Originally posted by jayne lee wilson
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI know forecasting is difficult if not impossible to perfect. I wouldn't mind if they admitted this . But I've heard them boast about how accurate they are when clearly they aren't.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostYes, that's why its best to use the BBC or Met Office websites which allow you to view the satellite-photo-derived maps and forecasts in real time, regionally and nationally, advancing them by 3-hourly intervals if you wish. You can zoom in and out to see the local or larger patterns including the isobarics.
You can also see the latest 3-hourly reports from your local weather station of temp., pressure, visibility, precipitation etc. Very useful and in my weather-and-wildlife-obesessed experience, very accurate too.
A lot of film crews used to use dark sky but I gather that been subsumed into Apple weather - wouldn’t mind knowing how accurate people find it.
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I see the Beeb's gone one step further than simply a curated concert - tonight we have a "carefully curated concert". Is it sponsored by M&S perchance? Or does it mean the BBCS will be on their best singing behaviour.
Care, whether curated or not, was missing when this was put up for public viewingThe George Enescu International Festival: Bach's Golberg Variations
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostI see the Beeb's gone one step further than simply a curated concert - tonight we have a "carefully curated concert". Is it sponsored by M&S perchance? Or does it mean the BBCS will be on their best singing behaviour.
Care, whether curated or not, was missing when this was put up for public viewing https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001h695 The mistake appears twice.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostHair of horse from what I heard - and it certainly made the most of a chromatic variation towards the end. However you could do me a service by explaining your comment; I understand what the terms mean but not the relevance - unless it's to do with not being keyboard?
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI use the netweather rain radar and looking out of the window to the South west to work out the weather in the next two hours unless there’s a high pressure (very high 1032 at the moment ) in which case it’s all fairly static. The BBC forecasts are now supplied by meteo and not the Met office. One reason was the former did 13 day forecasts something the Met shy away from understandably. The problem where I live is 5 minutes of rain without the right gear can mean a compete soaking.
A lot of film crews used to use dark sky but I gather that been subsumed into Apple weather - wouldn’t mind knowing how accurate people find it.
The Met Office do provide long range (and always did for years back), if you want them....scroll down.....
Lots of other good stuff here, like WOW...
https://wow.metoffice.gov.uk/?_gl=1*...MjU3Ny4wLjAuMA..
If netweather or looking aht yer winder isn't accurate enough, try the local weather station reports on the BBC site. Mine is the Coastaguard, around 2 miles away; rarely ever wrong. I like to recall, and imagine, the seaview out to the horizon there.
Keen birder, amateur naturalist all my life, obsessive forecast-follower since I got excited in my late teens listening to the Shipping Forecast and Inshore Waters forecast just after Midnight in the early autumn (they were pretty accurate even back then - 70s/80s), hoping for Westerly gales to bring the seabirds closer to the coast.....
And (now) a garden bird curator , I check the Met and BBC 3-hourly updates each day and find them very reliable. Of course you get some hourly variation about the arrival of rapidly changing weather will arrive, but that's Nature for you - and it is always clear from the satellite maps (and commentary) why this happens.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 27-01-23, 01:25.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostAnother one is “Manchister”.
Oh and while we're on the topic of London place names, I always thought Marylebone was pronounced Marry le Bone, but most people seem to pronounce it Marly Bone - and Wiki concurs!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostHave to admit I can never decide whether Grinnich or Grennich is right.
Oh and while we're on the topic of London place names, I always thought Marylebone was pronounced Marry le Bone, but most people seem to pronounce it Marly Bone - and Wiki concurs!
I think I’m in the majority pronouncing Holborn as ‘Ho-bun’ but it took some years to learn that Lamb’s Conduit Street in fact involves a Cun-dit…
Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post-ich or -idge?"...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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