Windrush Weather

Category: Commentary

  • What a difference a day makes!

    The difference between saturday and sunday is significant:

    Maximum: down from 20.4C to 14.2C
    Wind: maximum gust up from 11mph to 20mph
    Sun: down for 9.07 hours to Zero
    Rainfall: rising from a dry day to 7.1mm

    The warm front that brought almost twenty-four hours of light rain and drizzle started at 8am yesterday. There was a slightly drier period early evening and again between 1am and 3am. The total rainfall was 7.1mm.

    The thermometer hovered around 14C all day but started to rise late evening adding 2C to the maximum by day resulting in a temperature of 16.1C at 08.00.

    This morning dawned with hill fog that gave visibility dropping down from 2,200m. at 06.30 to 400m at 08.00.

  • Nine hours of strong sun – another glorious autumnal day on saturday

    Saturday was another lovely day, similar to friday, with 9.1 hours of strong sunshine and the maximum of 20.4C, almost 2C above the September average

    Combined with little wind from a variable direction and no showers, it was the last of the very warm, dry days for a while.

    The lowest temperature of 10.2C was reached at 02.06 this morning as the leading edge of the approaching weather front began to encroach from the west. As a result the temperature began to creep upwards, reaching 12.3C at 08.00

    There was a little brightness after dawn but this soon disappeared as the cloud rapidly thickened. The first raindrops from the extensive weather front began to fall at 08.00.

  • Autumn arrives, meteorologically, with much sunshine

    Friday arrived with sunshine from the start and produced 9.22 hours of strong sunshine and a maximum of 20.0C, 1.3C above the September average.

    The winds were very light again, due to the high pressure, with no rainfall.

    It was another very cool night wth the thermometer dropping to a minimum of 6.8C just before 7am, some 2.5C below the average for September.

    This morning dawned with lines of fog that formed just before dawn and merged into a more general fog bank that then dispersed by 7.30am.

    August summary

    With a very wet start to the month, followed by a cool period, then ending in a dry week with very warm days, it was a variable month.

    The wettest day was on the 2nd when 15.1mm of rain was recorded, being a quarter of the month’s total. Two weeks followed that brought changeable weather that included rain on many days but no great quantity until the 20th with 9.3mm. The rainfall for August totalled 59.3mm, which was 7.3mm below the 33-year average, making it the driest August since 2013.

    There 12 wet days, described meteorologically as days when at least 1mm of rain is recorded. Interestingly, the trend for wet days in August has risen from about 9 days in the 1990’s to 11 during the past few years.

    Evaporation from ground sources and plant life totalled 72.3mm. This loss of moisture into the atmosphere usually far exceeds the rainfall total in a summer month but this August it was only 13mm in excess.

    The end of the first week felt more like autumn with maxima 6C below the 33-year August average on two days; 15.4C on the 9th was the coolest day in the month.

    This summer month redeemed itself with seven consecutive dry days from the 23rd – 29th when the thermometer soared to 27.8C on the 28th, the warmest day of the month being some 7C above the long-term average.

    The last day of August dawned with the morning feeling like the start of autumn as we experienced the lowest temperature of the month when the thermometer dropped to 6.6C being 5C below the August average minimum.

    We enjoyed 143.6 hours of strong sunshine, which was down 20 hours on the total for 2016 but twice the total for the dull August of 2015. There were three glorious days when the sunshine total rose into double figures, the sunniest was a total of 12.29 hours on August 10th. The flip side was the very wet day on 2nd August when no sunshine was recorded.

    September 1st is meteorologically the first day of autumn. George Eliot wrote, “My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth seeking the successive autumns”. We look forward the colourful autumnal leaf displays as the season progresses.

  • Last day of Summer was summer like

    Thursday gave us 8.7 hours of strong sunshine that boosted the temperature to 19.4C, 1.2C below the August average but with light winds again it was a very pleasant end to the season of summer, meteorologically.

    There was a brief shower, amounting to 0.6mm, around midday, which brought the total for August to 59.3mm. This is 7.3mm below the August average.

    The past night was not as cold as the previous one, but still cool, being 3C below the August average with the thermometer dropping to 8.4C.

    Today dawned with glorious sunshine boosting the temperature at 08.00 to 10.9C as a modest ridge of high pressure promises a fine autumn day.

    August summary

    With a very wet start to the month, followed by a cool period, then ending in a dry week with very warm days, it was a variable month.

    The wettest day was on the 2nd when 15.1mm of rain was recorded, being a quarter of the month’s total. Two weeks followed that brought changeable weather that included rain on many days but no great quantity until the 20th with 9.3mm. The rainfall for August totalled 59.3mm, which was 7.3mm below the 33-year average, making it the driest August since 2013.

    There 12 wet days, described meteorologically as days when at least 1mm of rain is recorded. Interestingly, the trend for wet days in August has risen from about 9 days in the 1990’s to 11 during the past few years.

    Evaporation from ground sources and plant life totalled 72.3mm. This loss of moisture into the atmosphere usually far exceeds the rainfall total in a summer month but this August it was only 13mm in excess.

    The end of the first week felt more like autumn with maxima 6C below the 33-year August average on two days; 15.4C on the 9th was the coolest day in the month.

    This summer month redeemed itself with seven consecutive dry days from the 23rd – 29th when the thermometer soared to 27.8C on the 28th, the warmest day of the month being some 7C above the long-term average.

    The last day of August dawned with the morning feeling like the start of autumn as we experienced the lowest temperature of the month when the thermometer dropped to 6.6C being 5C below the August average minimum.

    We enjoyed 143.6 hours of strong sunshine, which was down 20 hours on the total for 2016 but twice the total for the dull August of 2015. There were three glorious days when the sunshine total rose into double figures, the sunniest was a total of 12.29 hours on August 10th. The flip side was the very wet day on 2nd August when no sunshine was recorded.

    September 1st is meteorologically the first day of autumn. George Eliot wrote, “My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth seeking the successive autumns”. We look forward the colourful autumnal leaf displays as the season progresses.

  • Brrr! – cool, very cool & cloudy was wednesday

    Maximum of 15.9C, down 8C on previous day and 5C below average
    Minimum of 6.6C, 5C down on previous night and 5C below average
    Rainfall of 0.5mm after seven consecutive dry days.
    Sunshine – just 10 minutes compared to almost 12 hours on Sunday & 11 hours on Monday.

    It was the coolest day for three weeks and the coolest night for over three months since 11th May.

    This morning there has been intermittent sunshine that raised the thermometer to 10.3C at 08.00, the coolest start at this time of day since 16th August.

    Rainfall total is 58.7mm, which is 8mm below the August average.