areas have tended to do very poorly... I have to say I feel sorry for those living in the likes of Bournemouth and Plymouth - often when 95% of use were celebrating cold and snow in the past few years the best they have had is a temporary slushy cover....  It's interesting to think that those under 20 living in the coastal south, west of say Southampton, may never have seen 'proper' snow, unless they happenned to venture inland during those snowy episodes.


I know there's no such thing as fairness when it comes to weather, but surely we're due a really easterly soon!


  


Originally Posted by: Chiltern Blizzard 


Poole, Dorset
Medlock Vale Weather
21 January 2015 22:44:15


Notwithstanding what I wrote at the start of this thread, reading through the posts there is clearly something that we have been missing.  It's not snow as such - half-a-dozen decent falls that stuck for a week or more since 2009 IMBY, and most others haven't had it too bad - but the lack of a true, sustained, deep cold easterly feed.  The last one I believe was in early 1997, some 18 years ago! 


OK, there as March 2013, but being March, the sun significantly reduced the impact.  As for 2005, the easterly flow lasted for nearly two weeks but it was hardly deep cold (in fact, it was one of the most dissapointing cold spells I can remember - I lived in Leamington Spa at the time and its must have snowed on 10 or so days, but any snow cover (when it did lie) was pathetically thin and melted within hours).   As for recent cold spells (i.e. 2009 onwards) they have been cold enough for decent snow for most, but coastal areas have tended to do very poorly... I have to say I feel sorry for those living in the likes of Bournemouth and Plymouth - often when 95% of use were celebrating cold and snow in the past few years the best they have had is a temporary slushy cover....  It's interesting to think that those under 20 living in the coastal south, west of say Southampton, may never have seen 'proper' snow, unless they happenned to venture inland during those snowy episodes.


I know there's no such thing as fairness when it comes to weather, but surely we're due a really easterly soon!


  


Originally Posted by: Chiltern Blizzard 


In regards to the sun, even in March it is not "strong" any where in the UK, I used to work in America and we had a 6 inch fall of snow that lay on all surfaces in mid April, given the location is a far south as Madrid I very much doubt the sun had much of an effect, in fact the sun strength in Pennsylvania were I was in April is something like late May here in Northern England. Given the right synoptics (especially low dew points) snow can lay and last in the UK in March. It just takes a decent easterly and Europe to be cold too. By April it does become increasingly difficult to tap into any decent cold air.


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 
some faraway beach
21 January 2015 23:11:23

Christmas Eve 2010, looking towards the Blackdown Hills, south of Taunton. And that's with loft insulation too.


UserPostedImage " alt="" />


Having worked in West Germany throughout 1981/2 I'd always derided anybody in this country who reckoned we were experiencing conditions that were treacherous or memorable during winter ... until December 2010. 


It's extraordinary how under-appreciated this event has been. In southern England generations have come and gone who never experienced the unique bleakness of deep and intensifying cold around the shortest days which we were fortunate enough to witness then.


 


2 miles west of Taunton, 32 m asl, where "milder air moving in from the west" becomes SNOWMAGEDDON.
Well, two or three times a decade it does, anyway.
nsrobins
22 January 2015 21:52:45

Another exceptional event occurred locally on the night of 5th Jan, 2010. A trough moving N to S in the cold flow deepened as it engaged with the warmer surface air over the English Channel forming a closed circulation and wrapping colder, dryer air into itself. Sleet and snow had already fallen during the day in the Midlands, and as the low deepened and moved more or less down the A34 and exited the coast in Dorset it picked up extra moisture and started to slow.
At 3.35pm the Met Office issued a rare RED warning for exceptional snowfall for Dorset, Hampshire, Wiltshire , Surrey and Berkshire with a forecast of 30 - 40 cm overnight.
At 4pm just north of Portsmouth the temperature was +6C and rain was moving in from the North. In Newbury it was already below freezing with snow. I issued a severe alert to my local network by email at 4.15pm, and many colleagues took the advice and got their cars from the hospital car park situated up the hill above the hospital. Those that didn't were unable to retrieve their cars for three days.
At 5pm the heavy rain turned to snow and continued well into the evening. It was quite frankly one of the longest continuous periods of persistent very heavy snow I've ever seen. By 9pm I measured a level 12cm. Local roads had become blocked. The A3 between Portsmouth and Petersfield was blocked with abandoned cars, and the authorities initiated a red alert emergency plan to recover people stranded in the snow.
The snow continued into the following morning. By the time it petered out I had amassed a level 21cm although areas towards Berkshire (Farnborough for instance) achieved u to 40cm level.


A truly remarkable event remembered not only for the depths but for the rapid transition from a 'mild' dry afternoon to deep snow and chaos just a few hours later.


Neil
Fareham, Hampshire 28m ASL (near estuary)
Stormchaser, Member TORRO
turbotubbs
23 January 2015 10:40:31


Another exceptional event occurred locally on the night of 5th Jan, 2010. A trough moving N to S in the cold flow deepened as it engaged with the warmer surface air over the English Channel forming a closed circulation and wrapping colder, dryer air into itself. Sleet and snow had already fallen during the day in the Midlands, and as the low deepened and moved more or less down the A34 and exited the coast in Dorset it picked up extra moisture and started to slow.
At 3.35pm the Met Office issued a rare RED warning for exceptional snowfall for Dorset, Hampshire, Wiltshire , Surrey and Berkshire with a forecast of 30 - 40 cm overnight.
At 4pm just north of Portsmouth the temperature was +6C and rain was moving in from the North. In Newbury it was already below freezing with snow. I issued a severe alert to my local network by email at 4.15pm, and many colleagues took the advice and got their cars from the hospital car park situated up the hill above the hospital. Those that didn't were unable to retrieve their cars for three days.
At 5pm the heavy rain turned to snow and continued well into the evening. It was quite frankly one of the longest continuous periods of persistent very heavy snow I've ever seen. By 9pm I measured a level 12cm. Local roads had become blocked. The A3 between Portsmouth and Petersfield was blocked with abandoned cars, and the authorities initiated a red alert emergency plan to recover people stranded in the snow.
The snow continued into the following morning. By the time it petered out I had amassed a level 21cm although areas towards Berkshire (Farnborough for instance) achieved u to 40cm level.


A truly remarkable event remembered not only for the depths but for the rapid transition from a 'mild' dry afternoon to deep snow and chaos just a few hours later.


Originally Posted by: nsrobins 


Great post. I recall that event as a 'so close but no cigar' event. I was on crutches at the time so missed out on much of the fun, but couldn't believe my area was actually in a red warning of snow from the Met. In the event the biggest snow totals were 50-60 mile east and we had to make do with 4-5 inches, still nice but I was so jealous...


All goes to show that this kind of event can still happen in the UK in the South... And that's before we we get on to Dec 2010.


Keep the faith

Rob K
23 January 2015 10:46:59


Another exceptional event occurred locally on the night of 5th Jan, 2010. A trough moving N to S in the cold flow deepened as it engaged with the warmer surface air over the English Channel forming a closed circulation and wrapping colder, dryer air into itself. Sleet and snow had already fallen during the day in the Midlands, and as the low deepened and moved more or less down the A34 and exited the coast in Dorset it picked up extra moisture and started to slow.
At 3.35pm the Met Office issued a rare RED warning for exceptional snowfall for Dorset, Hampshire, Wiltshire , Surrey and Berkshire with a forecast of 30 - 40 cm overnight.
At 4pm just north of Portsmouth the temperature was +6C and rain was moving in from the North. In Newbury it was already below freezing with snow. I issued a severe alert to my local network by email at 4.15pm, and many colleagues took the advice and got their cars from the hospital car park situated up the hill above the hospital. Those that didn't were unable to retrieve their cars for three days.
At 5pm the heavy rain turned to snow and continued well into the evening. It was quite frankly one of the longest continuous periods of persistent very heavy snow I've ever seen. By 9pm I measured a level 12cm. Local roads had become blocked. The A3 between Portsmouth and Petersfield was blocked with abandoned cars, and the authorities initiated a red alert emergency plan to recover people stranded in the snow.
The snow continued into the following morning. By the time it petered out I had amassed a level 21cm although areas towards Berkshire (Farnborough for instance) achieved u to 40cm level.


A truly remarkable event remembered not only for the depths but for the rapid transition from a 'mild' dry afternoon to deep snow and chaos just a few hours later.


Originally Posted by: nsrobins 


Yes I mentioned this one in the "most memorable event" thread above. The best snowfall I've ever seen at home. I was at work and getting updates from my wife by text. I think I left work about 7pm when there was already 10cm. Remarkably the trains were still running, and I stepped out onto deep snow on the platform at Fleet station. I had resigned myself to (and was oddly looking forward to!) walking the 4 miles home through the snow, but a taxi driver had made it to the station and asked if I wanted a lift. He managed to get up the fairly steep and winding hill to the A30 at Blackbushe, with the car sliding all over the place, and saved me the walk.

Then the snow kept falling right through until morning, with 25cm on the road outside and over a foot up on Yateley Common. I don't think that event will be bettered in a long long time.


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
Saint Snow
23 January 2015 11:23:17

In terms of non-events where the Atlantic easily won-out when not forecast to do so, 31/12/00 is fairly fresh in the mind.


We'd had around 12cm of snow fall on the 29th December, which then froze a bit and stayed around with minimal meltage. A front was forecast to move in from the west on the evening of the 31st  bringing a period of heavy snow.


Without TWO, it was difficult to get to see accurate discussion of what was likely/unlikely to happen, but I do remember reading bits and bobs on the net that there was a chance this front could stall and not bring through milder air. However, the very least that seemed to be in offing was 1-2 hours of heavy snow falling on a base of frozen snow (instant depth increase).


This to happen on New Year's Eve. I was really looking forward to not just a rare 'snow on snow' event that had the potential to add a further 12cm to a good depth already in place, but also, as we weren't going out that NYE (I personally hate NYE), looking forward with mischievous glee to the absolute chaos in towns and cities that the snow would bring (especially if the snow could continue to midnight).


Around 9pm, the snow began. Lovely big flakes.


By 9.15 it was turning very sleety, and all rain by 9.30.


When the clocks struck midnight, all the snow had gone, barring the sorry remains of snowmen, along with the remnants of snow piles where people had cleared drives/paths.


There was no chaos, no stories of people having to sleep in pubs/nightclubs, etc


 


All in all a most disappointing failed snow event


 


 


 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Rob K
23 January 2015 12:59:27

It's worth remembering that, without all the info and forecasts we have nowadays, most of the "failed snow events" and "non events" of the past would just have been... rainy days. 


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
Saint Snow
23 January 2015 13:08:14


It's worth remembering that, without all the info and forecasts we have nowadays, most of the "failed snow events" and "non events" of the past would just have been... rainy days. 


Originally Posted by: Rob K 


 


True - although the one I talk of above (and a couple others I can remember) were shown on the BBC weather as snow events, but failed to materialise.


 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
KevBrads1
23 January 2015 13:09:49


In terms of non-events where the Atlantic easily won-out when not forecast to do so, 31/12/00 is fairly fresh in the mind.


We'd had around 12cm of snow fall on the 29th December, which then froze a bit and stayed around with minimal meltage. A front was forecast to move in from the west on the evening of the 31st  bringing a period of heavy snow.


Without TWO, it was difficult to get to see accurate discussion of what was likely/unlikely to happen, but I do remember reading bits and bobs on the net that there was a chance this front could stall and not bring through milder air. However, the very least that seemed to be in offing was 1-2 hours of heavy snow falling on a base of frozen snow (instant depth increase).


This to happen on New Year's Eve. I was really looking forward to not just a rare 'snow on snow' event that had the potential to add a further 12cm to a good depth already in place, but also, as we weren't going out that NYE (I personally hate NYE), looking forward with mischievous glee to the absolute chaos in towns and cities that the snow would bring (especially if the snow could continue to midnight).


Around 9pm, the snow began. Lovely big flakes.


By 9.15 it was turning very sleety, and all rain by 9.30.


When the clocks struck midnight, all the snow had gone, barring the sorry remains of snowmen, along with the remnants of snow piles where people had cleared drives/paths.


There was no chaos, no stories of people having to sleep in pubs/nightclubs, etc


 


All in all a most disappointing failed snow event


 


 


 


Originally Posted by: Saint Snow 


Was disappointing that but I am not sure by your timing, Saint. It started snowing here in the early afternoon and was wet in nature. I think had all cleared through by the time you said it started?!


You can see the radar image on the BBC forecast that I taped. It was already in the Manchester area by midday


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3h2GeDk3NU


 


 


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
Saint Snow
23 January 2015 13:17:39


 


Was disappointing that but I am not sure by your timing, Saint. It started snowing here in the early afternoon and was wet in nature. I think had all cleared through by the time you said it started?!


 


 


Originally Posted by: KevBrads1 


 


Really? My memory's not always great on specifics, but I could have sworn it was an evening event.


 


BTW, in a remarkable coincidence, we also got snow on 29/12/01. Not nearly as deep (little more than a thin covering, perhaps 1-2cm deep), but it froze solid and lasted past NYE. We actually went out that NYE with some friends, to a lovely country pub for a meal & disco thing. When everyone piled outside for the midnight fireworks, people were slipping on their arses all over the place



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Snowedin3
23 January 2015 13:26:25

When was the last time multiple low pressure systems dumped snow over Most of the uk?


Dean Barnes
Finstock, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire
160m ASL 525 Ft
KevBrads1
23 January 2015 13:29:47


 


 


Really? My memory's not always great on specifics, but I could have sworn it was an evening event.


 


BTW, in a remarkable coincidence, we also got snow on 29/12/01. Not nearly as deep (little more than a thin covering, perhaps 1-2cm deep), but it froze solid and lasted past NYE. We actually went out that NYE with some friends, to a lovely country pub for a meal & disco thing. When everyone piled outside for the midnight fireworks, people were slipping on their arses all over the place


Originally Posted by: Saint Snow 


Yes, I remember that one, infact I think that was the longest period that snow was on the ground here since Feb 1991, maybe even the mid 80s!


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
nsrobins
23 January 2015 13:37:25


When was the last time multiple low pressure systems dumped snow over Most of the uk?


Originally Posted by: Snowedin3 


1671



Neil
Fareham, Hampshire 28m ASL (near estuary)
Stormchaser, Member TORRO
Saint Snow
23 January 2015 14:03:39


 


1671



Originally Posted by: nsrobins 


 


Think you'll find it was 1684.


 


Tsk!



 


 


 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
TimS
  • TimS
  • Advanced Member
23 January 2015 18:59:51
What the last few winters, and this thread, have reinforced is that when you get cold snowy winters more often than not you get cold miserable summers. 1995 and 96 are rare exceptions. The summers of those quoted 80s years were godawful.

Give me mild wet winters and scorching summers any day.

The winters of my youth were much snowier than now but that's mainly because I moved to London.

Brockley, South East London 30m asl

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