Windrush Weather

Category: Commentary

  • Sunniest day for almost a month followed by cold night

    Thursday began with a squall that arrived promptly at 08.00 with heavy rain and gusty winds with a maximum gust of 30mph at 08.20. The rainfall amounted to 1.9mm with the remainder of the day dry. By 08.30 the rain had stopped, the winds abated with blue sky evident from the north.

    With 7.91 hours of strong sunshine on Thursday it was the sunniest day since 13th September that raised the thermometer to a maximum of 15.5C, some 0.9C above the October average.

    The clear night with a Harvest Moon meant a cool night with the thermometer dropping to 5.2C, some 2C below the 33-year average.

    The ridge of high pressure, with a reading of 1026mb this morning, is the highest barometric pressure since 17th June. As a result we have been greeted with blue sky and sunshine after dawn that triggered the sunshine recorder at 08.20.

  • Coolest day for three weeks but warmest morning for a month

    Interesting fact that the maximum yesterday of 14.8C was almost exactly the temperature at 08.00 this morning (14.7C).

    However, that masks what really happened during the past twenty-four hours. There was limited strong sunshine yesterday, just 38 minutes, that lifted the temperature from the starting point of 7.7C on Wednesday morning. A cloudier afternoon meant that the thermometer gradually fell to a minimum of 11.9C just after 11.30pm, since when it reversed and reached 14.7C at 08.00 this morning.

    It was dry day followed by a breezy night, especially between 6 and 7am this morning.

    A narrow band of rain arrived at 07.30 this morning, initially with light drizzle, but exactly at 8am a narrow band of heavy rain arrived with squally winds. At 08.18 a strong gust of 30 mph was recorded as the wind abruptly veered from the west into the north.

    September 2017
    If you got the impression that September was a wet month, you were correct. The statistics prove it was a very wet month with total rainfall amounting to 75.0mm, which was 13.5mm above the 33-year average and the wettest September since 2008. The maximum fall was 8.7mm on the 24th.

    To look a little closer into the data I find that we only had 6 dry days when the average, since my station started in 1984, is 16. What a contrast with the 26 dry days in September 2003. There were 17 days classed as wet days with the rainfall equal to or greater than 1mm. In total there were 7 days with modest totals from 5 to 7mm.

    Not only was it a damp month but not surprisingly, a cool month, due to the above average cloud cover. The mean temperature was 0.6C below the 33-year average. To analyse the data a little further, the average maximum and minimum were 0.7C and 0.4C respectively below the long-term average. Only 5 days were above the average temperature.

    There was a warm spell at the beginning of the month with a peak of 22.0C on the 4th. In contrast were the very cool nights at the later end of the month with the coldest night on the 22nd with a minimum of 2.2C, giving a brief grass frost.

    Much of the blame for this disappointing start to autumn can be blamed on a number of passing low-pressure systems. The average barometric pressure for September was 3mb below the long-term average. There was a particularly wet and windy period in the middle of the second week with strong winds gusting to 39mph on the 12th. The exact opposite occurred on the 25th being a very calm day with little wind and a maximum gust of just 8mph.

    Fog was evident on 5 mornings with visibility down to 200m on the 26th and mist prevalent after dawn on 4 days at the end of the month.

    Sunshine during September amounted to 115 hours varying from 9.22 hours on the 1st to no sunshine at all on the 3rd and 25th.

  • Sunshine up but temperature down yesterday also September summary

    With 6.7 hours of strong sunshine, Tuesday was a dry and typically autumn day. However, the wind, mainly from the west-nor-west was from a cool direction and pegged back the maximum to 14.9C, down 1C on the Monday maximum, which was fractionally above the 33-year average, with light winds peaking at 16mph.

    A cool night followed as the thermometer fell away in light winds to a minimum of 6.6C, which was 0.7C below the October average.

    This morning is bright and dry with thin cloud restricting any strong sunshine.

    September 2017

    If you got the impression that September was a wet month, you were correct. The statistics prove it was a very wet month with total rainfall amounting to 75.0mm, which was 13.5mm above the 33-year average and the wettest September since 2008. The maximum fall was 8.7mm on the 24th.

    To look a little closer into the data I find that we only had 6 dry days when the average, since my station started in 1984, is 16. What a contrast with the 26 dry days in September 2003. There were 17 days classed as wet days with the rainfall equal to or greater than 1mm. In total there were 7 days with modest totals from 5 to 7mm.

    Not only was it a damp month but not surprisingly, a cool month, due to the above average cloud cover. The mean temperature was 0.6C below the 33-year average. To analyse the data a little further, the average maximum and minimum were 0.7C and 0.4C respectively below the long-term average. Only 5 days were above the average temperature.

    There was a warm spell at the beginning of the month with a peak of 22.0C on the 4th. In contrast were the very cool nights at the later end of the month with the coldest night on the 22nd with a minimum of 2.2C, giving a brief grass frost.

    Much of the blame for this disappointing start to autumn can be blamed on a number of passing low-pressure systems. The average barometric pressure for September was 3mb below the long-term average. There was a particularly wet and windy period in the middle of the second week with strong winds gusting to 39mph on the 12th. The exact opposite occurred on the 25th being a very calm day with little wind and a maximum gust of just 8mph.

    Fog was evident on 5 mornings with visibility down to 200m on the 26th and mist prevalent after dawn on 4 days at the end of the month.

    Sunshine during September amounted to 115 hours varying from 9.22 hours on the 1st to no sunshine at all on the 3rd and 25th.

  • The sun returns! Almost a dry day.

    The sun returned yesterday with 1.93 hours of strong sunshine, raising the thermometer to a peak of 15.9C, which was 1.3C above the average for October.

    There was a very brief shower amounting to 0.1mm mid afternoon.

    As the skies cleared overnight the thermometer fell for over 18 hours, with a brief hiccup jut after 3am, to a low of 6.3C, which was 1C below the 33-year average for October.

    However, the barometric pressure has been rising for almost two days providing a ridge of high pressure so that we start the day with glorious sunshine and a reading of 1022mb.

  • Last southerly winds boost temperatures

    Sadly, the 1st of October brought no sunshine. However, the southerly winds for the majority of the day, gusting to 21 mph, meant an above average maximum of 16.7C (+2C) and a mild night with the thermometer not dropping below 12.5C (+4.7C) at 08.00

    There a couple of short showers mid-morning producing 0.4mm of rainfall.

    This morning dawned with broken, weak sunshine before cloud built up before 9am.

    Early evening yesterday the low pressure to the north meant that the wind slowly veered into the west.