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Old April 24th 15, 07:37 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Beware the Ides of April

A large input from the West Australian side of the Indian Ocean puts a lot of negative pressure on the coast of Antarctica next Wodin's Day. There is just the one black cyclone so little concerted action. But it is direct and quick so I am going to say a Mag 7, as we are due for a break in the weather.

There is the problem of the section of coast at which it takes place. It is bang on the shoulder where such cyclones develop into volcanic eruptions or tornadoes -so to speak.

Touch-down is at 06:00 on Wednesday the 29th at 120 E:
http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View

The run ends on the 30th, so we won't know what that twin centre will do for a few days. It does beg the question: "What prompted it?" though.


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Old April 29th 15, 09:30 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Beware the Ides of April

On Friday, 24 April 2015 08:37:17 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
A large input from the West Australian side of the Indian Ocean puts a lot of negative pressure on the coast of Antarctica next Wodin's Day. There is just the one black cyclone so little concerted action. But it is direct and quick so I am going to say a Mag 7, as we are due for a break in the weather.

There is the problem of the section of coast at which it takes place. It is bang on the shoulder where such cyclones develop into volcanic eruptions or tornadoes -so to speak.

Touch-down is at 06:00 on Wednesday the 29th at 120 E:
http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View

The run ends on the 30th, so we won't know what that twin centre will do for a few days. It does beg the question: "What prompted it?" though.


As the death toll from the Nepal quake heads towards 5000 I am wondering what Dawlish will find to laugh at next. What I find most appalling is his coterie of feeders and enablers.

Well we can't have freedom with the Internet without a degree of underachievement. I'll just have to put up with it.

I can't say what on earth is likely with today's Australian run. It is absolutely all over the place and it doesn't clear up for a day and more. The NAEFS is stuck in the toilet again so no clues are likely from there.

There is another tropical storm extant at last but goodness knows how much of the swaddling around Antarctica will apply to that. Which brings us to the North Atlantic. I wonder if any experts would care to help out with this morning's chart?

There is a blocking Low en-route but it doesn't get here until it is all over. Bar the shouting perhaps?
A string of occluded fronts on the bottom left look strange, to say the least. and then, as the storm (Quang?) finds its legs, the block appears. What is all that about then?

Missing something on the bottom off the page are we?
This isn't very helpful, you know!
OK; children, let us begin:

https://weatherlawyer.wordpress.com/...ion-the-storm/


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Old April 29th 15, 04:09 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default Beware the Ides of April

On Wednesday, 29 April 2015 10:30:12 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
On Friday, 24 April 2015 08:37:17 UTC+1, Weatherlawyer wrote:
A large input from the West Australian side of the Indian Ocean puts a lot of negative pressure on the coast of Antarctica next Wodin's Day. There is just the one black cyclone so little concerted action. But it is direct and quick so I am going to say a Mag 7, as we are due for a break in the weather.

There is the problem of the section of coast at which it takes place. It is bang on the shoulder where such cyclones develop into volcanic eruptions or tornadoes -so to speak.

Touch-down is at 06:00 on Wednesday the 29th at 120 E:
http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/char...Refresh+ View

The run ends on the 30th, so we won't know what that twin centre will do for a few days. It does beg the question: "What prompted it?" though.


As the death toll from the Nepal quake heads towards 5000 I am wondering what Dawlish will find to laugh at next. What I find most appalling is his coterie of feeders and enablers.

Well we can't have freedom with the Internet without a degree of underachievement. I'll just have to put up with it.

I can't say what on earth is likely with today's Australian run. It is absolutely all over the place and it doesn't clear up for a day and more. The NAEFS is stuck in the toilet again so no clues are likely from there.

There is another tropical storm extant at last but goodness knows how much of the swaddling around Antarctica will apply to that. Which brings us to the North Atlantic. I wonder if any experts would care to help out with this morning's chart?

There is a blocking Low en-route but it doesn't get here until it is all over. Bar the shouting perhaps?
A string of occluded fronts on the bottom left look strange, to say the least. and then, as the storm (Quang?) finds its legs, the block appears. What is all that about then?

Missing something on the bottom off the page are we?
This isn't very helpful, you know!
OK; children, let us begin:

https://weatherlawyer.wordpress.com/...ion-the-storm/


Someone has stitched a new knicker elastic into the NA-EFS at last. You can take a look at the set up over North America -all the way back in 25 April if you have a mind to. (It all seems very similar.)



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