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Post by brillbilly on Jun 14, 2016 21:34:37 GMT 10
Are Thunder Storms common in the U.K.? In Australia, during Summer, we often get Thunder Storms. A few a month. I think we have a storm front that starts to roll in in feb and lasts until nov lol Now this year our MET OFFICE has even started giving storms names just like USA....we used to just say here comes a storm, now we can say heres storm Hillary lol
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Post by Wes Gear on Jun 14, 2016 21:41:27 GMT 10
We only name Cyclones. But adding a name makes it more Real.
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Post by brillbilly on Jun 14, 2016 21:48:01 GMT 10
We only name Cyclones. But adding a name makes it more Real. I think they name them because they're turning out to be real nasty manipulated bitches,who's name's can be linked and remembered for their nasty destruction lol
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Post by Rareclan on Jun 15, 2016 16:08:05 GMT 10
Are Thunder Storms common in the U.K.? In Australia, during Summer, we often get Thunder Storms. A few a month. I think we have a storm front that starts to roll in in feb and lasts until nov lol Now this year our MET OFFICE has even started giving storms names just like USA....we used to just say here comes a storm, now we can say heres storm Hillary lol
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Post by brillbilly on Jun 16, 2016 2:30:09 GMT 10
and i bet we still get drought warning!....Skys opening up again today,roads flooded as too much rain in too short time xx
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Post by Wes Gear on Jun 17, 2016 20:18:04 GMT 10
We have this new thing in Australia called a 'Rain Event'. And they seem to be able to predict these with conference. Getting one on Sunday.
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Post by brillbilly on Jun 17, 2016 20:47:37 GMT 10
We have this new thing in Australia called a 'Rain Event'. And they seem to be able to predict these with conference. Getting one on Sunday. umm?... funny how they can predict the future when it comes to weather?..unless you know of on going Geo-Engineering projects
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Post by Wes Gear on Feb 8, 2017 15:13:22 GMT 10
Heatwave to set temperatures soaringThe heat map shows the extreme inland temperatures that will make their way the coastlines over the next few days. THE next few days are going to be unbearable for large swathes of the country as an extreme heatwave sees temperatures soar. Parts of Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia and Victoria are expected to cop it the worst for the next four to five days, with temperatures predicted in the high 30s to possibly mid-40 degree mark.The dire forecast saw the website of the popular weather tracker Higgins Storm Chasing crash overnight, as tens of thousands of social media users tried to get as much information as they could. The looming spikes in temperature is also backed up by Bureau of Meteorology predictions for across regional Queensland New South Wales. A chance of rain in Brisbane tomorrow may cool things down after a predicted muggy day of 31C. The southeast is expected to be cloudy with a chance of showers on Thursday but temperatures are still expected to be very warm. link
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Post by brillbilly on Feb 8, 2017 21:51:13 GMT 10
The stark comparison to New Zealanders after rare weekend frosts and heavy mountain snow in the South Island. In fact snow also fell on the North Island mountains.
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Post by theshee on Feb 13, 2017 9:20:01 GMT 10
And here I am after three solid days rain with no let up I'm begining to have webbed feet! Blooming weather.
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