|
Post by sari on Dec 10, 2017 10:58:00 GMT -5
We have reached a new level of dullness here. Today (10 December) is the 22nd straight day without precipitation. The only precipitation of any kind is a prediction of light snow...on the 23rd, 13 days out. So basically, we can expect to reach at least 34 days of no precipitation, and probably more, as that snow will probably miraculously disappear from the forecast a day before, as is typical.
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Dec 10, 2017 10:59:47 GMT -5
We have reached a new level of dullness here. Today (10 December) is the 22nd straight day without precipitation. The only precipitation of any kind is a prediction of light snow...on the 23rd, 13 days out. So basically, we can expect to reach at least 34 days of no precipitation, and probably more, as that snow will probably miraculously disappear from the forecast a day before, as is typical. What are the temps like? Above or below average?
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 10, 2017 11:03:35 GMT -5
holma in august 1975. 3 consecutive +36C days. must be unique. maybe there was something similar in ultuna july 1933 or in målilla june 1947. unfortunatly, the max and min temps before 1961 haven't been digitized yet. 36.8C is the swedish heat record for august. Is that Holma in Malmö? östergötland.
|
|
|
Post by sari on Dec 10, 2017 11:05:45 GMT -5
We have reached a new level of dullness here. Today (10 December) is the 22nd straight day without precipitation. The only precipitation of any kind is a prediction of light snow...on the 23rd, 13 days out. So basically, we can expect to reach at least 34 days of no precipitation, and probably more, as that snow will probably miraculously disappear from the forecast a day before, as is typical. What are the temps like? Above or below average? Extremely variable. On the 4th we reached 70F and then dropped below freezing that night, an insane 40F diurnal range. On the 7th, the maximum was below freezing. Now we're consistently reaching a bit above freezing during the day and a bit below during the night. It looks like it's bouncing up and down over the next two weeks if you look at a weather forecast: weather.com/weather/tenday/l/64152:4:US
|
|
|
Post by Babu on Dec 10, 2017 11:06:14 GMT -5
What the hell kind magic gave Sweden's August record high to an islet in an archipelago?
|
|
|
Post by Ariete on Dec 10, 2017 11:51:22 GMT -5
We have reached a new level of dullness here. Today (10 December) is the 22nd straight day without precipitation. The only precipitation of any kind is a prediction of light snow...on the 23rd, 13 days out. So basically, we can expect to reach at least 34 days of no precipitation, and probably more, as that snow will probably miraculously disappear from the forecast a day before, as is typical. Maybe you should move to Helsinki? They've got 26 precipitation days of the last 30. Rediculous. Boke.
|
|
|
Post by Nidaros on Dec 11, 2017 15:14:39 GMT -5
Temp @ 20:00
Stavanger: -1.4c Stavanger Airport: -4.9c! Bergen Airport: -1.5c Trondheim Airport: -6.2c Oslo Airport: -3.3c Folldal: -17.2c --- Karasjok: -1.6c Tromsø: 1.2c Lofoten/Skrova: 3.2c --- Longyearbyen: 0c
Odd temperature pattern in the country now
|
|
|
Post by boombo on Dec 12, 2017 8:57:59 GMT -5
I wonder if anybody could explain this temperature pattern in Bingley recently: clear skies the entire time, you can see the temperature drop as normal in the afternoon/early evening of the 11th, then instead of carrying on falling it just bobs up and down throughout the night even though it never reaches the dewpoint. I've seen a similar thing in the hourly obs of some of the well-known frost hollows in this country on really cold nights where there's a lot of radiation cooling, the temperature drops like a stone as soon as the sun sets and then randomly fluctuates with the movement of air currents, but this is on a hillside and it's not common here, usually on clear nights the temperature keeps falling or at least plateaus. It was -8C at 8 am in the valley instead of the -3C it says there, so there was obviously more cold pooling than normal but I still can't quite understand the dynamics behind this.
|
|
|
Post by Hiromant on Dec 13, 2017 9:34:43 GMT -5
We have reached a new level of dullness here. Today (10 December) is the 22nd straight day without precipitation. The only precipitation of any kind is a prediction of light snow...on the 23rd, 13 days out. So basically, we can expect to reach at least 34 days of no precipitation, and probably more, as that snow will probably miraculously disappear from the forecast a day before, as is typical. Be careful what you wish for. I'd trade my three months of rain for those dry days any time.
|
|
|
Post by Nidaros on Dec 15, 2017 16:16:22 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Giorbanguly on Dec 16, 2017 5:41:03 GMT -5
Absolutely massive UHI right now. -2C/-3C inside the city, down to -7/-8C on the rural edges. -13C in Somerset Airport (!!!) wtf
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Dec 16, 2017 5:54:43 GMT -5
Absolutely massive UHI right now. -2C/-3C inside the city, down to -7/-8C on the rural edges. -13C in Somerset Airport (!!!) wtf -20°C in Bingkhoyansk right?
|
|
|
Post by Giorbanguly on Dec 16, 2017 6:10:03 GMT -5
Absolutely massive UHI right now. -2C/-3C inside the city, down to -7/-8C on the rural edges. -13C in Somerset Airport (!!!) wtf -20°C in Bingkhoyansk right? Actually only -4C one of those rare days where Binghamton is the same as the city, but don't worry, over the next week we will see a huge difference
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Dec 16, 2017 7:16:50 GMT -5
Actually only -4C one of those rare days where Binghamton is the same as the city, but don't worry, over the next week we will see a huge difference Haha that's amusing! Speaking of this what do you make of Whyallos Aires in South Australia? Near that other place you mentioned but right on the sea instead! With that low summer humidity it's a solid B+ from me!
|
|
|
Post by jgtheone on Dec 16, 2017 7:19:46 GMT -5
tf, they've never recorded 49.5°C might have to fix that one
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on Dec 16, 2017 7:21:15 GMT -5
tf, they've never recorded 49.5°C might have to fix that one Is there a Wikiprankster involved you think?
|
|
|
Post by Beercules on Dec 16, 2017 7:26:36 GMT -5
Whyalla had 2 stations, one of them is closed, with the airport the current official station. On the BOM site the old station recorded 49.4C on Jan 2, 1960. That was actually the same date as the 50.7C record in Oodnadatta. I'm certain it's legit.
The record high at the current airport station is 48.0C on Feb 7, 2009.
|
|
|
Post by jgtheone on Dec 16, 2017 7:27:40 GMT -5
tf, they've never recorded 49.5°C might have to fix that one Is there a Wikiprankster involved you think? The 48.0C reading in February is legit, but yeah no idea where they got that from. Apart from minor changes since the last time it was edited, the rest of the data was correct. No idea. I've updated it anyway Edit: I found the 49.4C from the old station, the reason the airport didn't have that data was that it didn't record between 1949 and 1981, weird as hell
|
|
|
Post by Giorbanguly on Dec 16, 2017 7:30:34 GMT -5
Haha that's amusing! Speaking of this what do you make of Whyallos Aires in South Australia? Near that other place you mentioned but right on the sea instead! With that low summer humidity it's a solid B+ from me! a-, too fucking dry man! But I gotta love those temperatures, and with the low humidity it seems amazing. Pretty close to Jacarandopolis, dont you think
|
|
|
Post by Beercules on Dec 16, 2017 7:33:33 GMT -5
Port Augusta is way better as a climate. Whyalla often gets seabreezes which make it surprisingly cool on those days compared to Port Augusta, Port Pirie etc.
|
|