Windrush Weather

Category: Commentary

  • Coldest night in a year

    The temperatures have slowly been falling for a week but from the 1st we have had maxima of 12.9C, 11.3C, 9.7C, 6.7C and 5.4C peaking on Wednesday at 12.54. The wind backed a few degrees on Wednesday to come from the northwest. There were very welcome 3.8 hours of strong sunshine, due to a temporary ridge of high pressure, that began to disappear after 13.35 as variable could arrived.

    The thermometer began a slow decent during the afternoon and overnight to reach a minimum of -5.4C at 06.13 on Thursday. This was the coldest night since 1st January 2021 when the thermometer dropped to -6.7C.

    At 06.20 on Thursday the sky was still clear but thereafter cloud began to drift from the west, which saw the thermometer begin a slow rise to reach -3.6C at 08.00 and -2.6C at 08.30.

  • Northerly breeze brings chill on Tuesday

    As the depression relocated over the continent the wind on Tuesday came from the north initially that brought much cooler air. In fact the temperature dropped 4C after 08.00 to hover round 2C or 3C for most of the day. A light sleet shower was observed just after 14.30 with the daily precipitation amounting to 1.8mm.

    With a clearing sky after midday we enjoyed almost an hour of strong sunshine. The clearing sky brought the expected drop in temperature overnight with a minimum of 0.2C producing a ground frost. The wind backed into the west shortly before 17.00.

    Wednesday brought glorious sunshine as soon as the sun rose above the horizon. A ridge of high pressure, current pressure of 1013.8mb, is likely to produce a sunny day, if cool. The temperature by 08.00 had eased upwards a trifle to read 0.8C

  • Last of the warm days on Monday

    The last warm day from the Azores mild air saw the thermometer climb to 9.7C on Monday, the coolest day for a week but still 2.7C above the average. It was another dull and gloomy day with no UV registered.

    Overnight the thermometer sank to 6.6C with rain starting at 06.45 amounting to 1.2mm by 08.00.

    Tuesday saw the next weather front arrive but just before 08.00 the wind began to veer from the southwest to the north-northwest and strengthen. As a result, by 08.30 the thermometer had dropped 2C. The barometric pressure has been falling since the begin g f the month and at 08.00 registered 997.8mb, a drop of almost 20mb since the 1st as another depression arrived close-by.

  • Temperatures sliding

    Sunday brought a little sunshine of 0.3 hours but the maximum of 11.3C was down on the past five days although still 4.3C above the average. Rain in the afternoon was brief but quiet heavy amounting to 2.7mm. The wind continued from the southwest but less strong than recent days although a single gust of 25mph was recorded.

    Overnight the thermometer sank away to a minimum of 7.6C at 05.46 on Monday morning.

    As Monday dawned the cloud bank to the east was seen receding being replaced by a much clearer sky. The barometric pressure has been falling for the past week with a reading at 08.00 of 1009.8mb

  • Warmth continues for another day

    Yet again on Saturday the warm air from the Azores region pushed the thermometer well above average (+5.6C) with a maximum of 12.9C. Although this was record high for New Year’s Day in parts of the country we had a higher temperature on January 1st 2016 with 13.2C.

    The year started with 3.8mm of rainfall and anther day with no sunshine registered, although there was a bright start.

    Sunday arrived as many previous days with total cloud cover, which is going to thicken as yet another weather front approaches from the west.

    December 2021
    Dull and dry

    The 27 hours of sunshine hours for the UK were 38% less than the national average with Marlborough figures similar totalling just 26.4 hours. There were 15 days when the sun never made a visual appearance. The UV figures were worse as there were 20 days when it was so dull and gloomy no UV light was registered.

    The rainfall total for December reached 72.7mm being just 79% of the 37-year average or almost 20mm below.

    It was another mild month with the average mean temperature a significant 2.0C above the 37-year average.

    Evaporation from ground sources and plant life at this time of year is minimal but 6.8mm of equivalent rainfall was lost to the atmosphere on the drier days. The wettest day brought 10.1mm followed close behind with 9.8mm on the 27th.

    The month began with topsy-turvy weather that brought alternating warm and cool days and an air frost with a minimum of -2.2C in the early hours of the 3rd.

    The news was full of images and facts about the second named storm Barra that approached on the 5th. It was the shortest period between named storms since 2018 and named by Met Éireann. On the 7th we felt the effect of the storm with wind gusting to 31mph, but very modest compared to the considerable destruction in the north of the country.

    A ‘weather bomb’ was declared by the Metrologocal Office on the 7th, or explosive cyclogenesis. That event occurred when the central pressure of the depression to the west of Ireland fell more than 24mb in a 24 hour period, from 1017mb to 961mb from 06.00 on the 6th to 06.00 on the 7th.

    It was all change from the 11th as we enjoyed a sequence of 5 days when the wind backed into the southwest bringing warm air. A peak of 12.6C was recorded on the 12th, which was 4.6C above the 37-year average. There were eight consecutive days with above average maxima before the cooler air on a north-easterly breeze, that arrived on the 17th, took effect.

    A peak barometric pressure was recorded on the 17th of 1041.7mb as an anticyclone moved north from the continent. It was the highest barometric pressure since 27th February. As it eased to the north then east the wind veered into the northeast.

    There followed a brief period of cooler weather as a north-easterly set in with a sharp air frost on the 22nd as the thermometer dropped to -3.2C making it the coldest night since 17th April.

    Christmas Day and Boxing Day dawned with fog that in the early morning limited visibility to 400m due to warm moist air brought on a south-westerly and southerly air stream.

    Due to the persistent thick cloud the diurnal range of temperatures was minimal with a variation of less than 3C between maximum and minimum on the 25th and 26th. Earlier in the month there were variations of 10C or more on the three days of the 11th to 13th.

    Exceptional warmth from mid-Atlantic, from around the Azores area, arrived on the 29th that saw the thermometer soar to a maximum of 13.9C and the 31st higher again to 14.0C. This latter peak was exactly 6.0C above the 37-year average. However, this was not a record as on the 18th and 19th of December 2015 the thermometer rose to 14.4C on both days. During the evening of the 29th/30th the thermometer did not drop below 13.2C, which was a significant 10.9C above the 37-year average.

    On the 26th, a study from the charity Christian Aid identified 10 extreme events that each caused more than $1.5bn of damage. Earlier in the month I discovered the following article from the World Meteorological Organization.

    As the economic and human impacts of extreme weather and climate change increase, forecasts not just of what the weather will BE, but of what the weather will DO are vital to save lives and livelihoods.

    As a result, there is a paradigm shift towards impact-based forecasting, driven by the international meteorological and humanitarian community and facilitated by leaps in science and technology.

    “Over the last 50 years there has been a five-fold increase in recorded weather, climate and water-related hazards, with long-lasting socio-economic consequences. The number of deaths has decreased thanks to increased availability of accurate and timely warnings. But it is still unnecessarily high, as a result of lack of understanding of potential impacts,” says Cyrille Honoré, Director, Disaster Risk Reduction and Public Services Branch at the World Meteorological Organization. “This needs to change,” he says.

    The World Meteorological Organization has consequently expanded its Guidelines on Multi-hazard Impact-based Forecast and Warning Services, first produced in 2015 as a standard reference text.

    The guidance provides practical information and case studies on how to move from weather forecasts and warnings issued by National Meteorological and Hydrological Services to the provision of impact-based forecast and warning services of multiple cascading hazards (for instance a tropical cyclone, which triggers flooding, storm surge, wind damage, impacts on infrastructure, transport and energy and on health systems).

    The new edition benefits from significant research into exposure and vulnerability and incorporates extensive input from both service providers and the user community. It underlines the paramount importance of partnerships and dialogue between scientists, forecasters, disaster managers, community leaders and decision-makers.

    Anticipatory Humanitarian Action.
    The publication also embraces the concepts of anticipatory actions – using weather and climate information to underpin humanitarian interventions such as shelter strengthening before a tropical cyclone makes landfall and using forecast-based financing to limit the impact of a drought or flood.