Great forecast Mr. Deakin. Love the average temperature graph! I think you should show us more of this background info.
@ashleyhaworth-roberts6066
6 жыл бұрын
If anything the extreme nature of the cold this week across southern England was UNDER hyped not over hyped. We are now officially in 'Spring'.
@TheChopmama
3 жыл бұрын
Bruh it was so snowy in south east even after this there was measurable snow like half of the days in march
@TryThinkingAboutIt
6 жыл бұрын
This channel is starting to become really informative, interesting and thought-provoking. The key factor is economy of presentation: just enough, briefly put. Hard to do that well. Success so far. Keep going folks.
@pambusby222
2 жыл бұрын
Very Happy New Year 2022. To you all at Met Office. 10 days Trends focuses is my favourite focus. It's in to move details of the focuses in some parts of the country, and more reliable focused. Thank you so much beautiful soul Alex for the amazing focused. Love and lights with greatitude and so it is. 👍💐🙏💫✨🇬🇧🕊️🌈🕊️🤗
@terratec1001
6 жыл бұрын
So what's happening in the upper atmosphere with the polar vortex?
@slap-u-silly7529
6 жыл бұрын
Bring back the snow
@droneexexplore3074
6 жыл бұрын
Thing is my dog got stuck in the snow ⛄️ 🙄
@Hannymcfee
5 жыл бұрын
Now it’s very warm
@Warrior6504
6 жыл бұрын
I don't know what all the fuss is about it's a normal winter up here in the North. 🌨🌨🌨❄️🌨🌨🌨❄️🌨🌨🌨🌬☃️
@petrol1983
6 жыл бұрын
Liking the technical terms for the chart icons I mean blobs lol
@helencheckley9260
6 жыл бұрын
Will we have a cool summer this year.
@the_snowball3718
6 жыл бұрын
I like a cold snowy winter and a hot summer
@ashleyhaworth-roberts6066
6 жыл бұрын
Our coolest summers these days (such as 2011) are no longer as some around 100 years ago (such as 1922). Though summers seem to be getting wetter over time. Whereas with winters we can still get the occasional extremely cold winter (though despite the snow 2017/18 was not far off average). Which is surprising. But our winters are mild for our latitude due to the gulf stream and prevailing southwesterly winds. Some years we get a blocked pattern with cold northerlies or easterlies instead (though in 2016/17 a blocked mild southerly pattern brought a shortage of snow for Scotland). Basically our climate is extremely variable from year to year.
@ashleyhaworth-roberts6066
6 жыл бұрын
Sorry "no longer as cool as some 100 years ago ...".
@ashleyhaworth-roberts6066
6 жыл бұрын
I mean 'surprising' that we can still some extremely cold winters.
@scrapwomblecreatives6944
6 жыл бұрын
lol how easy people forget in 1963 there was 20 foot snow drifts in 1970's there was 17 foot snow drifts in the 80s there was 6 foot snow drifts and 4 foot snow drifts the weather got wet a few years and this snow is all over not just England think on weather can kill if you get the idea your safe weather men only forecast by the past its just an old record of how things could be on a given day the sun is in its grand solar minimum thats what you look at trust me please , that and ice melting is affecting the coldness of the sea
@2coryman
6 жыл бұрын
Prepare folks for the “Mini” ice Age. do vertical farming to feed the people.
@highbany
6 жыл бұрын
I remember walking to work in the late 60’s knee deep in snow, we just got on with it, none of this media rubbish, trying to scare people like it’s 24 hr news
@TryThinkingAboutIt
6 жыл бұрын
@DotL, I need these forecasts: I'm building a house. They're help me schedule, save me money, and help my mates do the same. Deep snow for me means no concreting: several hundred pounds saved.
@kernowforester811
6 жыл бұрын
Deffo unusually cold, remained below freezing all day in Cornwall and Devon, very rare. Had some snow in Bodmin, though more along the south coast of Cornwall and Devon. Not as cold as I experienced in SW or NE Scotland though. Global warming, climate change, yeah right. Sudden stratospheric warming over the arctic, probably. Due to global warming? Probably not, though some will claim it is.
@tonybennett4159
6 жыл бұрын
Kernow, do you know that global warming causes the jet stream, which is driven by the differential between hot and cold air, to meander and lose speed as the differential is decreased? On one side of this meander, you will have unusually hot temperatures (as you are on the side bringing winds deep from the south), on the other side, you will have unusually cold temperatures (as you are on the side bringing winds high up from the north). Meanders in a jet stream are slower than the straighter, faster jet stream patterns, therefore the event tends to stick around longer as well. The deeper this north/south meander, the more extreme the temperature event. The polar regions are less cold than they should be, hence the decrease in differential, for example, one day this week the north pole was one degree warmer than London. On the face of it, you might think that the weather in the northern and southern hemispheres would even out, and by and large it does, until you chart the global average at the end of each year. On a graph, taking into account some fluctuations, if the line is on an overall upward trajectory, then you are getting global warming. In recent years this has been a trend that is more rapid than could be explained by other phenomena (eg sunspots). It is perfectly possible, therefore to have the US event, where a massive north/south meander dragged in air from the coldest part of Canada way down as far as Florida, or the present European event and still have global warming. Take into account some very hot temperatures in both Australia and New Zealand in their present summers, to see that the global average is the thing, not more localised events.
@ashleyhaworth-roberts6066
6 жыл бұрын
The recent warming at sea level in the arctic is due to global warming/climate change. You do realise the stratosphere is above where weather happens, don't you? SSW events are not new and are probably natural variation (there was another one in 2013 and it led to prolonged cold in the late winter and early spring in the UK). However this week's weather pattern in southern England has barely been seen since February 1991 - a very long gap (Scotland had similar conditions in December 2010 though). On 7 February 1991 the highest temperature in Brighton (without 'wind chill') was about minus 5 C. It's a good thing this week's weather did not happen several weeks ago.
@ashleyhaworth-roberts6066
6 жыл бұрын
And the 'polar vortex' has been split recently - in effect the jet stream is (prior to Emma's arrival at least) coming at us from the east, which is unusual (though February is perhaps the most likely month for it to happen).
@kernowforester811
6 жыл бұрын
Err, no global warming does not cause the jet stream. This cold spell has little to do with the jet stream, it is due to the so called sudden stratospheric warming, itself poorly understood. Only a brave scientist without scientific study, would claim it is due to global warming. However, the polar Jetstream both north and south, is generated by differences in air mass temperature between the polar and tropical air masses in the upper troposphere. The amplitude is driven mainly by the Coriolis effect of a spinning Earth and pressure systems. The degree of amplitude, that is how far they meander north and south is open to debate. The more intense the difference in temperature, in general the stronger the jet stream. In Winter the polar jet stream is generally stronger. This is an area of recent science study since the 1940s, when the jet streams were first discovered, science with some diverse debate, but is related to temperature differences of air masses and the Coriolis effect of a spinning Earth. Some attribute the increased amplitude of the jet streams to global cooling, not warming, I can name names. We would expect a warming planet to produce less strong polar jet streams, however in the Summers of 2007 to 2012 over the North Atlantic, they became stronger with increased amplitude further south. Result was a long run of cold, cloudy Summers over NW Europe and the north Atlantic, but heatwaves over eastern Europe. Perhaps nothing to do with a warming planet but a cooling one? I have studied the HadCRUT 4 figures and data recently, where the global rise is around 0.18 deg C per decade over recent decades. It all depends upon where one starts and ends the data set to derive a statistical progression of rises or falls. Starting the data set in the Mediaeval warm period would indicate a cooling Earth! I have looked at Met office stats for 3 sites in the SW of England, Camborne, Chivenor and Yeovilton, for the growing season in July. Not surprisingly, they show little or no general rise in temperature since 1986. The data doesn't lie, these aren't Met office/IPCC/NASA satellite or computer generated data sets, they are real direct measurement data. There is also a persistent cold anomaly over the north Atlantic, some attribute to global cooling, some to warming, where increased melt water from Greenland is reducing the speed of the North Atlantic Drift. I've not noticed any stats or measurements on a decreasing surface salinity in the North Atlantic, so I am skeptical it is due to a supposed warming climate. This remains a very unusual cold spell over Europe, and I would expect some low temperature records to be broken for the month of March. I've never known in my 53 years of life, max temps of only -3 deg C in Cornwall in March, let alone January! This is truly exceptional, especially in a so called warming Earth.
@kernowforester811
6 жыл бұрын
No, the unusually 'warm' temperatures in the high Arctic of around 0 deg C or so, is likely not due to any supposed global warming, but due to the large anticyclonic block over Eurasia and northern Europe, displacing a finger of warmer air north to the north pole area. That anticyclone itself is probably due to the sudden stratospheric warming over the polar region. I'm not aware it is generally accepted science that sudden stratospheric warming is in any way due to ground level temperatures. Until recently, the polar vortex has been very strong and cold, not warm. I doubt any acceptable science study at the moment will be able to attribute that to 'global warming' or even 'global cooling'.
@StuartOliver83
6 жыл бұрын
My poor car isn’t liking all of this gritted salty roads,although it’s like it less without it
@StuartOliver83
6 жыл бұрын
I feel your pain buddy
@tiedupsmurf
6 жыл бұрын
NOT LONG ENOUGH THAT IS HOW
@Eliptagon
6 жыл бұрын
Hi
@ashleyhaworth-roberts6066
6 жыл бұрын
The current extreme UK weather (they are calling it 'weird' for some reason) is discussed here: www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09smh5p
@mefp9889
3 жыл бұрын
Interesting but 3 years ago 🤷🏽
@Irisphotojournal
6 жыл бұрын
It's not really exceptional, It's just Winter, Not Global Warming just Winter. I'm old enough to have seen much worse weather than this, it's all perfectly Normal, for Winter.!
@eugeneoreilly4067
6 жыл бұрын
IPJ Bradley its spring
@chaiandrelax
6 жыл бұрын
I'm viewer 420... I'm gettin LIT AS FUK
@garyburford5774
6 жыл бұрын
Why oh why are you mangling the English language? Less cold? Surely, it should be slightly warmer, or not as cold? Stop dumbing down things! Is this because your writers don’t use a dictionary?
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