Never known such a variation in weather over such a short distance...
"Graham Easterling" wrote in message
oups.com...
On 22 Aug, 19:27, "Col" wrote:
"John Hall" wrote in message
...
In article om,
writes:
Maybe I was wrong about Dorset yesterday... it appears that the
adjacent counties of Hampshire and Dorset (never mind Devon) are
either side of a line dividing near-continuous sunshine from gloom
(yesterday) or heavy showers (today). I'd have expected a more gradual
transition from east to west, with Hampshire a bit more settled and
Dorset and Devon a little less.
I can remember something similar about 20 years ago at just this time of
year. I had to travel from Surrey to Torquay by train
(Guildford-Reading-Newton Abbot-Torquay). Surrey was under thick
stratus, but by the time I reached Reading there had been an abrupt
clearance and the sky was clear of cloud, as it was for the rest of the
journey
You should try travelling over the Pennines west to east.
Quite often I would find find cloud in the west but broken
cloud and sunny conditions to the east. Sometimes the cloud
would pile up to the very ridge of the hills then dissapate
on the eastern side, a very natural dividing line for weather!
--
Col
Bolton, Lancashire
160m asl
Or even from the north coast of Cornwall to the south (& vica versa).
I've known differences of 10C over the same number of miles when 1
coast has sea fog or persistent low cloud.
Graham
Penzance
Or even from Haytor 900 feet down into Bovey Tracey (3 miles). Heavy snow and
freezing down into drizzle and 4C.
Or from Teignmouth, clear and sunny and warm up to Haytor (9 miles) with fog and
drizzle.
Will
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