Remove ads from site

KevBrads1
06 December 2014 19:35:30

December 1892 was a cold month with spells of wintry weather. A Nwly flow on the 4th and 5th, gave heavy snowfalls to a number of areas.


1st December
Melrose: 2.5 inches of snow
Peebles: 3.5 inches of snow
Glasgow: 4 inches of snow

2nd- 5th December
Forres, snow daily

3rd-5th December
Douglas, snow daily

4th and 5th December
Buntingsdale: 14 inches of snow
Southport: 4 inches of snow
Manchester: 6 inches of snow


UserPostedImage


3rd-6th December
Coventry, snow daily

The mid month period was milder but it became colder towards the end of the month as high pressure ensured frosts and fog.

Addington: 28th, the max was 28F. On the 25th, the lake was covered with ice strong enough to carry skaters and during the last week, trees were beautifuuly covered in rime.

Diss: The weather during the entire Christmas holidays was exceptionally brilliant with sharp frost and good skating.

Haverfordwest: On the night of the 25th, a severe frost set in, skating on every day, large ice floes on the river Cleddan


Jedburgh: ponds and rivers frozen over.


Old Cummock: almost continuous frost from 20th to the close.


Cargen: the mean temp of the last 10 days was 28.6F


The CET for the month was 1.8C


 


 


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
Gooner
07 December 2014 08:18:22

Cheers Kev


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


Jeff
  • Jeff
  • Advanced Member
07 December 2014 18:55:03
Kev,

do you have anything from 5-9th December 1981 when North Manchester received several inches of snow from heavy snow showers off the irish sea and then a blizzard on the night of 13th? Cheers
On the East/West Sussex Border
70m ASL

Remove ads from site

Ads