Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Stormy Weather II
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Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
Disappointment here as no sun(although the lighter quality of the grey cloud did give an indication of its presence) and the scraps of blue sky midday were completely inadequate to cover the proverbial Dutchman's modesty. It was chilly as well.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post.
... according to yr.no, here in London tonight between 02:00 and 03:00 hrs as the wind veers from south-west, west, to northerly the temperature will drop within that hour from 11 ° to 5 ° C. Then later on Tuesday down to 3 ° and 0 °.
Time for the bed-socks...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
That would be thought a small drop in temperature in some parts of the world. My own experience was of a cold front transition in Zurich in April of 1968. The day had seen temperatures reaching 25 Celsius. As the evening wore on, people in t-shirts sitting outside taverns enjoying the still warm but now rising Sirocco winds were unaware of what was to come within a few hours, announced as a continuous line of cumulonimbus with lightning flickering along its entire length bore down from the north west, obscuring an angry, deep red sunset. The next morning one awoke to lift the venetian blind on a blizzard scene, with snow 30 centimeters deep and an air temperature of minus 2 celsius. I have not had experience of a temperature drop of comparable proportions since.
"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Tuesday looks like a good day to catch up on various indoor tasks - wet, windy and perishing cold. If things do clear a bit at midday, as forecast, then a short walk may be in order, but otherwise exercise will have to wait. Knee problems are making walking rather unpleasant as it is, adding extra weather-related discomfort I can do without.
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I can't remember snow falling this early in November for very many years. There was a bitterly cold Bonfire Night one year (1968, I think) but no snow.
We are on low ground here so it's even more surprising to see the snow settling this evening."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI can't remember snow falling this early in November for very many years. There was a bitterly cold Bonfire Night one year (1968, I think) but no snow.
We are on low ground here so it's even more surprising to see the snow settling this evening.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostI can't remember snow falling this early in November for very many years. There was a bitterly cold Bonfire Night one year (1968, I think) but no snow.
We are on low ground here so it's even more surprising to see the snow settling this evening.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
I do remember a memorably early snowfall in October not long after moving here. It might have been 2009. Heavy rain falling from a southward-moving cold front as I entered the Festival Hall for an evening concert had turned to moderate snow on emerging. I got the last train from Victoria and when it arrived at Sydenham Hill, six minutes' walk from my pad, snow was settling on grass and vehicle tops at a temperature just a fraction above freezing point. I don't recall a single white Christmas during childhood - even during the infamous '62-'63 winter the first snow did not fall in London until Boxing Day. It used to be folklore when I was a child that snow rarely came to the south of the country until February - apocryphal maybe, but at least we knew we would get snow at some point every winter. The earliest I remember snow in November was at school at the start of the 1960s, when following a very cold frosty night in the wake of a brief spell of northerlies, snow which settled before turning to rain began falling from an approaching warm front during one morning.
White Christmasses i recall from my early teenage years are 1968 and 1970, then later in 2004.
The infamous winters of 1947 and 1963 did not have serious snowfall until January/February time. I heard many stories from my mother about 1947 and the photographs I've seen are amazing. I can remember the 1963 winter, just about.
Currently, the sky is looking an ominous slate grey and further snowfall appears to be very likely."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Pleasantly surprised to find NO snow here (Ryedale/Hambleton) this morning - none on the Eastern Dales either judging by the view from Sutton bank.
Bit of frost on the windscreen, that's all.Last edited by Old Grumpy; 19-11-24, 10:55.
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostPleasantly surprised to find NO snow here (Ryedale/Hambleton) this morning -
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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