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Brian Gaze
18 January 2018 07:36:21

Was there much snow in the north from last night's storm? 

PS: I was told Storm Fionn was a different system after writing a Buzz post a couple of days ago.


Brian Gaze

Berkhamsted

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"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan

Retron
18 January 2018 07:42:27

This was definitely not a non-event. The Met Office upgraded their yellow warning overnight to increase the wind speeds. Gusts over 70mph include:

Originally Posted by: Global Warming 

Indeed, I was surprised yesterday afternoon when the MetO rescinded the yellow warning - looks like they brought it back overnight, but a fat lot of good that did!

The main road this morning was an obstacle course due to a mixture of wheelie bins in the road (with contents all over the place) and a couple of small fallen trees necessitating driving on the wrong side of the road. Trains have been cancelled onto the island and slightly further afield there are trees partially blocking the M20 this morning and the A299 is completely blocked. In fact, the local rag says:

"Trees are also obstructing roads in Hatch Lane, Chartham, Westgate Court, Avenue, Canterbury, Shalloak Road, Canterbury, Ronbridge Road, Plaxtol, Istead Rise, Wrotham, New Barn Road, Southfleet, Leeds Road, Sutton Valance, Sandling Lane, Boxley, Bull Lane, Aylesford, Iwade, Sheppey, Church Road, Sittingbourne and Old Ashford Road, Lenham."

Surprisingly the Sheppey Crossing wasn't closed (it's meant to be when mean wind speeds hit 35, which they did for a time earlier) and I decided not to risk it... my little car was being buffeted around enough on the level, let alone 100ft up!

All in all, a noteworthy event down here. Not historic, but certainly out of the ordinary.

(EDIT: And looks like they're finally closing the Sheppey Crossing. Ironic, considering the worst is past us now!)


Leysdown, north Kent
John p
18 January 2018 07:46:06

I’m sure I saw it was Storm Fionn ?

Originally Posted by: DeeDee 

There was a squeeze in the isobars - not even a low pressure system - that affected western Ireland yesterday which was named by Met Eirran.


Camberley, Surrey
doctormog
18 January 2018 07:46:31

Was there much snow in the north from last night's storm? 

PS: I was told Storm Fionn was a different system after writing a Buzz post a couple of days ago.

Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 

Apparently up to just under 7”/17cm in some parts of hillier N England (and possibly the Borders).

And yes Fionn was, as John says, named for the system than impacted Ireland yesterday. This one was not named.


Brian Gaze
18 January 2018 07:51:34

 

Indeed, I was surprised yesterday afternoon when the MetO rescinded the yellow warning - looks like they brought it back overnight, but a fat lot of good that did!

The main road this morning was an obstacle course due to a mixture of wheelie bins in the road (with contents all over the place) and a couple of small fallen trees necessitating driving on the wrong side of the road. Trains have been cancelled onto the island and slightly further afield there are trees partially blocking the M20 this morning and the A299 is completely blocked. In fact, the local rag says:

"Trees are also obstructing roads in Hatch Lane, Chartham, Westgate Court, Avenue, Canterbury, Shalloak Road, Canterbury, Ronbridge Road, Plaxtol, Istead Rise, Wrotham, New Barn Road, Southfleet, Leeds Road, Sutton Valance, Sandling Lane, Boxley, Bull Lane, Aylesford, Iwade, Sheppey, Church Road, Sittingbourne and Old Ashford Road, Lenham."

Surprisingly the Sheppey Crossing wasn't closed (it's meant to be when mean wind speeds hit 35, which they did for a time earlier) and I decided not to risk it... my little car was being buffeted around enough on the level, let alone 100ft up!

All in all, a noteworthy event down here. Not historic, but certainly out of the ordinary.

Originally Posted by: Retron 

 The strong winds woke me up last night and I'm a good sleeper. Not been outside to inspect the damage yet. WRT the warnings I was also surprised and wondered whether they had disappeared due to an IT glitch. However I was also surprised on Tues night when there was a yellow warning for snow in London and the home counties. 


Brian Gaze

Berkhamsted

TWO Buzz - get the latest news and views 

"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan

RobR
  • RobR
  • Advanced Member
18 January 2018 07:51:36

Travel is chaos this morning and the winds were strongest inland away from hills I've seen in some years. Failure to name this is confusing people.


Winter 23/24 in Nantwich

Days Snow Falling: 4

Days Snow Lying: 1

Deepest Snowfall: 3rd December 23 (2cm)

Winter 22/23 in Nantwich

Days Snow Falling: 4

Days Snow Lying: 2

Deepest Snowfall: 10th March (3cm)

Latest Snowfall: 10th March

Winter 21/22 in Nantwich

Days Snow Falling: 3

Days Snow Lying: 1

Deepest Snowfall: 28th November (3cm)

Latest Snowfall: 31st March

Winter 20/21 in Solihull

Days Snow Falling: 21

Days Snow Lying: 8

Deepest Snowfall: 24th January (9cm)

Latest Snowfall: 12th April

Winter 19/20 in Stoke

Days Snow Falling: 5

Days Snow Lying: 2

Deepest Snowfall: 10th Feb (5cm)

Winter 18/19 in Stoke

Days Snow Falling: 6

Days Snow Lying: 6

Deepest Snowfall: 29th Jan (3cm)

Winter 17/18 in Stoke

Days Snow Falling: 27

Days Snow Lying: 24

Deepest Snowfall: 18th March 2018 (10cm)

Gusty
18 January 2018 07:53:36

I think wind won the day on this one.

Something went through here between 5.30 and 6am (sting jet ?) but easily 65-70 mph for a while.

A lot of blue flashing lights on my trip to work this morning. A number of fallen trees observed too. 


Steve - Folkestone, Kent

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John p
18 January 2018 07:54:10
Two fence posts and a panel down in the garden 😂
Camberley, Surrey
Ally Pally Snowman
18 January 2018 08:04:13

Local news here Look East saying Suffolk alone 6000 homes without power and travel chaos for most of region. Certainly the worst storm of the winter in EA. 


Bishop's Stortford 85m ASL.
johncs2016
18 January 2018 08:05:59
A complete non-event here.

All we got from that was a very brief period of very light rain which wasn't even enough to wet the ground.

The only thing that this system did for us was to lead us into yet another night without any sort of frost and now, most of the snow which was around from before has all gone from here.


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.

Ally Pally Snowman
18 January 2018 08:19:09

 

 The strong winds woke me up last night and I'm a good sleeper. Not been outside to inspect the damage yet. WRT the warnings I was also surprised and wondered whether they had disappeared due to an IT glitch. However I was also surprised on Tues night when there was a yellow warning for snow in London and the home counties. 

Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 

 

Indeed that yellow warning for snow was laughable,  it hasn't been the Meto's finest week.


Bishop's Stortford 85m ASL.
Elstevio
18 January 2018 08:41:18
Not good in our area. Drive to work challenging with trees down and branches everywhere. I recorded 52mph gust on my station - my highest ever - but my sensor is close to the roof so is always well below an official figure. Other stations in Norfolk recording gusts between 70mph and 80mph
Aylsham, North Norfolk

RobN
  • RobN
  • Advanced Member
18 January 2018 09:19:26

Well that was a lively one!

I was woken up some time after 4am to the sound of the storm pulling and tugging at the house, the wind whistling through all the cracks and crevices around the window frames, internal doors rattling, the letter box flapping and the chimneys booming like huge organ pipes, all punctuated by the odd alarming crash outside as another piece of garden furniture was hurled about.

I haven't done a tour of inspection yet but there's certainly some tidying up to be done outside.

That was certainly the most notable storm here for some years.


Rob

In the flatlands of South Cambridgeshire 15m ASL.

Fargo
18 January 2018 09:26:51
Not too bad here but the neighbours trampoline blew clean over a 6ft hedge into next doors garden!
West Oxfordshire 230m asl
Brian Gaze
18 January 2018 09:28:39

This thread can be dedicated to the memory of the unknown storm. It wasn't named by the UKM and has received modest coverage in the media this morning. Had it been named and the excitement ramped up ahead of time perhaps we would be reading more about it? I know some people will logically argue it wasn't an exceptional event. However it hit densely populated parts of the country and has caused significant damage and disruption. 


Brian Gaze

Berkhamsted

TWO Buzz - get the latest news and views 

"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan

idj20
18 January 2018 09:45:31

I think wind won the day on this one.

Something went through here between 5.30 and 6am (sting jet ?) but easily 65-70 mph for a while.

A lot of blue flashing lights on my trip to work this morning. A number of fallen trees observed too. 

Originally Posted by: Gusty 



Winds being mostly westerly worked to my favour as I was pretty well sheltered by the built up hilly ASDA hill so the effects wasn't that notable at this coastal end (and I was awake by 6 am and it didn't look that particularly wild). My bin & paper collection box were still in place ready for collection this morning.

But again, what IS it with the strongest winds occurring in the night and just before recycling collection morning?!

Mind you, the strong winds were felt more by those living inland while my battle-hardened coastal location mean it's just another one of those things.


Home location: Folkestone Harbour.
johnr
18 January 2018 10:05:31

A scary morning! Probably the third strongest storm of the 25 years we have been here. Hearing the wind slam into our bungalow and shaking it with each gust, while it shrieked outside, was not for the faint-hearted. All roads out of our village were blocked by fallen trees, the top branches of one fell on my car, fortunately just a minor dent. The tree has already been shifted by a fork lift.

Our neighbours have a two storey timber frame farmhouse. When it started visibly swaying, they decamped at 6am to the ground floor. We have no power and there are lines down all over the place. The number of trees down is remarkable, considering they are not in leaf.

It seemed to peak about 6 to 7am and now it is just a bit breezy. Most trees are already cleared (the farmers don’t hang about) but many are still wrapped in fallen power lines and can’t be touched.

[edit] power went off at 6am when max gust was 65mph. There’s a 10% height correction to add to that and the wind did strengthen after power went so I would guess a max of 75 to 80mph. We are in a very exposed location, with 2 miles of flat open fields to our west. I have checked the max gust speed on the unit, which has a battery backup, but I can’t believe what it shows so I must be pressing the wrong buttons. 


Mickfield, Mid Suffolk
Chiltern Blizzard
18 January 2018 10:07:07
Very stormy early hours in east Suffolk... still without power. Lots of debris and fallen trees/branches.
Rendlesham, Suffolk 20m asl
Arcus
18 January 2018 10:11:26

This thread can be dedicated to the memory of the unknown storm. It wasn't named by the UKM and has received modest coverage in the media this morning. Had it been named and the excitement ramped up ahead of time perhaps we would be reading more about it? I know some people will logically argue it wasn't an exceptional event. However it hit densely populated parts of the country and has caused significant damage and disruption. 

Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 

It was named by Met Éireann as "Fionn" but for some reason the name was not picked up by UK MetO. The name Fionn does seem to have been widely used by the UK media however.


Ben,

Nr. Easingwold, North Yorkshire

30m asl

Ally Pally Snowman
18 January 2018 10:37:29

 

It was named by Met Éireann as "Fionn" but for some reason the name was not picked up by UK MetO. The name Fionn does seem to have been widely used by the UK media however.

Originally Posted by: Arcus 

 

No that was another storm apparently it was called storm David named by the French met office.  That's from our met office twitter feed.


Bishop's Stortford 85m ASL.
Saint Snow
18 January 2018 10:39:00

This thread can be dedicated to the memory of the unknown storm. It wasn't named by the UKM and has received modest coverage in the media this morning. Had it been named and the excitement ramped up ahead of time perhaps we would be reading more about it? I know some people will logically argue it wasn't an exceptional event. However it hit densely populated parts of the country and has caused significant damage and disruption. 

Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 

 

Hit a wide swathe of the country, too. It wasn't as bad as I'd feared here (strongest winds further south than forecasted?) but still very strong winds, with a particularly squally period from around 1am to 1.30am period.

 


Martin

Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)

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Surrey John
18 January 2018 10:41:37
Now moved into Netherlands, apparently all flights at Amsterdam Schipol airport suspended because of it


Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire

35m ASL

Arcus
18 January 2018 10:43:53

 

 

No that was another storm apparently it was called storm David named by the French met office.  That's from our met office twitter feed.

Originally Posted by: Ally Pally Snowman 

Yep - by bad.  Just shows how confusing and pointless this can get...


Ben,

Nr. Easingwold, North Yorkshire

30m asl

Ally Pally Snowman
18 January 2018 10:45:59

 

Yep - by bad.  Just shows how confusing and pointless this can get...

Originally Posted by: Arcus 

 

Not your fault at all its a complete farce . 


Bishop's Stortford 85m ASL.
RobN
  • RobN
  • Advanced Member
18 January 2018 10:49:40

 

 

No that was another storm apparently it was called storm David named by the French met office.  That's from our met office twitter feed.

Originally Posted by: Ally Pally Snowman 

Well this sort of confusion is just another reason why attempting to name these storms in advance is worse than pointless.

Apparently our storm, unnamed by our Met Office, which appears to have caused significant damage and disruption in East Anglia, is now causing widespread chaos in Germany (according to daughter's friend over there). I wonder what the're calling it.


Rob

In the flatlands of South Cambridgeshire 15m ASL.

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