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4wd

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Posts posted by 4wd

  1. 4 hours ago, northriding said:

    Yes, brilliant flash and sharp crack of thunder just to my south a few moments ago.

    Our power went off about then but was back by 6am.
    At the time there was such a din from hail and wind banging I didn't hear thunder but could easily have been some.
    The severe gustiness of the wind from unusual direction must have done a lot of damage to trees and buildings

  2. If it can vibrate and oscillate in wind it could trip, you can often get a trip from dewy condensation which might only go through later in the day.
    This is one of the drawbacks of an all in one set up where you want it high enough for wind but ideally rain would be recorded near ground level and temperature at abut 1.5m. There are always compromises in real world

  3. There's quite a push to demand a referendum on the whole legitimacy of our supposed commitment to net zero by a set date, if it succeeds I know what the result will be because it has simply been railroaded through with almost no debate or consideration of the consequences - which will be quite simply devastating for this country.

    The costs are simply not affordable, many of the required changes involve technology (e.g. Hydrogen) which isn't anywhere near ready to implement yet - and above all after spending countless trillions - surprise surprise the weather won't be changed to whatever they imagine it ought to be.
    Not least because major emitters will emit more CO2 attempting to supply the world with products we will also have to import having shut ourselves down

    • Like 2
  4. 20 hours ago, Wheezer said:

    With more than 80 percent of its 1,190 coral islands standing less than 1 meter above sea level, the Maldives has the lowest terrain of any country in the world.  Sea level rise has  remained consistent for decades/centuries,  2-4mm per year.  Yet Somehow this is now not a natural progression 

    Coral islands are a dynamic living system which can easily keep up with slow sea level rise.
    Unless you build on them and disrupt sediment flows and build up.
    The Maldives have always been vulnerable to major storms sweeping over large areas it's like building new houses on a flood plain then wondering why they flood a couple of times per decade.

    • Like 2
  5. An odd feature often noticed here is temperature hovering just above freezing all night but dropping below just as sun rises for an hour or so.
    It's probably similar to how wind often falls lighter at sunset, since getting a weather station it is striking how during potential ground/air frost nights a little breeze will keep springing up periodically just enough to mix things up and lift temperature a degree or two.
    Though to be honest I suspect something else is involved like first rays of sun somehow increasing the ability of heat to radiate away through upper layers.

    • Like 1
  6. Horse chestnuts had a terrible time here all the flowers were frosted to brown pulp but some did attempt a kind of half hearted second crop which hasn't produced any conkers I'm aware of.
    Northern England is on the northern edge of their range they aren't native and are thought to have been introduced no earlier than 1500 probably from Turkey

    • Like 1
  7. It was a mainly mild (but not frost free) and almost snowless winter even here until around that colder spell late March, there must have been a quite potent northerly.
    At school we had a favourite NZ supply teacher who was from North island so had never seen proper snow she literally squealed with delight looking from our upstairs classroom window as a subzero swirling full on white out developed one afternoon probably at start of April.

    • Like 1
  8. 8 hours ago, A Face like Thunder said:

    A horrible night at Whitby with wind and driving rain throughout. Not a night for a caravan. I got the impression that at 8am, when I loaded up the car, the wind had come around to more of a NE rather than NW but could be wrong. It was certainly NW for most of the night. Strange journey back to Cheshire, with the wind and rain at Whitby quickly replaced with blue skies and sun by the time I came off the A64 and on to the M1(S). Such are the vagaries of the weather on the NY Moors.  

    Edit - what's the weather like there now? Have the wind and rain finally cleared? I can imagine that anyone coming from (say) Leeds for a day out in Whitby will have had a nasty shock if the weather is as it was earlier. It's quite pleasant back in Cheshire, but that's relative of course! 

     

    Dry since daylight and sunny afternoon.

    • Like 1
  9. Here we had committed to a complete rebuild of slurry/manure handling system - a dairy farm at the time.
    It was expected to take six weeks from start to finish.
    Last two weeks of September revolved around removing what was there and at start of October excavating new pit started.
    The team doing it were travelling quite some way from near Harrogate daily and often could not believe how different it was here with three significant snow events causing delays.
    The final part was finished in November when we had a good foot of snow.
    In those days the RAC rally went through forest stages in North Yorkshire late November, what little footage was captured for TV looked like northern Scandinavia

    • Like 1
  10. Worth reading. 

    Close to home 
     

    QVNIMTIyNjkyNTE1.jpg?width=2048&enable=u
    WWW.YORKSHIREPOST.CO.UK

    Lonely frost pockets and windy high hills dot North Yorkshire’s remote valleys with rare micro-climates that might be missed but for one man’s mission to capture the county’s extremes.

     

     

    • Like 3
  11. It went on into May and was one of the latest ever (cow) turn out days 17th May  and there was still no grass.
    One day early March I think was the only time I saw snow rollers here.
    There was snow on snow from just after Christmas until late March when it did thaw dramatically for a few days.

    • Like 1
  12. 2 hours ago, Sunny76 said:

    It hasn’t been a decent summer,  maybe for those who think 19-22c is acceptable, with little to no sunshine and hardly any days of 25c or above.

     

    I agree with the poster who said it must have been a waste of money for people to have a staycation here, having to sit in a hotel, guest house or grubby caravan, because it’s raining or too cold for the beach. 
     

    I would take 35-40c in Portugal, Spain or Italy for a week or two over this pile of rubbish.

    That's normal here, and it has been like that most days.
    We usually only get 2 or 3 days between 25C and 30C typically in July, most days about 18-20C is the comfortable maximum

    • Like 1
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