Cheeky Monkey
Well-known member
- Jul 17, 2003
- 23,868
Surely our winters aren’t usually this wet? Is this the (globally warmed?) future or what we usually experience?
No, I don't think they are usually this wet.Surely our winters aren’t usually this wet? Is this the (globally warmed?) future or what we usually experience?
A pre-curser to the Liverpool game....Surely our winters aren’t usually this wet? Is this the (globally warmed?) future or what we usually experience?
In Britain, it is usually wetter the further west you goIt is been consistently raining since I moved to Worthing at the end of Sept. I feared I may actully have moved to Manchester by mistake. It never rained like this in Hove!
This suggests we've been on a bit of a "wet streak" since September.
How our teams are tackling the challenge of record rainfall and high groundwater levels this winter
Months of extreme rainfall has left the region waterlogged. We're working hard to tackle our challenges.www.southernwater.co.uk
We need @Papa Lazarou, the sage of Sussex weather, to report from the Durrington weather station.
Agreed, but you can also get pretty wet if you venture too far southIn Britain, it is usually wetter the further west you go
Got pretty wet at 7am on the Downs with mine.Whose old enough to remember the drought last summer?
It's pissing down here. So much so, I haven't walked the dog and it is giving me evils.
Done some analysis for 2022. Brown blobs, below average, Blue = on average, Red = Above.
Overall, 2022 delivered 1026mm here versus the long term climate average of 880mm
November is the BIG outlier, almost 300% of the expcted rainfall.
View attachment 155589
That's a proper outlier.Done some analysis for 2022. Brown blobs, below average, Blue = on average, Red = Above.
Overall, 2022 delivered 1026mm here versus the long term climate average of 880mm
November is the BIG outlier, almost 300% of the expcted rainfall.
View attachment 155589
The reason, warmer oceans generate more humid air. In addition, we're seeing fewer spells of dry, cold air from Scandinavia and Russia.