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Mis-named Storm Emma?
GFS yesterday and today has the main winds near the centre of the main
low , well out into the Atlantic, with only minor lows nearer the UK. Too hasty in the storm-naming business this time?, usually the storm is near enough on our doorstep before the give the next name to it. Yes loads of strong easterly , but that is due to the Scandinavian high , rather than that low , well off in the Atlantic, by Friday, assuming GFS is not wlidly out of kilter. |
Mis-named Storm Emma?
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 8:54:47 AM UTC, N_Cook wrote:
GFS yesterday and today has the main winds near the centre of the main low , well out into the Atlantic, with only minor lows nearer the UK. Too hasty in the storm-naming business this time?, usually the storm is near enough on our doorstep before the give the next name to it. Yes loads of strong easterly , but that is due to the Scandinavian high , rather than that low , well off in the Atlantic, by Friday, assuming GFS is not wlidly out of kilter. The thing is it was so named because it was a storm out over the Canaries and Madeira that produced gale force + winds, was a bit vicious and cancelled flights. From the Portuguese and Spaniards point of view they are are quite entitled to have it named. Len Wembury |
Mis-named Storm Emma?
In message , N_Cook
writes GFS yesterday and today has the main winds near the centre of the main low , well out into the Atlantic, with only minor lows nearer the UK. Too hasty in the storm-naming business this time?, usually the storm is near enough on our doorstep before the give the next name to it. Yes loads of strong easterly , but that is due to the Scandinavian high , rather than that low , well off in the Atlantic, by Friday, assuming GFS is not wlidly out of kilter. It was named by the Portuguese, and I suppose it's not far from THEIR doorstep. -- John Hall "Hegel was right when he said that we learn from history that man can never learn anything from history." George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) |
Mis-named Storm Emma?
On 27/02/18 10:24, John Hall wrote:
In message , N_Cook writes GFS yesterday and today has the main winds near the centre of the main low , well out into the Atlantic, with only minor lows nearer the UK. Too hasty in the storm-naming business this time?, usually the storm is near enough on our doorstep before the give the next name to it. Yes loads of strong easterly , but that is due to the Scandinavian high , rather than that low , well off in the Atlantic, by Friday, assuming GFS is not wlidly out of kilter. It was named by the Portuguese, and I suppose it's not far from THEIR doorstep. Yes, Carol pointed that out this morning. -- Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. Web-site: http://www.scarlet-jade.com/ "There is nothing more frustrating than playing hide and seek with a deaf wolf." [Benton Fraser] OS: Linux [openSUSE Tumbleweed] |
Mis-named Storm Emma?
On 27/02/2018 11:37, Graham P Davis wrote:
On 27/02/18 10:24, John Hall wrote: In message , N_Cook writes GFS yesterday and today has the main winds near the centre of the main low , well out into the Atlantic, with only minor lows nearer the UK. Too hasty in the storm-naming business this time?, usually the storm is near enough on our doorstep before the give the next name to it. Yes loads of strong easterly , but that is due to the Scandinavian high , rather than that low , well off in the Atlantic, by Friday, assuming GFS is not wlidly out of kilter. It was named by the Portuguese, and I suppose it's not far from THEIR doorstep. Yes, Carol pointed that out this morning. With the junk-press jumping on Emma I'd forgotten "we'd" got to Georgina. I see GFS 06Z run has brought the 55mph SW wind on the southern flank of the low (I associate that to the low rather than the widespread easterlies I associate with the Scandi-High) back near the doorstep of Corwall, so Emma could still Hector the UK. |
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