Originally posted by Fussbudget
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Storm in a tea cup: The weather thread
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Originally posted by Evariste Euler Gauss View PostSo, as regards what passes for "summer" in England, we had some very nice warm sunny weeks in June, utterly shit chilly and rainy July, not much better August, and now we are in the first day of a forecast last hurrah of 7 gloriously sunny and hottish days before the weather reverts to type for the autumn. As Sod's Law would have it, I will miss 4 of those, from Wednesday inclusive, in hospital, due to having a major operation on Wednesday with 4 days at least in hospital afterwards. Ah well, today, Monday and Tuesday will be nice.
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Originally posted by Evariste Euler Gauss View PostSo, as regards what passes for "summer" in England, we had some very nice warm sunny weeks in June, utterly shit chilly and rainy July, not much better August, and now we are in the first day of a forecast last hurrah of 7 gloriously sunny and hottish days before the weather reverts to type for the autumn. As Sod's Law would have it, I will miss 4 of those, from Wednesday inclusive, in hospital, due to having a major operation on Wednesday with 4 days at least in hospital afterwards. Ah well, today, Monday and Tuesday will be nice.
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I had a lovely 24 hours in the Yorkshire Dales after the weather finally decided to turn decent, got the tent out and found myself a lonely spot. Not a speck of wind overnight, the tent was dripping wet due to condensation and dew but it dried quickly enough.
Hopefully another such weekend coming after the coming week will be wasted at work
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ha ha, France is known for being the world's top cheese producer!
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Thanks DR and ad hoc. The German for “Indian summer” is apparently Altweibersommer, which seems to me to make equally little sense.
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Best of luck, EEG. Such spells have long been described here as "Indian Summers", though they should now be rebranded as "Native American", as the term originally derives from the US.
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Good luck EEG
I've finally made it back to Romania where it is currently 38°
(I'm not home yet though. I'm looking at at least 42 hours door to door and I have realised I'm too old for this)
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So, as regards what passes for "summer" in England, we had some very nice warm sunny weeks in June, utterly shit chilly and rainy July, not much better August, and now we are in the first day of a forecast last hurrah of 7 gloriously sunny and hottish days before the weather reverts to type for the autumn. As Sod's Law would have it, I will miss 4 of those, from Wednesday inclusive, in hospital, due to having a major operation on Wednesday with 4 days at least in hospital afterwards. Ah well, today, Monday and Tuesday will be nice.
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Originally posted by ursus arctos View Post
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We are OK here. 25 mph winds. Power still on. Very unlikely to get any worse.
But the Big Bend is going to have a catastrophe, starting in the next hour.
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Serious fuck-up in Collier County. They kept the kids in school and now there are tornado warnings going off in the surrounding streets (Marco Island, Lely, heading north to around 10 miles east of me). Lely is one of the locations where I teach but we got the day off, otherwise I'd be stuck there unable to drive home until the tornado passed (and then driving in sleeting rain).
We just have torrential rain at present.
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I'm in the yellow (39-57 mph). Classes cancelled. We are trying to fit 3 days' home-office work into one in case we lose power (IIRC Ian was just 24 hours for us, due to us being 25 miles inland).
Sarasota northwards are in danger of getting what Fort Myers Beach got in Hurricane Ian, when all beachside property was obliterated. Full moon makes the tides worse.
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Our university is closing as a precaution so I'm at home tomorrow and Wednesday, apart from a doctor's appointment at 8 am (which should still be calm).
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I see the " over a thousand scientists have signed off that climate change isn't real" nonsense has reared its head in social media again.
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Daughter's friend is on a family holiday in Orlando and not long ago they were given 10 minutes to get out of the hotel, and are now attempting to get across a bridge towards the airport (don't know which, don't know the area) before the bridge is closed, while trying to rebook their flight home.
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Looks like it's going to dodge way north of Satchmo. It may graze Tampa but remains much more likely to hit Big Bend. Which is tough for the residents there, but at least there are fewer people who live there than further south.
What's worse is that it appears to be ramping up faster than expected and now rather than a Cat 1 at landfall it might be a Cat 3, which is much worse news.
Later on its track when it's well downgraded, the current central track forecast has it going pretty much straight over the Winter* Palace so we might again get to see whether the flood zone info is accurate.
* which we probably won't be using in winters any more.
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We are south of Lake Okeechobee, which you can see on the map as being below the cone, so as yet no major worries. I did get gas though as I anticipate some panic buying.
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