The Briefing Room
General Category => Science, Technology and Knowledge => Topic started by: rebewranger on July 28, 2022, 02:51:26 pm
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FOLLOWING ITS 2-DAY HEATWAVE, THE UK SUFFERS UNUSUAL JULY CHILLS (2.9C/37.2F); SUMMER SNOW SWEEPS ALASKA; + FRESH FERTILIZER CUTS IN CANADA AND GERMANY SPARK THE LATEST ‘AWAKENING’
JULY 28, 2022 CAP ALLON
FOLLOWING ITS 2-DAY HEATWAVE, THE UK SUFFERS UNUSUAL JULY CHILLS (2.9C/37.2F)
It’s been 11-days since the UK endured its 48-hours of heat, since that toasty plume of African air rode anomalously-far north on the back of weak and wavy meridional jet stream flow and sent climate extremists into record-breaking fits of bed wetting hyperbole (which they must surely now be embarrassed about).
Britain, and also large parts of Northern France, have seen a pause in summer this week — very cool temperatures for late-July have invaded vast swathes with lows of 2.9C (37.2F) logged on Wednesday morning at Sennybridge, Wales — the nation’s coldest late-July reading in decades.
But according to master shillers theguardian.com, “the UK is no longer a cold country”:
https://electroverse.co/uk-suffers-unusual-july-chills-2-9c-37-2f-summer-snow-in-alaska-fertilizer-cuts-in-canada-and-germany/
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37 F in late July? Figured this was a reporting station in Northern Scotland.
Hell, this was in Wales....
But the enviro-whackos won't publicize the real truth which clearly differentiates the difference of what constitutes "climate" is versus weather. That is the nature of the dishonesty of our Green terrorist enemies.
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Can't they make up their minds? Is it hot or is it cold?
You can get Summer low temps in 30's F with very low humidity, no wind, radiational cooling - sometimes in low lying valleys or higher elevations.
Did a cold front just move through?
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Can't they make up their minds? Is it hot or is it cold?
You can get Summer low temps in 30's F with very low humidity, no wind, radiational cooling - sometimes in low lying valleys or higher elevations.
Did a cold front just move through?
Sometimes we lose sight of the fact that the UK is generally more north than any large Canadian City. All you need is a hiccup in the Gulf Stream, and get a blast of Nordic air sneaks in, and it can get pretty damned cold.