Storm Darragh is a frightening prospect, particularly for Wales and the West Country as it swings its way across Lancs and Yorks. Predictions are for winds to gust to 55 mph here in London, and I am expecting this and the other windows here on the north side of our block to be rattling from the winds and pelting rain for much of Sunday - after which the weather is safely predicted to settle down with a strong if temporary high in residence to the north west for most of next week.
Stormy Weather II
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Blimey! Anyone else's mobile just gone berserk with a UK government (thanks Keir) Severe Alert? Batten down the hatches!
Advice is to look out torches, charge batteries. Just as my new electric heater has been fitted in the kitchen this morningIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Blimey! Anyone else's mobile just gone berserk with a UK government (thanks Keir) Severe Alert? Batten down the hatches!
According to Met Office we have only () yeller warnings here. A red warning of wind is present over much of Wales and on both sides of the Severn Estuary, but just misses Bristol.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostBlimey! Anyone else's mobile just gone berserk with a UK government (thanks Keir) Severe Alert? Batten down the hatches!
Advice is to look out torches, charge batteries. Just as my new electric heater has been fitted in the kitchen this morning
Good luck over in Bristol.
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostA red warning of wind is present over much of Wales and on both sides of the Severn Estuary, but just misses Bristol.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostBlimey! Anyone else's mobile just gone berserk with a UK government (thanks Keir) Severe Alert? Batten down the hatches!
Advice is to look out torches, charge batteries. Just as my new electric heater has been fitted in the kitchen this morning
For want of something to do on what will be too distracting a day to undertake concentrated activity tomorrow, I shall be watching ongoing reports on this forum for as long as power holds out:
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MET office forecast was for gusts up to 55-61 mph on the coast near here (c6m) - it sounds like they're close to that now.
Originally posted by french frank View PostBlimey! Anyone else's mobile just gone berserk with a UK government (thanks Keir) Severe Alert? Batten down the hatches!
Originally posted by french frank View PostAdvice is to look out torches, charge batteries. Just as my new electric heater has been fitted in the kitchen this morning
Originally posted by oddoneout View PostThe naming of storms...
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I hope & trust everyone's all right? - especially in the red and amber warning areas? Here it probably peaked at around nine this morning, with huge wind roars and thrashing trees just about visible through rain-drenched windows - since when it has been mainly drizzly, with winds, surprisingly, in the fresh to strong ranges, although it might become windier again as the day goes on and winds veer around to more of a northerly direction, less interrupted by succession of uplands and escarpments on the way down here. I've replaced my max-min thermometer weighted down with a large pebble back on the external railing below my north-facing windows, having earlier on been fearful of it being blown down onto the tarmac below. Barometer now a steady 990mb, temperature falling, currently a raw-feeling 6.5 C.
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The rain and high wind got here during the night, but as is often the way with weather coming from the west it had lost some of the extreme oomph by the time it got here. The wet and the rain had both dropped away quite a lot by the time I went into town to catch a bus for a lunchtime concert in the city. It was building again by the time I came out and went to catch the bus home, but getting damp on the way home is OK - it's the getting wet before sitting in a rather chilly church that's not so good! The bus was getting pushed about a fair bit - exposed road in a flat landscape - but the rain was coming from the side or behind so at least the wipers(which always seem to be less than satisfactory on buses) were coping.
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While not quite the 15C predicted in today's forecast for London, it seemed pretty mild for my cycle ride to the shops a mile away this afternoon - by which time thankfully this morning's strong winds had considerably abated, though they are expected to return with a vengeance tonight, along with considerable rainfall, already being experienced down west. I even spotted three bumble bees taking nectar from the last few rose blooms to be remaining on mostly now bare stems, ready for pruning back whenever our gardener can find the time. Christmas Day temps here are now being predicted to reach into the lower teens - closer to what would be expected in late March!
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Just two remaining days to the Winter Solstice - after which time the days start lengthening once more, beginning at the back end of the day. A friend who has paganstic tendencies sends out email greetings at Christmas in place of cards, and always signs off "Solstice Greetings".
This is the final year in which I am keeping a meteorological diary - a practice I have mostly maintained, with gaps due to circumstances, since the age of 12 in 1959. My intention had always been to build my understanding of the weather, which is now sufficient for me to feel enough is enough. In recent years I have experienced the growing anxieties about climatic warming reflected in its pages, almost to the point that I feel that I am charting the beginnings of a slide to the extinction of human existence in what will become unsurvivable conditions unless or until the large and growing percentage of humanity drilled in a mindset geared to wasteful unsustainable consumption undergoes a massive reversal of what it means, both psychologically and in practical terms, to be part of its life support systems. At present, collectively speaking we mostly seem to be travelling at 180 degrees in the opposite direction, while the voices of opposition trail off into cries in the wilderness.
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