Windrush Weather

Author: Eric Gilbert

  • Chilly day on Sunday – not Spring like!

    Due to a mostly cloud day, just 0.4 hours of sunshine and a breeze from the south east, the thermometer struggled to reach a peak of 12.8C being 4.2C below the 36-year average. Not surprisingly, the UV level dropped from the ‘high’ category on Saturday back to ‘Moderate’.

    There was a light rain shower at 21.40 and more substantial rain overnight amounting to 1.9mm.

    The cloud cover meant an above average minimum of 9.3C (+2.3C) 04.59 on Monday morning.

    Monday initially was cloudy after dawn but just before 07.30 breaks began to appear in the cloud cover and short, bright intervals appeared.

    The barometric pressure has been rising since the beginning of the month with a current reading of 1018.1mb, the highest for 11 days, as anticyclone edges into the Northwest.

  • Much sunshine before the rain returns!

    After a glorious start on Saturday with intense blue sky and strong sunshine, the cumulous clouds arrived late morning, however we did enjoy 10.1 hours of strong sunshine.

    The thermometer slowly rose to a maximum of 16.4 during the late on the afternoon at 16.04. This peak was just below the average for early May. During the evening and overnight the warmth slowly ebbed away until a minimum of 6.4C was reached at 00.51 on Sunday morning, which was also just below the 36-year average. At this time cloud began to spread in ahead of another weather front.

    Sunday saw the odd glimmer of weak sunshine after dawn before cloud, ahead of a rain band, arrived. The first spots of rain were noted at 07.50 and light rain began to fall at 8.00.

  • Intense hail shower followed by a cold night

    Friday’s weather brought heavy showers and hail. There were brief showers late morning but just after 16.30 a more substantial shower arrived from the west that by 16.40 produced an intense downpour of hail, classified as small hail being less than 5mm in diameter. There was another short shower just after midnight. The total precipitation for the past twenty-four hours was 5.6mm.

    The sunshine total for the day was 6.6 hours. The thermometer rose to a maximum of 14.3C early afternoon at 13.34 but fell away as cloud cover increased. However, during the hail shower the temperature dropped over 4C down to 7C.

    With much clearer skies overnight the temperature tumbled to a minimum of 4.0C at 05.57 Saturday morning.

    The sun arrived at dawn on Saturday shining strongly in an intense blue sky that soon got to work on the temperature so that by 08.00 the thermometer read 8.2C

    April Review

    Rainfall record broken for April

    The month started with a blast of Arctic air that produced a hard frost as the thermometer dropped to -2.8C following a cold day with a maximum of just 8.8C that was 5.3C below average.

    The first four days in April continued the dry theme after the previous period in March that saw twelve consecutive dry days. However, the wind then changed direction significantly from the north into the west and then south to bring warmer days and nights. High pressure to the east and low pressure to the west brought warm air from Iberia that lifted daytime temperatures above average.

    The first substantial rain in eighteen days fell on the 5th with 2.3mm that refreshed the gardens.

    From the 6th another dry period arrived with a further ten, consecutive dry days with temperatures rising well above the average. Over the previous 28 days we received just 3mm of rainfall and the equivalent rainfall of 44mm was lost through evaporation from ground sources and plant life.

    From the 9th to the 11th the thermometer rose above 24C with the warmest day of the month on the 11th that gave a maximum of 24.4C, which was 10.3C above the 36-year average.

    The long, dry spell was broken with a vengeance on the 17th as a rain band in the shape of an arc, slowly rotated anticlockwise continuously over this area producing 15.4mm of rain. After a few dry hours in the evening another intense rain band moved north in the early morning producing another 17.8mm. This brought the daily total to 33.2mm breaking the previous record for the wettest April day set in 1991 with 28.7mm. It was welcome refreshment for the very dry gardens.

    On the 18th an anticyclone developed over Scandinavia that produced a ‘blocking high’, which kept weather fronts advancing from the Atlantic. This high-pressure system, circling clockwise combined with a low-pressure system circling anticlockwise over southern Europe, continued the run of strong north easterlies. It was especially strong from the 20th to the 22nd with gusts up to 33mph, only very slowly decreasing.

    There was a dramatic change in our weather on the 27th. The anticyclone had been declining for several days having lost over 20mb since its peak. This allowed depressions, with accompanying rain bands, to sweep in from the Atlantic with four wet days after the eight consecutive days without rain. The strong north easterly winds and very warm conditions had meant that evaporation from ground sources also plant life was equivalent daily to rainfall of 4mm and a loss of 32mm through that period.

    Tuesday 28th was an exceptionally cold day with a strong north easterly wind producing a wind chill so that the maximum of just 7.8C, being 6.3C below average, felt more like 5.7C. It was the coldest day since 5th March.

    There were 23 days without measurable rainfall during April but the four days at the end of the month added another 44.5mm bringing the monthly total to 82.9mm. This was 24.4mm above the 36-year average and the wettest April since 2014. The extreme April rainfall years were in 1984 with only 2.0mm and the wettest in 2000 that produced 175.2mm. The period January to April gave us 382mm of precipitation that was 104mm above the 36-year average.

    Set against the above monthly precipitation of 82.9mm is the figure of 85.4mm of equivalent rainfall that was lost to the atmosphere due to evaporation from ground sources and plant life during the very warm dry spells also the strong northeasterly winds that prevailed for 15 days during the month. So in fact there was a deficit of 2.5mm of rainfall.

    Due to the many warm days it was not surprising to find that the mean temperature for April was a significant 2.0C above the average and the third warmest I have recorded since my station began in 1984.

    There were only two days during the month without sunshine that totalled a considerable 237 hours.

  • Intense April showers on Thursday

    The showers on Thursday were very heavy and frequent that continued until 15.00. Further showers began just after 00.45 on Friday morning. The daily total was another 18.0mm. This brought the monthly rainfall total to 82.9mm, which was 24.4mm above the 36-year average and the wettest since 2014.

    As the showers diminished late afternoon we enjoyed some sunshine amounting to 3.9 hours that lifted the temperature from the cool 7C, that existed for most of the day, to 11.1C being 3C below average.

    Friday started cloudy but an hour after dawn there was broken sunshine as the clouds began to thin.

    April Review

    Rainfall record broken for April

    The month started with a blast of Arctic air that produced a hard frost as the thermometer dropped to -2.8C following a cold day with a maximum of just 8.8C that was 5.3C below average.

    The first four days in April continued the dry theme after the previous period in March that saw twelve consecutive dry days. However, the wind then changed direction significantly from the north into the west and then south to bring warmer days and nights. High pressure to the east and low pressure to the west brought warm air from Iberia that lifted daytime temperatures above average.

    The first substantial rain in eighteen days fell on the 5th with 2.3mm that refreshed the gardens.

    From the 6th another dry period arrived with a further ten, consecutive dry days with temperatures rising well above the average. Over the previous 28 days we received just 3mm of rainfall and the equivalent rainfall of 44mm was lost through evaporation from ground sources and plant life.

    From the 9th to the 11th the thermometer rose above 24C with the warmest day of the month on the 11th that gave a maximum of 24.4C, which was 10.3C above the 36-year average.

    The long, dry spell was broken with a vengeance on the 17th as a rain band in the shape of an arc, slowly rotated anticlockwise continuously over this area producing 15.4mm of rain. After a few dry hours in the evening another intense rain band moved north in the early morning producing another 17.8mm. This brought the daily total to 33.2mm breaking the previous record for the wettest April day set in 1991 with 28.7mm. It was welcome refreshment for the very dry gardens.

    On the 18th an anticyclone developed over Scandinavia that produced a ‘blocking high’, which kept weather fronts advancing from the Atlantic. This high-pressure system, circling clockwise combined with a low-pressure system circling anticlockwise over southern Europe, continued the run of strong north easterlies. It was especially strong from the 20th to the 22nd with gusts up to 33mph, only very slowly decreasing.

    There was a dramatic change in our weather on the 27th. The anticyclone had been declining for several days having lost over 20mb since its peak. This allowed depressions, with accompanying rain bands, to sweep in from the Atlantic with four wet days after the eight consecutive days without rain. The strong north easterly winds and very warm conditions had meant that evaporation from ground sources also plant life was equivalent daily to rainfall of 4mm and a loss of 32mm through that period.

    Tuesday 28th was an exceptionally cold day with a strong north easterly wind producing a wind chill so that the maximum of just 7.8C, being 6.3C below average, felt more like 5.7C. It was the coldest day since 5th March.

    There were 23 days without measurable rainfall during April but the four days at the end of the month added another 44.5mm bringing the monthly total to 82.9mm. This was 24.4mm above the 36-year average and the wettest April since 2014. The extreme April rainfall years were in 1984 with only 2.0mm and the wettest in 2000 that produced 175.2mm. The period January to April gave us 382mm of precipitation that was 104mm above the 36-year average.

    Set against the above monthly precipitation of 82.9mm is the figure of 85.4mm of equivalent rainfall that was lost to the atmosphere due to evaporation from ground sources and plant life during the very warm dry spells also the strong northeasterly winds that prevailed for 15 days during the month. So in fact there was a deficit of 2.5mm of rainfall.

    Due to the many warm days it was not surprising to find that the mean temperature for April was a significant 2.0C above the average and the third warmest I have recorded since my station began in 1984.

    There were only two days during the month without sunshine that totalled a considerable 237 hours.

  • Another above average monthly rainfall

    Wednesday initially saw a little brightness and there were glimpses of the sun during the day amounting to 5.5 hours that meant it was a warmer day than the very cold Tuesday but a maximum of 13.4C was still 0.7C below average.

    It was a breezy day with the wind predominantly from the southwest and gusting to 24mph at 12.50. This was the strongest gust since 21st April.

    A rain band passed through in the late evening, starting at 21.45 and again just after 23.00, which was very heavy and produced another 5.4mm of rainfall. This brought the monthly total to 64.9mm, which is 7mm above the 36-year average. It is the wettest April since 2014 with one day of April showers still to add to the total.

    It was another very cool night with the thermometer sinking to 4.9C at 04.25, being just above the average.

    Low pressure is now firmly in control as depressions roll in from the Atlantic. The barometer dropped to 993.7mb at 08.00 on Thursday and continues to fall. This is the lowest pressure since 5th March. Thursday saw a little brightness after dawn but thick cloud soon obscured the sun with a light shower soon adding to the monthly total that occurred at 07.50.