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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#11
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On Jan 30, 3:23*pm, (Gareth Slee) wrote:
John Hall wrote: Though technically Bob's posts on Canadian conditions are off-topic for the group, I find them interesting and would regret it if they stopped. So long as the contents are made clear in the posts' Subject line, so that those not interested can easily skip them, I don't see that there's much of a problem. I totally agree. And a subject heading of "Snow total for the Kingston, ON region" could hardly be confused with being a British related one could it? -- Am I the only Gareth Slee?http://garethslee.blogspot.com/ Yes, you're right. I make it clear where by posts are from. On a side note, I notice at the bottom of your postings that you've written "Am I the only Gareth Slee?" Here in North America, I have yet to meet anyone with either this first or last name. Bob |
#12
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![]() "Gareth Slee" wrote in message .. . "jim beam" sputnick wrote: Dear Sir While it is great that you post on this group ,it is a uk weather group and I feel you should be posting on your own countries site.I know we have the Brussels and Greek guy and the same could be said for them .It does gaul me a bit when you are constantly talking snow in winter and we have so little .Comments please. Jim I enjoy Bob's posts and see no reason why he shouldn't post here. OK they get more snow there but why that gauls you says more about you than it does about anything else. So do I. I think the common interest is the fact that the winter climate can vary so widely over the northern hemisphere. Us with our balmy climate so far north (to him) and him with his fridgid one so far south (to us). Perhaps the best thing for Bob to do would be to put 'OT' in the header so that anybody who really doesn't want to read it can easily filter it out. The weather does not respect international boundaries so I would be very wary of encouraging a policy where anything other than discussion of UK weather was frowned upon. -- Col Bolton, Lancashire 160m asl |
#13
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In article
, mittens writes: What weather specific weather conditions would cause these fohn winds? What time year would they occur in Scotland and in Wales? The chinook winds in western Canada only occur in the winter. I think they can occur at any time of the year, when a moist airstream is forced to rise by the mountains and lose some of that moisture as rain, before being warmed as it descends the lee-slope. But the warming effect is small by Canadian standards: normally no more than 2-3C, perhaps 5C at most. -- John Hall "Banking was conceived in iniquity and born in sin" attributed to Sir Josiah Stamp, a former director of the Bank of England |
#14
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#15
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mittens wrote:
On a side note, I notice at the bottom of your postings that you've written "Am I the only Gareth Slee?" Here in North America, I have yet to meet anyone with either this first or last name. Bob Click on the link Bob and it'll take you to my blog. I reckon I could be the only person in the world with the name Gareth Slee. Well no-one has contacted me to tell me different :-) -- Am I the only Gareth Slee? http://garethslee.blogspot.com/ |
#16
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jim beam wrote:
Dear Sir While it is great that you post on this group ,it is a uk weather group and I feel you should be posting on your own countries site.I know we have the Brussels and Greek guy and the same could be said for them .It does gaul me a bit when you are constantly talking snow in winter and we have so little .Comments please. Jim, the charter for the group says: "This group is essentially for the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted." Note "chiefly" rather than "exclusively". In reference to this, the FAQ says: "It is worth pointing out that the area embraced by the phrase 'adjacent parts of Europe' has grown to include Australasia and North America! As long as it's interesting weather, and within the context of the rest of the Charter, then that has come to be accepted as OK!" I don't think anyone can deny that Bob's weather is "interesting", as indeed are his posts, in my opinion. -- Steve Loft Sanday, Orkney. 5m ASL. http://sanday.org.uk/weather Free weather station softwa http://sandaysoft.com/ |
#18
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![]() "George Booth" wrote in message ... "jim beam" sputnick wrote in message ... Dear Sir While it is great that you post on this group ,it is a uk weather group and I feel you should be posting on your own countries site.I know we have the Brussels and Greek guy and the same could be said for them .It does gaul me a bit when you are constantly talking snow in winter and we have so little .Comments please. Jim "mittens" wrote in message ... I have checked my unofficial snow records for this winter season. Bob Carry on with your Ontario posts on here Bob. I've visited your area in both summer and winter (even soared over it in a glider-but that's another story). Impressive weather with summer heat and thunderstorms and winter cold and snow-experienced them both over there. As I recall the 'just who can post on here' issue has surfaced before on USW but can't be bothered to look for it. Oh well, here it is http://tinyurl.com/24wnpl -- George |
#19
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"mittens" schreef in bericht
... Along that line, I am curious about the occurrence fohn winds in Scotland. Is such a weather phenomenon possible in the mountains up there? I think a föhn effect in the lee of the Scottish mountains was apparent as recently as last Monday. On that day - with a strong roughly WSW flow - the mildest places in the UK were in NE Scotland, e.g. 12.1°C at Kinloss on the south side of the Moray Firth. Colin Youngs Brussels |
#20
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On Jan 30, 6:05*pm, "Colin Youngs" wrote:
"mittens" schreef in ... Along that line, I am curious about the occurrence fohn winds in Scotland. Is such a weather phenomenon possible in the mountains up there? I think a föhn effect in the lee of the Scottish mountains was apparent as recently as last Monday. * On that day - with a strong roughly WSW flow - the mildest places in the UK were in NE Scotland, e.g. 12.1°C at Kinloss on the south side of the Moray Firth. Colin Youngs Brussels I suspected that SW would need to be present for a fohn effect in Scotland. I went to Wikipedia and I read about the Moray Firth. I didn't realize that the bay along the NE coast of Scotland is the Moray Firth. I always thought that a firth was more like an inlet, as in the Firth of Forth. It makes sense that a fohn effect would happen here, at a place like Inverness, with a SW wind. Bob |
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