doctormog
09 February 2018 18:04:07
A bit of warmth would actually be rather nice. The problem with this winter (here) is that it has never been very cold but has also rarely been mild leaving us with a cool/slightly cooler than average winter but without the excitement and “events” that can often bring.

So far...
tallyho_83
09 February 2018 21:45:00

Originally Posted by: doctormog 

A bit of warmth would actually be rather nice. The problem with this winter (here) is that it has never been very cold but has also rarely been mild leaving us with a cool/slightly cooler than average winter but without the excitement and “events” that can often bring.

So far...


Oh don't you start or else it would get Richard to start ranting ha!


What really frustrates me is knowing the fact that Paris will have had 3x heavy falls of snow this week (Tuesday, Friday morning and now as I type) Each time the snow has settled and today their daytime max was rarely above freezing! Yet London as well as many areas to the south of M4 hasn't even seen a single flake of snow yet!? What is going on?!


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


phlippy67
09 February 2018 22:36:02
Aye, I didn't realise that France was getting a lot of snow until a friend of mine posted a video of his girlfriend in Paris pulling on a branch of a tree and lots of snow falling on her, it looked quite deep in places, I did notice on the f/cast last week they were predicting up to 2ft of snow for parts of northern Spain too...seems to be the norm now, the UK gets stuck under a high and the cold goes SE through Europe and towards northern Africa, another friend of mine sent me a video tonight of where she lives in Kazan, Russia and they are struggling to cope with the heaviest snow in 140yrs, drifts to the top of doorways, they've had blizzards for days and temps of around -20deC she reported, Moscow had record snowfall earlier this week too...ah well, maybe the predicted SSW will bring some to us...probably in March when the flowers are out and birds are nesting...
JACKO4EVER
09 February 2018 22:41:08
Let’s face it, the British climate is now almost incapable of producing anything other than mild wet and windy records in winter. Cool zonality is as good as it gets, you want snow go and live on a Scottish mountain, otherwise more often than not your going to be disappointed.
doctormog
09 February 2018 22:47:21
It’s not overly surprising that continents have a continental climate and islands have a maritime one surely?
idj20
09 February 2018 23:07:11

Originally Posted by: doctormog 

It’s not overly surprising that continents have a continental climate and islands have a maritime one surely?



Even though Kent is the most nearest to the main Continent, you've seen how that small bit of sea is enough to maintain the maritime-type climate at this end.


Folkestone Harbour. 
LeedsLad123
09 February 2018 23:08:54

Originally Posted by: JACKO4EVER 

Let’s face it, the British climate is now almost incapable of producing anything other than mild wet and windy records in winter. Cool zonality is as good as it gets, you want snow go and live on a Scottish mountain, otherwise more often than not your going to be disappointed.


As has always been the case in the UK, since our climate has always being oceanic and largely snowless.. 


 


Whitkirk, Leeds - 85m ASL.
tallyho_83
09 February 2018 23:17:57

Originally Posted by: phlippy67 

Aye, I didn't realise that France was getting a lot of snow until a friend of mine posted a video of his girlfriend in Paris pulling on a branch of a tree and lots of snow falling on her, it looked quite deep in places, I did notice on the f/cast last week they were predicting up to 2ft of snow for parts of northern Spain too...seems to be the norm now, the UK gets stuck under a high and the cold goes SE through Europe and towards northern Africa, another friend of mine sent me a video tonight of where she lives in Kazan, Russia and they are struggling to cope with the heaviest snow in 140yrs, drifts to the top of doorways, they've had blizzards for days and temps of around -20deC she reported, Moscow had record snowfall earlier this week too...ah well, maybe the predicted SSW will bring some to us...probably in March when the flowers are out and birds are nesting...


Also snow in Madrid too! A friend of mine is skiing in Andorra this week - some ski lifts were closed due to the sheer amount of snow and avalanche risk! A report re the snow in Paris: - The fact they would have had 3 lot's of snow in the space of 5 days when London our capital along with many other parts of southern England hasn;t even seen a flake is quite frustrating! I saw some but I was looking out for it - blink and you would have missed it - here with the article below re snow in Paris, France:


6" of snow - and more today adding to it and more to come:


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-43011862


 


When was the last time London saw 6" of snow?


Snow in Madrid and rest of Spain:


https://www.thelocal.es/20180205/in-pics-snow-brings-gridlock-and-chaos-across-spain


 


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


tallyho_83
09 February 2018 23:26:31

Originally Posted by: JACKO4EVER 

Let’s face it, the British climate is now almost incapable of producing anything other than mild wet and windy records in winter. Cool zonality is as good as it gets, you want snow go and live on a Scottish mountain, otherwise more often than not your going to be disappointed.


Yes true even with cold zonality in Scotland or N. Ireland - whilst there is snow it's transient in nature and very wet as always - it never lasts for longer than a day! PARIS has had lying snow for almost 5 days now and more is falling as I type!


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


doctormog
09 February 2018 23:37:58
What never lasts more than a day? I guess you were not in west Scotland last month.

And again you (deliberately?) are ignoring the continental v maritime climate issue.
johncs2016
09 February 2018 23:47:45

Originally Posted by: doctormog 

What never lasts more than a day? I guess you were not in west Scotland last month.

And again you (deliberately?) are ignoring the continental v maritime climate issue.


The reasons for what I am about to say are probably better being debated over in the climate change forum, but there seems to been an increasing number of occasions during recent summers when the continental climate has probably been a bit too hot (without any actual evidence for that, I'm not going to say that this is actually the case but it certainly seems like it from what I have been hearing) and in those conditions, the maritime climate can at least provide some relief from that.


It therefore, seems as though you just can't really win when it comes to the weather as there will usually always be something to moan about (but then, that is what this thread is for 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.
phlippy67
09 February 2018 23:49:28
I think we all realise that the UK has a maritime climate but 30yrs ago we used to get snow that stayed on the ground for days and was topped up with more while rivers and lakes froze regularly...and back then they were saying climate change would make W.Europe even colder in winter as the Gulf Stream would get cut off by the Arctic ice melting...what happened to that...!
doctormog
09 February 2018 23:53:55

I remember winters of 30 years ago very well. Many winters were very wet where no rivers froze (although many flooded) and snow was a novelty. Plus ça change...

The reason why so many crave snow and cold is because it is NOT the norm for the vast majority of us.


tallyho_83
10 February 2018 00:03:45

Originally Posted by: phlippy67 

I think we all realise that the UK has a maritime climate but 30yrs ago we used to get snow that stayed on the ground for days and was topped up with more while rivers and lakes froze regularly...and back then they were saying climate change would make W.Europe even colder in winter as the Gulf Stream would get cut off by the Arctic ice melting...what happened to that...!


Yet France, Spain and Portugal is considered western Europe but still get's snow Ireland for instance has seen a substantial amount of snow this winter compared to recent years England (southern) has been unlucky! 


Re the gulf stream being cut off I am never sure if this is true. I have always wanted to know if this is a possibility - fresh water caused by melting sea ice will no doubt reduce the salinity in Atlantic thus reduce the strength of the flow of the Gulf stream but this could take years...maybe in a decades before it will give us colder winters!? Without the Gulf stream we would have winters like Eastern Canada does i/e Quebec or Montreal etc - Or say eastern Europe Warsaw Poland for instance, which shares the same latitude as London. 


I found this interesting to read.


https://phys.org/news/2017-06-climate-gulf-stream.html


 


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


tallyho_83
10 February 2018 00:10:38

Originally Posted by: doctormog 

What never lasts more than a day? I guess you were not in west Scotland last month.

And again you (deliberately?) are ignoring the continental v maritime climate issue.


 


I actually meant for lowland England really, these days snow is transient if it does fall and usually only over hills in the south where it settles but doesn't last long!


Yes it was a wintry month in December  into Jan and spent 2 weeks travelling around W Scotland - My friend went to Fort William, Skye and Inverness etc - She actually saw more snow there than in Poland! Actually This was when many parts of Europe were mild and Western Scotland & N. Ireland were much colder and snowier than many other parts of Europe (ASIDE Norway or Sweden).


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


LeedsLad123
10 February 2018 00:22:12

Originally Posted by: phlippy67 

I think we all realise that the UK has a maritime climate but 30yrs ago we used to get snow that stayed on the ground for days and was topped up with more while rivers and lakes froze regularly...and back then they were saying climate change would make W.Europe even colder in winter as the Gulf Stream would get cut off by the Arctic ice melting...what happened to that...!


Really - where and when was this? 


If you actually lived in a climate where snow as the norm rather than the exception then you'd soon get sick of it.


Whitkirk, Leeds - 85m ASL.
johncs2016
10 February 2018 01:05:34

Originally Posted by: doctormog 


I remember winters of 30 years ago very well. Many winters were very wet where no rivers froze (although many flooded) and snow was a novelty. Plus ça change...

The reason why so many crave snow and cold is because it is NOT the norm for the vast majority of us.



I'm not so sure that I fully agree with that because proper heat and sunshine isn't the norm for us either even in the middle of summer (and especially if you live here in Scotland) and yet, we don't seem to crave that so much (if we did, the MOD threads would probably be every bit as busy during the summer as they are in the winter, yet that is clearly not the case).


To me, it is the nice scenery which cold and snow can provides, which often makes it look really seasonable at around Christmas in particular, which probably causes us to crave that more. However, the actual reality is that whilst craving cold and snow is one thing, actually experiencing it is a different matter altogether because whilst all of that might be nice to look at from an indoor perspective, that cold and snow is often not so good for travelling out and about in as I discovered when a friend of mine almost got stuck in the snow when travelling home from here in Edinburgh during that bit transitional snow to rain event which we had here in Edinburgh during one weekend in January.


Also, there has been the odd occasion as well during this winter, where I just haven't really been able to get out for a proper walk because the footpaths have just been too icy underfoot, especially on the side roads and pavements.


 


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.
LeedsLad123
10 February 2018 01:11:15

Originally Posted by: johncs2016 


 


I'm not so sure that I fully agree with that because proper heat and sunshine isn't the norm for us either even in the middle of summer (and especially if you live here in Scotland) and yet, we don't seem to crave that so much (if we did, the MOD threads would probably be every bit as busy during the summer as they are in the winter, yet that is clearly not the case).


To me, it is the nice scenery which cold and snow can provides, which often makes it look really seasonable at around Christmas in particular, which probably causes us to crave that more. However, the actual reality is that whilst craving cold and snow is one thing and whilst all of that might be nice to look at from an indoor perspective, that cold and snow is often not so good for travelling out and about in as I discovered when a friend of mine almost got stuck in the snow when travelling home from here in Edinburgh during that bit transitional snow to rain event which we had here in Edinburgh during one weekend in January.


Also, there has been the odd occasion as well, where I just haven't really been able to get out for a proper walk because the footpaths have just been too icy underfoot.


 


 



It's not the case because some people on here only care about snow but absolutely nothing else - however, those of us who stick around all year look for Spanish plumes and high pressure in summer.


 


Whitkirk, Leeds - 85m ASL.
johncs2016
10 February 2018 03:22:11

Originally Posted by: LeedsLad123 


 


It's not the case because some people on here only care about snow but absolutely nothing else - however, those of us who stick around all year look for Spanish plumes and high pressure in summer.


 



If you balance it all out though, this shows that there are more people on here who look for snow in winter than who look for high pressure and Spanish Plumes in summer. In my books, that in turn is enough to disprove the original point which I was replying to, about the reason why people look for snow in winter being mainly due to that not being the actual norm as there are clearly other reasons which are more significant than that (there is after all, a reason why someone should only ever care about snow).


 


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.
doctormog
10 February 2018 07:42:25
Perhaps “a reason” rather than the reason people crave snow, as there are other reasons of course. Even some of the problems, which I am well aware of, that you highlight re. travel “chaos”and disruption are probably even exciting for some people.

As for warmth, you can speak for yourself, I would love heat and sunshine all summer but it is not a valid comparison as many myself included will take advantage of even mediocre summer weather and longer daylight hours with outdoor activities. That is less appealing when it is cool, damp, breezy and dark outside - when it’s more tempting to be online.

I suspect I may not be the only one who would love a cold snowy winter followed by a hot sunny summer (which is not the same as expecting one!)
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