Black Comb
Queen Bee
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2009
- Messages
- 2,737
- Reaction score
- 2
- Location
- Cumbria
- Hive Type
- Other
- Number of Hives
- 10+
Yes a local beek has just told me the same with his Keith.
Heres the answer!East winds and north winds are always cold. Mostly the wind comes from the west. Not sure why the wind is blowing the wrong way at the moment.
Heres the answer!
http://www.netweather.tv/index.cgi?action=jetstream;sess=
Bob.
So looking ahead the 12th April should be all change.
But yet again this is only a forecast.......
But YES the end could be in sight!
Seems they're great at keeping records - just not so good at forecasting future weather.
I agree, they are not much use in guessing what any future weather is going to be,despite all the wonderful equipment they have, but sometimes they come on the telly/radio and tell us what the weather was like the day before, and that is often reasonably accurate.
I agree, they are not much use in guessing what any future weather is going to be,despite all the wonderful equipment they have, but sometimes they come on the telly/radio and tell us what the weather was like the day before, and that is often reasonably accurate.
They may as well junk all the hi tech stuff and use one these:
More accurate than the met office bunch, forcast cold september, no it was above average temperatures,so they tried the same forcast for Oct, wrong,then Nov,wrong,then December which after guessing enough times turned out partly correct, towards the end of the month.
From News.
The Met Office has admitted issuing advice to government that was "not helpful" during last year's remarkable switch in weather patterns.
The Met Office three-monthly outlook at the end of March stated: "The forecast for average UK rainfall slightly favours drier than average conditions for April-May-June, and slightly favours April being the driest of the three months."
A soul-searching Met Office analysis later confessed: "Given that April was the wettest since detailed records began in 1910 and the April-May-June quarter was also the wettest, this advice was not helpful."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21967190
Heres the answer!
http://www.netweather.tv/index.cgi?action=jetstream;sess=
Bob.
So looking ahead the 12th April should be all change.
But yet again this is only a forecast.......
They're not on the same pay scheme as bankers by any chance?
Perhaps they should be on some incentive scheme, like performance linked wages, when they get it wrong they get no pay.
Well ... it could still be.
Looks like strong wind from the far north over the weekend (and Monday) followed by the wind going round to the west, with the result that next week we should be getting above 10C regularly.
But we stay in the cold air for the whole of this week ... http://www.netweather.tv/index.cgi?action=jetstream;sess=
Got an apology to make to my bees.
They seemed surprisingly confused around lunchtime today.
I realised that, whilst yesterday I'd changed all the clocks in the house, I'd failed to alter the sundial next to the hive.
Doh!
Dusty
Burnage as usual is about 300 years behind the times. I recommend a clock...with atomic timekeeping and radio setting so adjustment is not required.
(just like my cheap G Shock)
Fascinating watching how the forecast is evolving, and "bits of weather" are still due to happen, but in a slightly different place or time.
Currently I read it as indicating two fair old gales from the North on Saturday and on Monday - with a decent Sunday sandwiched between - and the milder Westerlies establishing during Tuesday.
Looks like an 'Azores High' establishes itself during next week, which would give us a run of normal mild westerlies. Could be showery though! April might be arriving more conventionally.
Scroll through the chart to see how things are forecast to evolve (the time of the predicted chart is at its top right corner) http://www.netweather.tv/index.cgi?action=jetstream;sess=
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