howham
  • howham
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
12 August 2020 04:50:36
Look at the radar, what a wait to get to this corner of Scotland...
Col
  • Col
  • Advanced Member
12 August 2020 04:51:11

Originally Posted by: Caz 


Your storm was visible from here!  Hubby woke at 3am and said the sky to our North was providing an excellent light show with large constant flashes across the sky.  Northern lights!  
No thunder or rain and it’s a clear sky above us, so it must have been high up.  I can’t believe he didn’t wake me!  



And from the other side of this storm there were some flashes of lightning here around 12.30 but little thunder. Some quite heavy rain just missed me though, by the looks of the radar it's been pretty wet in the eastern half of Bolton but in the west where I live judging by the state of the ground it's been completely dry, the rain probably no more than a mile away.


Col
Bolton, Lancashire
160m asl
Snow videos:
http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3QvmL4UWBmHFMKWiwYm_gg
johncs2016
12 August 2020 05:01:42
Here in Edinburgh, I have just woke up to discover that there are STILL some rumbles of thunder in the distance.

However, all of this is now happening just to my west rather than my east which means that I no longer have that really good view of any distant lightning strikes from my east facing windows which I had during last night.

The north of Edinburgh, usually always missing out on snow events which occur not just within the rest of Scotland or the UK, but also within the rest of Edinburgh.
KevBrads1
12 August 2020 05:10:49
Passed to my SE, thunder woke me up about quarter to 1. What a start to this decade after the thunderless 2010s






MANCHESTER SUMMER INDEX for 2021: 238
Timelapses, old weather forecasts and natural phenomena videos can be seen on this site
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Crepuscular Ray
12 August 2020 05:16:06
So Edinburgh, the Lothian and Fife area has just had the most intense and long lasting storm for many years.
Starting with small cells to the south and east of the city around 7 pm on Tuesday a large elongated area of activity stretching at times from Peebles/Moffat all the way north to Orkney has raged all night for 11 hours so far. Loud thunder still rumbles over West Lothian as I type at 0600 Wednesday.
48 mm of rain has fallen in 24 hrs from 0100 to 0100 this morning at Gogarbank though some of this may be from the previous night's storms.
From 2200 to 0600 lightning has been continuous and frequently at rates of every second.
What has fascinated me is the instant and relentless propogation of cells around Biggar, Moffat, Peebles and Innerleithan which have fed and are still feeding the main storm area. I'm exhausted!


Jerry
Edinburgh, in the frost hollow below Blackford Hill
doctormog
12 August 2020 05:42:41
Some nice flashes of lightning and rumbles (increasing in intensity/frequency currently) here at the moment.
johncs2016
12 August 2020 05:51:26

Originally Posted by: Crepuscular Ray 

So Edinburgh, the Lothian and Fife area has just had the most intense and long lasting storm for many years.
Starting with small cells to the south and east of the city around 7 pm on Tuesday a large elongated area of activity stretching at times from Peebles/Moffat all the way north to Orkney has raged all night for 11 hours so far. Loud thunder still rumbles over West Lothian as I type at 0600 Wednesday.
48 mm of rain has fallen in 24 hrs from 0100 to 0100 this morning at Gogarbank though some of this may be from the previous night's storms.
From 2200 to 0600 lightning has been continuous and frequently at rates of every second.
What has fascinated me is the instant and relentless propogation of cells around Biggar, Moffat, Peebles and Innerleithan which have fed and are still feeding the main storm area. I'm exhausted!


The main difference now is that the core of the storms has now moved north and west into Tayside and parts of Aberdeenshire with some moderate rain getting into the city of Aberdeen itself. As a result, I won't be surprised if Richard from Aberdeen comes on here before too long to rant about his own part of the world missing out on that action, although even that is a situation which could well change before too long with the way that this is going.


What is weird though is that as the thunderstorms continue to rumble away in the distance and refuse to go away altogether, we now have some hazy sunshine which has just broke through.


As for rainfall, I can report that the highest rainfall totals during a single hour as at 6am this morning were 18.4 mm at Edinburgh Gogarbank and an incredible 25.2 mm at the botanic gardens in Edinburgh with both of those totals being recorded between 11pm last night and midnight.


Meanwhile as at 6am this morning, an incredible 52.4 mm of rain has now been recorded at Edinburgh Gogarbank since 10am (09:00 UTC) this morning, along with 46.2 mm at the botanic gardens in Edinburgh. That now makes the current official observation day, the wettest day of this year so far at both of those stations.


This means that there has now been more rain during this month at both of those stations than the respective 1981-2010 August average for each of those stations, so this month will now go down as being wetter than average overall at both of those stations in terms of the actual rainfall amounts, regardless of what happens between now and the end of this month.


This also means that there has now been more rain during this summer at both of those stations than the respective 1981-2010 summer average for each of those stations, so this summer will now go down as being wetter than average overall at both of those stations in terms of the actual rainfall amounts regardless of what happens between now and the end of this month.


However, the fact that all of this has now happened so quickly is mainly down to these storms, which just goes to show how much this can massively impact the overall rainfall patterns.


EDIT:


Doctormog stepped in before I had a chance to post all of this so perhaps, we won't get any complaints from Richard after all.


 


The north of Edinburgh, usually always missing out on snow events which occur not just within the rest of Scotland or the UK, but also within the rest of Edinburgh.
Roger Parsons
12 August 2020 06:18:37
Looked out at 04.00hrs to see lightning to the NW in the direction of Newark. Referring to the Radar a large system was tracking through Sheffield. No local action - but at least we saw something!
Roger
RogerP
West Lindsey district of Lincolnshire
Everything taken together, here in Lincolnshire are more good things than man could have had the conscience to ask.
William Cobbett, in his Rural Rides - c.1830
Rob K
12 August 2020 06:21:09

Originally Posted by: Caz 


Your storm was visible from here!  Hubby woke at 3am and said the sky to our North was providing an excellent light show with large constant flashes across the sky.  Northern lights!  
No thunder or rain and it’s a clear sky above us, so it must have been high up.  I can’t believe he didn’t wake me!  



Lying out in the hammock last night around midnight I could see faint flashes of lightning. From the radar it must have been the big storm over the Midlands, there was mothhhf closer that I could see. 


Yateley, NE Hampshire, 73m asl
"But who wants to be foretold the weather? It is bad enough when it comes, without our having the misery of knowing about it beforehand." — Jerome K. Jerome
doctormog
12 August 2020 06:35:08
We are currently on a rainfall total of 45 mm from the last 45 minutes.
Justin W
12 August 2020 07:21:12

Shower activity making landfall at Dungeness


Yo yo yo. 148-3 to the 3 to the 6 to the 9, representing the ABQ, what up, biatch?
Perthite1
12 August 2020 07:38:54

Originally Posted by: doctormog 

We are currently on a rainfall total of 45 mm from the last 45 minutes.


Thats serious rainfall, must be some flash flooding from an event like that?

Heavy Weather 2013
12 August 2020 07:42:06

Originally Posted by: Justin W 


Shower activity making landfall at Dungeness



These bloody storms better arrive today. Really want a supersoaker


Mark
Beckton, E London
Less than 500m from the end of London City Airport runway.
Crepuscular Ray
12 August 2020 07:42:15
So to confirm 54mm of rain has fallen at Gogarbank, Edinburgh in the last 48hrs up to 7am today. We had weakish storms Mon evening and Tues early hours then last night's 11 hr humdinger!
Jerry
Edinburgh, in the frost hollow below Blackford Hill
Viking3
12 August 2020 07:57:57
Plenty of stations reporting 50mm plus in eastern Scotland. Highest I've seen so far are a couple of stations in Stonehaven with 81mm and 85mm respectively in just 2 hours! Judging by the radar signatures these values don't look unreasonable.
Keith
Aboyne, Aberdeenshire
135m asl
nsrobins
12 August 2020 08:17:46

Originally Posted by: doctormog 

We are currently on a rainfall total of 45 mm from the last 45 minutes.


Must be some flooding - Aberdeen has been under high rates for quite a while now.


Neil
Fareham, Hampshire 28m ASL (near estuary)
Stormchaser, Member TORRO
bledur
12 August 2020 08:19:41

Originally Posted by: Heavy Weather 2013 


 


These bloody storms better arrive today. Really want a supersoaker



 I would agree but for all the talk of storms coming in this area it does not look that stormy. Absolutly clear here atm so perhaps it will all suddenly de-stabilise.

doctormog
12 August 2020 08:21:46
Yes, I can confirm there are serious issues with flooding here this morning. The total rainfall is now 56mn since 6:45am as it has/had eased off for a while.
GezM
  • GezM
  • Advanced Member
12 August 2020 08:43:13
A late update but just before midnight we had a ferocious lightning shower, with no thunder. Torrential rain for about 5 minutes and a couple of minutes of very strong winds. Within 10 minutes the rain had stopped and the wind died down. If that's a sign of things to come over the next day or two then it could get very interesting.
Living in St Albans, Herts (116m asl)
Working at Luton Airport, Beds (160m asl)
David M Porter
12 August 2020 08:55:16

Wrt what happened in the east of Scotland last night & this morning, I seem to recall quite a few instances last summer when parts of eastern Scotland got considerable thundery activity while at the same time, areas further west saw comparatively little. Mind you, the synoptic set-up we have had over the last week is much the same as was seen from time to time last year as well, especially in late July 2019.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
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