Thunder and lightning yesterday and short sharp showers today, at the time of writing. sunny with a lot of cloud
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostThunder and lightning yesterday and short sharp showers today, at the time of writing. sunny with a lot of cloud
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Ockeghem's Razor
Here on the Stirlingshire/West Lothian border Bertha has proved to be a 'brutum fulmen'. Winds are no more than typical for an autumn day and the local burn is nowhere near being in spate. Further north, however, it seems to have been pretty damaging as the BBC News website shows--staggering photograph of a sinkhole or landslip with water cascading over the edge and a group of pigs standing around looking down into the abyss as if contemplating joining their Gadarene mates.
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Mixed day in the Pennines today - plenty of warm sunshine; so much that just when you can resist no further, you're tempted out. Ten minutes' walk from the house and the heavens open. I've been soaked twice today. Not unpleasurable - but none of the sunshine has been forecast: it's supposed to be non-stop rain all day.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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An unusual phenomenon in British weather, but one I've seen often in footage from abroad, particularly America and Australia: arc lightning. Just a moment ago I've been watching a large thunderstorm passing to the south of here, with forked lightning every few minutes making itself just about visible through a curtain of very heavy rain, about six miles distant (30 seconds between flash and rumble). Where I am located we were right under the edge of the anvil spreading out north from the storm; I was caught unawares, looking north, by a vivid flash, followed four seconds later by an enormous, ground shaking crash of thunder. The strike must have been a very powerful one, connecting the ground (or more probably a tree in woods just to the east) to the edge of the anvil overhang, probably 24,000 feet above.
Something similar happened 12 or so years ago when I was visiting Maidstone - a sudden huge thunder clap in brilliant sunshine that startled everyone in the vicinity, from a storm rumbling many miles away in the North Downs. We were extremely fortunate not to have got hit!
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amateur51
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostFrom the appearance of the sky to my north, and the ominous rumbles emitting therefrom, I would say that AM51's part of London is right now in the process of being washed away!
All the small children in the shop were thrilled by these events which went on for maybe twenty minutes. The roads were flooded very quickly and it took quite a while for the water to run off. It was a miracle that I got home without being drenched.Last edited by Guest; 12-08-14, 08:30.
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Originally posted by mercia View Postthat's a useful little formula. So 15 seconds = 3 miles ? [I had thought it should be a greater distance]
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostJust wondering if autumn has come early, or is it because of the back end of hurricane Bertha, the Jetstream has been put out of quilter?
Right now here we have a confused-looking sky, with a couple of thunder heads, one about 10 miles to the south, another far away to the north-east, at a rather stifling 19 degrees.
75 minutes later: Big forked lightning flashes a mile to the north ever 20 seconds or so as I write, (oh, one right overhead!) back end of roll cloud heading right this way whew!Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 14-08-14, 13:04.
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