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alexisj9

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Everything posted by alexisj9

  1. Probably got reported by many who still want the Christmas cold, as a wind up post.
  2. Nope they were definitely winter months. As were march April and most of may this year down here.
  3. Was talking about the model thread, it's still there on some models for Thursday, or was yesterday lol, not looked yet today.
  4. Low is also more developed, hope it doesn't develop much more, or it'll move a bit further north again like it has since last fax chart, and be a bit windy down here too.
  5. Looking at the charts, not by the met office, mid thread is to busy hunting for Christmas snow to notice, but they have flagged up a possible bug storm going down the north see, in a few models. Hopefully that moderates.
  6. Actually it's been drizzeling here on and off most of the day.
  7. Nope, I've had it in south east London many years ago though. First it was raining, with thunder, then I told my mum it snowing now, she was like nonsense it's thundering, couldn't say anything when she went out afterwards to a nice covering that lasted a few days.
  8. It's happened, and caused major coastal flooding in the past, Thames barrier exists because if this. Was on GFS a few times the other day, was hoping it was a GFS over blow, if it starts showing else where, in reliable times, I'll start getting very worried.
  9. That was a low that showed up in a slack flow, would have arrived at closer time scales cme or no cme in my view.
  10. As long as x doesn't stand for storm of 87 I'm in, hopefully that x happened earlier this year and stayed south, and won't be coming back for another 20+ years.
  11. Believe it or not, last year a sws at the bottom of the trough here in Dover, while UK was cold, was cold enough to get a covering, yep I was surprised too. Last December, however this set up does not look the same.
  12. Obviously talking about the possible wind storm in some models, it's too far ahead, GFS often over plays low at this distance. Hopefully it'll moderate when it gets closer. They normally do, but not always.
  13. Not me, I've got a tourney on Friday night unless it's cancelled, I which case I won't go out lol it's only ten minutes down the road.
  14. Those would actually be blizzards, a lot of what people call blizzards here in the UK, don't have strong enough winds to qualify.
  15. It's met language not utter tripe lol, but yeah people do need to be mindful that not everyone will know what everything means. Most of the abbreviations once posted auto link to an explanation, but not all of them. Perhaps if it doesn't, they could edit and put an info link up.
  16. I've thought this before, but I think it reversed, re southern hemisphere, that's how it makes more sense to me. But people said I was wrong about that.
  17. There was a big tail of showers with heavy bursts, though that storm in London was heavy, perhaps Thame big drainage system works better than people thought.
  18. It always based on amber warnings, and in Ireland the storms were bad enough for that, it was Thier met agency that named both of these last two. We saw what cirain would have done had it been just a little north in the channel islands, although it did produce high winds here, it thankfully missed most of us so people though it shouldn't have been named, I disagree, as I was in the needed amber wind warnings, and it was mental here in Dover.
  19. Also the time isn't here yet, so no one actually knows whether it'll happen or not yet.
  20. They were always for Ireland and north England these two, I got rain, but wind wise, was never expecting much, and didn't get much. You alway have to check where the named storm is actually tracking, and not think, named storm, what storm. The storms happened, and did have bad effects where those effects were expected.
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