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Pleasant today - plenty of sun, wind at a much more civilised level and temperature and doing a good job of drying out the excess water.
A spectacular hailstorm yesterday afternoon which left a temporary imitation of snow on the ground as they were very much slightly hardened snow -white - rather than solid ice. Even so I got stung on the face painfully while getting the washing in, and the sound of the precipitation coming over was impressive.
Pleasant today - plenty of sun, wind at a much more civilised level and temperature and doing a good job of drying out the excess water.
A spectacular hailstorm yesterday afternoon which left a temporary imitation of snow on the ground as they were very much slightly hardened snow -white - rather than solid ice. Even so I got stung on the face painfully while getting the washing in, and the sound of the precipitation coming over was impressive.
Well spotted that man! Yes, you're correct, oddy - I observed the same phenomenon during one of yesterday's wintry downpours here, and the colloqual term for it is "graupel": snowflakes which have started to melt on the way down and then become re-frozen on passing through a colder sub-layer. The precipitation wa a mixture of moderate-sized raindrops, graupel and "true", large pea-sized hail. The temperature fell spectacularly, from 10 Degs. Celsius to 3 degs C in about ten minutes. Similar-looking weather today, although the showers are not as heavy as they were yesterday - at present, at least.
We have a couple of weakish frontal systems to pass through tomorrow and Wednesday before high pressure builds up to the south, bringing warm moderate winds carrying quite large amounts of cloud to the bulk of England and Wales, and stronger winds further north and west, where there will be wind plus some rain from time to time, though nothing like at the weekend just gone!
"Cyclone Idai, the tropical storm ravaging southern Africa, is possibly the worst weather-related disaster to hit the southern hemisphere, with 1.7 million people affected in Mozambique and 920,000 in Malawi, UN officials have said.
Storm surge floods up to six metres deep had caused “incredible devastation” over a huge area, the UN World Food Programme regional director, Lola Castro, said. The Buzi river had burst its banks, killing hundreds..."
"Cyclone Idai, the tropical storm ravaging southern Africa, is possibly the worst weather-related disaster to hit the southern hemisphere, with 1.7 million people affected in Mozambique and 920,000 in Malawi, UN officials have said.
Storm surge floods up to six metres deep had caused “incredible devastation” over a huge area, the UN World Food Programme regional director, Lola Castro, said. The Buzi river had burst its banks, killing hundreds..."
It's another instance of the global warming phenomenon that some are still in denial about, notwithstanding ample scientific evidence of proof. And now, of course, the consequences are starting to affect America. I'm sure their right to bear arms will protect them.
It's another instance of the global warming phenomenon...
Any evidence for this? Climate scientists have made a good case for global warming being man made, but it's difficult to tie individual events to global warming. A few years ago I was worried by reports that global warming might be slowing down the gulf stream, leading to Siberian winters in the UK, but then scientists reckoned it wasn't:
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