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Your daily forecasts from Boards.ie weather forum (NO CHAT)

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Monday, 27 February, 2012
    _________________________________

    TODAY ... Mostly cloudy, with some light rain, but this should become more showery as it drifts southeast ... some brighter intervals this morning in the south, and by afternoon spreading into west, except where sea fog is present ... highs 12-15 C, mildest inland southwest. Rainfall potential is generally light, 1-3 mms.

    TONIGHT ... Partly cloudy with widespread mist or fog developing, mild ... some drizzle at times ... lows 7-10 C.

    TUESDAY ... After a cloudy or misty start, brighter with some sunny intervals and continuing very mild with highs 12-15 C. Potential for 16-17 C again in eastern Wicklow.

    WEDNESDAY ... Sunny intervals, some cloud and drizzle moving onto west coast and sporadically across the north later ... very mild, lows 4-7 C and highs 11-14 C.

    THURSDAY ... Intervals of cloud and sun and somewhat cooler in most places, with lows 3-6 C and highs 9-12 C. Foggy with some light rain by evening.

    FRIDAY ... Variable cloud, another interval of rain developing, this time possibly becoming heavy for part of the evening or overnight period ... lows around 3 C and highs 8-11 C.

    SATURDAY ... Breezy or windy from west to northwest, showers, turning cooler, lows near 5 C and highs near 9 C.

    SUNDAY ... Variable cloud, showers, breezy from north, cooler with lows 2-4 C and highs 6-9 C.

    OUTLOOK ... Some rather chilly weather may follow with a slight risk of wintry showers (especially for Ulster) with highs likely to be only 5-7 C, slight frosts at night.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... The northern plains snowstorm of the weekend is rapidly weakening as it crosses the Great Lakes today, but some parts of Michigan and central Ontario could see 3-7 cms. South of its track, a little milder with highs 7-10 C trending to about 15 C mid-Atlantic states and 18-20 C southeast where cloud from another weak system may bring a light rain at times. A more active storm is developing today in Nevada and will bring showers and mountain snow to Utah by later today, Colorado-Wyoming overnight. This storm will draw in a weak system left behind by the previous low in Montana, and a blizzard is likely to develop Tuesday in the Dakotas and Minnesota. Meanwhile, cold with snow showers near the west coast with highs only 2-4 C sea level and -3 C in the alpine.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Sunday was a cloudy and cold day with local snow showers, only a few small flakes at my location but 3-5 cms around other parts of the Vancouver region. Some clearing this evening gave us a brief but spectacular view of Jupiter near the Moon with Venus nearby.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Tuesday, 28 February, 2012
    _________________________________

    TODAY ... Mostly cloudy with some fog to start, then brighter especially for parts of south and east by mid-day and afternoon, mild or warm, light to moderate southerly winds ... highs 12-15 C, highest in southeast. Some chance of a local 16-17 C reading in parts of Wicklow, Dublin.

    TONIGHT ... Fog or mist redeveloping, low cloud over south coast, mild although somewhat cooler than previous nights, lows 4-8 C.

    WEDNESDAY ... Morning cloud and mist should clear partially by mid-day with another very mild afternoon, highs 12-15 C. Persistent fog likely near some outer coasts.

    THURSDAY ... Cloudy with sunny intervals, mild ... lows 3-6 C and highs around 12 C.

    FRIDAY ... Increasing cloud, mild, rain arriving in west with strong southerly winds developing. Lows 3-6 C and highs 10-12 C. Winds south 30-50 mph in parts of west Munster and Connacht by evening.

    SATURDAY ... Breezy, showers or periods of rain, cooler. Lows 3-6 C and highs 7-9 C with winds westerly backing to southerly 20-40 mph. Heavy rain may develop overnight, potential for 20-30 mms.

    SUNDAY ... Windy and turning colder again with rain possibly ending as sleet or snow over higher terrain, where highs only about 4-6 C (otherwise 7-8 C).

    OUTLOOK ... Model guidance is somewhat scattered but most outcomes are on the cooler side with highs around 6-9 C on average, slight frosts possible. Some outcomes are more breezy with more frequent showers.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... The strongest snowstorm of the winter may develop later today in the northern plains states as a low pushes northeast from Colorado. Eastern South Dakota could see 50 cms of snow and parts of North Dakota and Minnesota will also see blizzard conditions; temperatures in this region will be held down to -3 C in strong NE winds gusting to 50 mph, snow will drift extensively. Mild air with rain and thunderstorms will push north as far as Iowa and Missouri, and later into the western Great Lakes region. Highs of 10-15 C in this region will trend to about 22 C near the Gulf coast further south. Some severe storms are possible. Meanwhile, freezing rain could hit the Twin Cities region of southeast Minnesota, this spreading into Wisconsin and Michigan later.

    Eastern states will be mild ahead of the storm, with highs 12-15 C. Meanwhile, another rather weak storm is pushing onto the west coast where it will become wet near sea level and snowy inland with 10-15 cms on average in BC and parts of Washington state. The desert southwest will see a dry cold frontal passage with virga but some isolated thunderstorms later over mountains. Highs will continue 25-28 C but it will turn much cooler late today in Nevada and western Arizona, then in Utah and Colorado overnight.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Monday was a cold but mostly sunny day with light winds. Highs of about 3-4 C felt quite chilly especially in the shade. The evening featured extensive high cloud and a dim view of the brighter stars and planets. Snow and/or sleet is likely here about noon on Tuesday.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Wednesday, 29 February, 2012
    ____________________________________

    TODAY ... Morning cloud and mist should clear partially by mid-day to give some hazy sunshine in various places, with another very mild afternoon, highs 12-15 C. Persistent fog likely near some outer coasts. Light southerly winds.

    TONIGHT ... Hazy to overcast and becoming foggy or misty, lows 3-6 C.

    THURSDAY ... Cloudy with sunny intervals, some coastal fog or drizzle, mild ... highs around 12 C.

    FRIDAY ... Increasing cloud, mild, rain arriving in west with strong southerly winds developing. Lows 3-6 C and highs 10-12 C. Winds south 30-50 mph in parts of west Munster and Connacht by evening.

    SATURDAY ... Breezy, showers or periods of rain, cooler. Lows 3-6 C and highs 7-9 C with winds westerly backing to southerly 20-40 mph. Heavy rain may develop overnight, potential for 20-30 mms.

    SUNDAY ... Windy and turning colder again with rain possibly ending as sleet or snow over higher terrain, where highs only about 4-6 C (otherwise 7-8 C).

    MONDAY-TUESDAY ... Partly to mostly cloudy and cold with slight frosts overnight, wintry showers possible during the daytime, in moderate northerly winds becoming more westerly by mid-week. Lows around -1 to +3 C and highs 5-8 C. The further outlook calls for a gradual return to more seasonable temperatures and mostly dry conditions later in the week.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Heavy snow across most of Minnesota and the Dakotas, spreading into northern Wisconsin and Michigan and central Ontario by tonight, 20-40 cms in places, strong east to northeast winds and highs near -2 C. Further south, heavy rain with a zone of sleet and freezing rain marking the boundary from about Minneapolis-St Paul to Toronto. This mixture will spread across New York state into New England tonight and Thursday. Meanwhile, a second and weaker disturbance will follow from Montana with smaller amounts of snow or sleet. Turning colder today in the central plains states with showers to flurries, while heavy rains spread east towards the Ohio valley with isolated severe storms, highs 10-15 C.

    A weaker storm is spreading sleet and mountain snow onto the west coast with rain south of Vancouver to northern California, and continued dry and warm weather in the southwest U.S.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Cloudy and rather cold all day, with sleet developing by evening, some snow mixing in at present, high earlier about 4 C but close to 2 C now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Thursday, 1 March, 2012
    _______________________________

    In like a lamb ...

    TODAY ... Foggy or misty to start with some drizzle or light rain near northwest coasts, but some brighter intervals should develop, possibly even some bright sunshine in east and inland south, and very mild again with highs 12-15 C. Moderate southerly winds in west, light elsewhere.

    TONIGHT ... Some clear intervals but extensive low cloud, fog or mist, rather chilly with lows 3-7 C.

    FRIDAY ... Once again, the cloud and mist should partially clear for part of the day to allow temperatures to reach 11-13 C, but winds will increase to southerly 20-40 mph in western counties and rain will follow in the evening or towards midnight.

    SATURDAY ... Periods of rain, some partial clearing mid-day, cooler as winds veer to west, but another surge of moisture later with heavy rain possible by the evening. Lows 5-8 C and highs 7-10 C.

    SUNDAY ... The overnight rain could become sleety and end as snow in some higher parts of the east and south, but this system will retreat into northern France and leave most places dry later in the day, with a slow clearing trend against considerable high cloud and a stiff northerly wind adding chill to temperatures that are already below normal at about 4-7 C. This outlook could change towards a more significant snowfall event, so check for updates.

    MONDAY ... Sharp morning frosts and very cold in the daytime with some sunny intervals, lows -5 to -2 C and highs 4-7 C.

    TUESDAY ... Another morning frost, variable cloud to follow with somewhat milder afternoon temperatures, lows near -2 C and highs near 8 C.

    WEDNESDAY ... Milder with periods of rain and strong southwest winds, lows near 4 C and highs near 11 C, winds gusting to 55 mph in coastal areas.

    OUTLOOK ... A somewhat colder trend should follow this mid-week storm front and it could be almost a wintry mix situation by the weekend of 10th and 11th, on the current guidance. Longer term there may be a frosty interval of easterly sourced modified arctic air masses, nothing too extreme but chilly.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Snow will redevelop over most of New England as a complex storm gears up for part 2 this afternoon ... leftover freezing drizzle and wet snow from the old storm is still falling over parts of the Great Lakes and upper Midwest, but a new storm forming in Colorado will spread 3-5 cms of snow into the Dakotas later, with mild southerly winds in the central plains states and warm humid weather in Texas. A major severe weather outbreak should follow on Friday in the central states. But this will only be in the formative stages today. Meanwhile, the west coast is seeing the remnants of a weaker storm that will continue to produce wet snow and coastal rains for today.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Leap Year Day was cold with morning snow that left a wet compact 3 cms slowly melting in a drizzly, cloudy daytime that produced a high of only 4 C. Normal would be about 9 C now. The evening was clear with another lovely view of Venus and Jupiter and the Moon moving away across its northern maximum position (hence the northern max storms).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,959 ✭✭✭✭Villain


    Forecast and Winter Review from http://www.iwo.ie/2012/03/01/weather-forecast-1312-winter-review-with-a-wintry-weekend-ahead/
    Weather Forecast 1/3/12
    The Irish Calendar uses an old Gaelic Calendar which seasons are a little unusual but based on the Irish Meteorological seasons Spring started today the 1st of March, as Winter consist of the three coldest months December, January and February.

    Winter Review from Met Eireann:
    Mean air temperatures for the season were between 1.2°C and 2.0°C above normal, with all three months of Winter recording above average air temperatures for the time of year. Mean air temperatures recorded in the west and southwest were the highest relative to normal, with Shannon Airport and Belmullet reporting their warmest winter since 1989 (23 years). Knock Airport reported a seasonal mean temperature of 5.5°C, its highest winter mean temperature since the station opened in 1996 (16 years). Most other stations across the country reported that it was not as warm as the winters of 2007/2008. Mean maximum and mean minimum temperatures were all above average, with the majority of minimum air and grass temperatures for Winter were recorded during the cold spell at the start of February. Most lowest minimum air and grass temperatures especially in the south and southwest were the highest in the number of years, with Valentia Observatory reporting an Winter air temperature of 1.7°C and a Winter grass minimum of -3.1°C, the highest recorded at the site since 1939 (73 years) and 1989 (23 years), respectively. Other stations in the area reported their highest minimums in five to 17 years. Majority of rainfall totals were below normal for Winter across the southern half of the country and in some
    parts of the east. Rainfall totals were below average in the majority of these parts during December and January, while all stations reported dry conditions in February. Most stations the east and south reported a below average number of wetdays (days with 1 mm or more) and the driest Winter since 2006 (6 years). Highest daily falls were recorded at various times, mainly on December 12th and January 29th, with the daily falls recorded at stations in the south and southwest being the lowest in six to 15 years. Percentage of normal sunshine values for Winter were nearly all below normal. Below average totals were recorded during all three months of the season except at Dublin Airport, where above normal sunshine was recorded during December, January and February leading to a slightly above normal value for the season. Stations in the southwest reported the lowest amount of sunshine hours and sunshine relative to normal, with Valentia Observatory and Shannon Airport both reporting their lowest winter sunshine since sunshine records began at the stations in 1939 (73 years) and 1945 (67 years), respectively. Other stations reported it was the dullest winter in 16 to 20 years, with Dublin Airport, who had above average sunshine this season, reporting it was the dullest winter since 2006.

    The full review is available at http://www.met.ie/MetAdmin/useruploads/file/winter_summary_2011_12.pdf

    Summary:
    While we have had some nice mild weather of late we will see a brief return to wintry weather over the weekend with temps dropping below freezing and a risk of Sleet and even Snow for a time.

    THURSDAY NIGHT:
    A mainly dry night with just some light drizzle in the southern half of the country where temps will be 7c to 9c, dry with some clear spells in the Northern half but cooler with temps of 3c to 6c.

    FRIDAY:
    A dry mild day with temps of 9c to 14c but cloudy in most parts except for South Leinster and Munster where there will be some good sunny spells. A band of rain will arrive in the Southwest after midnight Friday night and spread across the country.

    SATURDAY:
    Widespread rain will gradually clear to scattered heavy showers with cooler temps of 5c to 9c.

    SATURDAY NIGHT:
    Showers in the Southern half of the Country of rain will turn to Sleet and possibly even Snow for a time as temps drops, getting down to -2c in many areas by early morning, leaving ICY conditions in many areas.

    SUNDAY:
    A cold ICY start with possibly some more sleet showers in Eastern areas before clearing to give a a mainly dry day with temps of 4c to 7c but feeling very cold in the breeze.

    SUNDAY NIGHT:
    Another very cold night with temps getting down to -3c and a widespread Frost setting in.

    MONDAY:
    A dry day with temps rising to 7c to 9c but cold again Monday night with another frost.

    OUTLOOK:
    It looks to turn milder from Tuesday with some light rain in some areas during the week but also good dry spells.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Friday, 2 March, 2012
    ____________________________

    TODAY ... Isolated showers in parts of Ulster, elsewhere, cloud and mist should partially clear for part of the day to allow temperatures to reach 11-14 C, but winds will increase to southerly 20-40 mph in western counties and rain will follow in the evening or towards midnight.

    TONIGHT ... Showers or periods of rain, gusty south winds developing, 20-40 mph (30-50 mph by morning west coast), lows 6-9 C, some rainfalls of 10-20 mms west, trace to 5 mms east.

    SATURDAY ... Periods of rain continuing to move east, a further 10-15 mms in east, followed by some partial clearing mid-day, cooler as winds veer to west, highs 7-10 C. The evening and overnight will bring cloud and some showers, and the risk of a period of steady rain or sleet near the south coast.

    SUNDAY ... The overnight rain could become sleety and end as snow in some higher parts of the east and south, but may amount to only trace or light amounts, before this system moves into northern France, leaving most places dry later in the day, with a slow clearing trend against considerable high cloud and a stiff northerly wind adding chill to temperatures that are already below normal at about 4-7 C. There is still some chance of an upgrade of this morning potential, so we'll set the chance of a heavier rain/sleet/snow mix at 30%.

    MONDAY ... Sharp morning frosts and very cold in the daytime with some sunny intervals, lows -5 to -2 C and highs 4-7 C.

    TUESDAY ... Another morning frost, variable cloud to follow with somewhat milder afternoon temperatures, lows near -2 C and highs near 8 C.

    WEDNESDAY ... Milder with periods of rain and strong southwest winds, lows near 4 C and highs near 11 C, winds gusting to 55 mph in coastal areas. Clearing later with winds veering to west and decreasing overnight.

    OUTLOOK ... Some sunshine on Thursday followed by more showers Friday and a breezy to windy interval with near normal temperatures or a slightly colder than average trend through the weekend, highs generally 8-10 C.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Clearing and cold in New England and eastern Canada as the storm pulls away into Atlantic, missing Newfoundland to south later. Highs near -1 C. A milder trend everywhere else in eastern Canada and the eastern U.S. with rain developing in the western Great Lakes (snow later in Lake Superior region), and widespread severe storms in the central plains states and Ohio-Tennessee valleys. Highs near 15 C to 22 C Gulf coast. Dry and mild in Florida, severe storms this evening in the Gulf coast region (AL-MS-LA) and tomorrow in the southeast which will be warm and humid today. Colder across parts of the inland west with outbreaks of snow, as a weak ridge develops on the west coast with partly cloudy, cool conditions.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Thursday was a cloudy day with some sunny intervals and highs of about 6 C ... earlier snow had largely melted except for piles around cleared parking areas and pavements.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Saturday, 3 March, 2012
    _______________________________

    TODAY ... After some brief sunny intervals in the east this morning, showers with some longer periods of rain, hail with isolated thunder occasionally mixing in, spreading across the country from west ... 10-15 mms potential ... highs 7-10 C. Gusty west to northwest winds developing for Connacht by afternoon.

    TONIGHT ... Showers becoming sleety and some snow appearing on higher terrain, later mixing in near sea level in east, some accumulations of 3-5 cms possible by morning ... clearing and rather frosty in parts of inland west ... lows 2-4 C east, -2 to +2 west. Winds veering more to northerly during the second half of the night.

    SUNDAY ... Morning sleet or snow possible near east coast and over parts of the south, variable cloud elsewhere with isolated wintry showers, followed by a general clearing trend, chilly, highs 5-8 C. Winds northerly 20-40 mph in eastern counties, 15-30 mph west.

    MONDAY ... A sharp frost in the morning with lows -5 to -2 C, then sunny with some cloudy intervals, cool, highs 7-10 C, winds becoming light so not feeling as cold.

    TUESDAY ... Another slight frost followed by increasing cloud, winds becoming SW 20-40 mph later, rain arriving by evening west, lows near -2 C and highs near 10 C.

    WEDNESDAY ... Windy with showers or periods of rain, some clearing later, winds SW veering to W 20-40 mph (35-55 mph Connacht, Ulster, west Munster). Lows near 7 C and highs near 11 C.

    THURSDAY ... Variable cloud, showers in north, some sunshine south, lows around 4 C and highs around 10 C.

    FRIDAY and WEEKEND ... Breezy or windy, showers at times, seasonable temperatures.

    OUTLOOK ... Windy and colder at times with strong northwest to north winds developing.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... A few more severe storms possible in the southeast especially Carolinas coastal, Georgia and north Florida, rain near Gulf coast west to south Texas. Clearing and much colder than yesterday for most of the storm-ravaged Midwest, highs 4-7 C, strong westerly winds at times. Very windy for the Great Lakes and New England, northeast U.S., showers turning to flurries. Clear and cold in parts of the northern plains, outbreaks of snow near Rockies and variable cloud, showers on west coast.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Friday was a miserable day under low overcast and drizzly rain, chilly with highs near 6 C.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Sunday, 4 March, 2012
    _____________________________

    ALERT for icy roads in some higher terrain this morning and more generally on Monday morning due to sharp frost.

    TODAY ... Partly cloudy and cold with passing showers of sleet, rain or snow, these more frequent in western counties, winds NW veering to N 20-30 mph, highs 4-7 C.

    TONIGHT ... Clear intervals, more cloud near west and north coasts with lingering wintry showers in a few places, very cold with widespread frost inland, lows -4 to +2 C.

    MONDAY ... Sunny with some cloudy intervals, cool, highs 7-10 C, winds becoming light so not feeling as cold.

    TUESDAY ... Another slight frost followed by increasing cloud, winds becoming SW 20-40 mph later, rain arriving by mid-day west and evening east, lows near -2 C and highs near 10 C.

    WEDNESDAY ... Windy with showers or periods of rain, some clearing later, showers then becoming mixed with hail, as winds SW veer to W 20-40 mph or 35-55 mph Connacht, Ulster, west Munster. Lows near 7 C and highs near 11 C.

    THURSDAY ... Variable cloud, showers in north, some sunshine south, lows around 4 C and highs around 10 C.

    FRIDAY and WEEKEND ... Breezy or windy, showers at times, seasonable temperatures.

    OUTLOOK ... Windy and colder at times with strong northwest to north winds developing.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Generally cold in the Great Lakes, upper Midwest and New England, with a few sleety snow showers, highs 0-3 C. Further south, outbreaks of sleet or cold rain with highs 4-7 C trending to about 15-18 C in Florida and near the Gulf coast, where cloudy with drizzle or light rain at times. Western and central states generally turning milder in a developing south to southwest flow, highs 12-16 C. Warm and dry in the southwest, highs 22-25 C.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Sunday was cloudy with light rain at times, and mild with highs reaching 12 C.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Monday, 5 March, 2012
    ______________________________

    TODAY ... Partly to mostly sunny except for a few light showers (some of these wintry at first) in western counties ... chilly but with light winds it should feel warmer than yesterday ... highs 8-11 C.

    TONIGHT ... Another slight frost but clouding over with milder air rushing into western counties followed by drizzle or light rain in some Atlantic coastal fringes, lows before or around midnight -2 to +3 C, rising to +6 by morning in west.

    TUESDAY ... Cloudy with periods of rain developing, although east coast may begin with a brighter start as rain arrives by afternoon there, rising southerly winds becoming strong and gusty by late in the day (SSW 30-50 mph) ... highs about 11 C although it may feel colder due to the wind.

    TUESDAY NIGHT ... Windy and wet (15-30 mms) with squally showers, some hail and thunder possible, winds SW 35-55 mph veering to W 30-50 mph. Temperatures steady near 10 C.

    WEDNESDAY ... Clearing during the morning with some residual showers in northern and western counties, hail possible with these, winds WNW 20-40 mph and highs 8-10 C.

    THURSDAY ... Partly cloudy, isolated showers, lows 2-4 C and highs 9-11 C.

    FRIDAY to SUNDAY ... The outlook has improved, as high pressure is now likely to stall over Ireland and Britain, with a mild southerly flow ... some sunshine each day and highs may reach 12-15 C. Rather chilly at night with fog patches.

    FURTHER OUTLOOK ... Mild for a few more days, then becoming windy and unsettled around mid-month.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Sleet or snow in some parts of the Virginias and mid-Atlantic states, turning to rain near coast, highs only 2-5 C. Dry and chilly further north, mild and partly cloudy further south. Central states are turning quite mild ahead of a broad frontal zone over the Rockies, and highs could reach 15-20 C well into the mid-section of the plains, 5-10 C northern plains.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Sunday was yet another cloudy and showery day, somewhat cooler with highs near 8 C. I think I'm beside the wrong ocean here. :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Tuesday, 6 March, 2012
    ______________________________

    ALERT for strong winds tonight with heavy showers including hail and thunder, followed by some wintry showers in north on higher terrain.

    TODAY ... Cloudy with periods of rain developing, although east coast may begin with a brighter start as rain arrives by early afternoon there, rising southerly winds becoming strong and gusty by late in the day (SSW 30-50 mph) ... highs about 11 C although it may feel colder due to the wind.

    TONIGHT ... Windy and wet (15-30 mms) with squally showers, some hail and thunder possible, winds SW 35-55 mph veering to W 30-50 mph. Temperatures steady near 10 C, falling to 3-7 C in west around dawn.

    WEDNESDAY ... Some clearing during the morning mainly in southern counties, with some residual showers in northern and western counties, hail possible with these, winds WNW 20-40 mph and morning highs 8-10 C, temperatures falling to about 5-7 C mid-day. Some wintry showers possible on higher terrain in north.

    THURSDAY ... Partly to mostly cloudy, showers or periods of light rain heavier in northwest than elsewhere, lows 2-4 C and highs 9-11 C.

    FRIDAY to SUNDAY ... Some sunshine each day and highs may reach 12-15 C. Rather chilly at night with fog patches. More chance of drizzle or light rain in north at times where low cloud more frequent.

    FURTHER OUTLOOK ... Mild for a few more days, then becoming windy and unsettled around mid-month.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... A snowstorm is developing for parts of western Canada as low pressure moves east along the international border; amounts of 5-15 cms will develop, but it will be quite mild from the border south and highs could reach 20-24 C in the central plains, 27-30 C in Texas.
    Clear with a cold start on the east coast, but turning milder in sunshine later with highs generally 8-12 C. A snowstorm will also develop for Newfoundland by tonight, 15-30 cms by mid-day Wednesday. Meanwhile, the west coast will see partly cloudy, cool conditions.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Monday was windy and rather cold with some sunshine at times. The high was about 7 C. The evening had clear intervals for a good view of rapidly approaching Jupiter and Venus, and the waxing full moon (about two days away) approaching Regulus and Mars.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Wednesday, 7 March, 2012
    _________________________________

    TODAY ... Windy and cold with some passing wintry showers, mostly in northern and western counties to early afternoon ... more sunny breaks further south ... winds westerly 25-45 mph but 40-60 mph near Atlantic coasts ... some hail and thunder, snow on higher terrain ... temperatures steady or falling slightly to mid-day (4-7 C) then tending to remain steady.

    TONIGHT ... Breezy or windy, rather cold although somewhat milder air feeding back in from west, keeping temperatures steady 3-5 C or slowly rising later, light rain mainly north.

    THURSDAY ... Variable cloud, a little milder, highs 8-10 C. Some light rain at times near coasts west and north, a few brighter intervals southeast.

    FRIDAY ... Sunny intervals, milder, lows 3-5 C and highs 11-13 C.

    WEEKEND and NEXT WEEK OUTLOOK ... Looking good in general, some fog patches at night, hazy sunshine daytime hours, just the slight risk of light rain in Donegal and parts of north Ulster. Highs generally 12-15 C. The end of this warmer spell seems likely to be around Thursday or Friday of next week.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Turning much milder in the east, except in Newfoundland where a blizzard will end mid-day with clearing skies. For the other regions of eastern Canada and the U.S., temperatures will rise to about 12-15 C in brisk southwest winds, feeding out of a warmer source in the central plains where 20-24 C likely. Snow across parts of west-central Canada will end as the low enters Hudson Bay later, then somewhat colder air will feed into those regions and make slight progress south into North Dakota and Montana. Clear and cool on the west coast.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Sunny but rather cool, highs near 7 C on Tuesday.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Thursday, 8 March, 2012
    _______________________________

    Full moon today at 0941h. With the clear skies developing over the next few days in many parts, you'll have an excellent view of the dramatic conjunction of Jupiter and Venus in the evening southwest skies (this is worth spotting all week but is closest on the 15th).

    TODAY ... Cloudy with some sunny breaks, isolated showers mainly in north with 1-3 mms in a few locations ... highs 9-12 C ... moderate westerly winds at 15-30 mph.

    TONIGHT ... Some cloudy intervals, fog patches developing, lows 3-5 C.

    FRIDAY ... Sunny with cloudy intervals for south, but cloudy further north with some drizzle or occasional light rain, not much accumulation. Highs 11 to 14 C.

    SATURDAY and SUNDAY ... Hazy sunshine, morning fog patches ... mild or very mild inland especially, light winds ... some low cloud and drizzle near northwest coasts, more likely Saturday than Sunday ... highs generally around 11-14 C.

    OUTLOOK ... This fine, mainly dry spell seems set for about a week before slowly yielding back to partly cloudy to overcast and breezy weather later next week.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Eastern states now very warm again in a southwest flow, highs 17-23 C. A weak front has developed across the Great Lakes into the central plains and will drift towards the coast tonight, resulting in cloudy skies, some rain and dropping temperatures (12 to 7 C) for the regions traversed. The front will be held up over the south-central plains by another developing low that will bring moisture north across Texas for overnight showers and storms. Meanwhile, another mild flow is pushing towards the west coast replacing the cool, dry regime ... highs 12-15 C later today for most western regions trending to 20-24 C southwest.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Wednesday was a cloudy day with some late sunny breaks, and it turned milder with highs near 11 C. The evening was generally clear with a good view of the full moon near Mars.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Friday, 9 March, 2012
    _____________________________

    TODAY ... Rather cloudy to start, some sunny breaks developing in the south (mostly inland), drizzle becoming more confined to north by afternoon, in a moderate southwest wind (15-30 mph) ... highs 11-14 C mildest inland southeast.

    TONIGHT ... Extensive mist and low cloud developing but some clear breaks, lows 4-7 C.

    SATURDAY ... Hazy sunshine at times, cloud and drizzle mainly confined to northwest coast. Very mild, light winds ... highs 12-15 C.

    SUNDAY ... Foggy to start, with lows 3-6 C, then hazy sunshine and very mild, light winds, some coastal fog and low cloud but otherwise warm inland with highs 12-16 C.

    MONDAY to WEDNESDAY ... The fine and rather warm spell should continue with little change, misty or foggy nights although clear evenings, and hazy sunshine, light winds each day, highs generally 13-17 C with lows 3-7 C and the slight chance of isolated frost where skies remain clear.

    OUTLOOK ... Eventually this fine spell could break down due to a weak disturbance within the larger ridge of high pressure, which could lead to low cloud, drizzle and fog, and somewhat lower daytime temperatures. Then in the longer term the ridge itself will likely break down leading to more unsettled weather.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Eastern states turning colder with periods of rain and falling temperatures (from near 14 C to near 5 C). Variable cloud and cold over parts of the Great Lakes, local snow showers. Otherwise, south of the advancing front, heavy rain and thunderstorms in parts of the southeast, warm and humid. This disturbance gradually breaks apart in Texas and other parts of the central states will enjoy a renewed mild to warm southerly flow, in advance of low pressure in the far west. Chinook warming also into the northern plains and Canadian prairies, as rain moves onto the west coast.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Thursday was a mild and increasingly cloudy day with highs near 12 C. Rain is expected by morning.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Saturday, 10 March, 2012
    _________________________________

    TODAY ... Hazy sunshine at times, cloud and drizzle mainly confined to northwest coast. Very mild or warm, light winds ... highs 12-15 C.

    TONIGHT ... Hazy or foggy, lows 3-7 C.

    SUNDAY ... Foggy to start, then hazy sunshine and very mild, light winds, some coastal fog and low cloud but otherwise warm inland with highs of 12 to 16 C.

    MONDAY to THURSDAY ... The fine and rather warm spell should continue with little change, misty or foggy nights although clear evenings, and hazy sunshine, light winds each day, highs generally 13-17 C with lows 3-7 C and the slight chance of isolated frost where skies remain clear. Showers may develop late Thursday ahead of a cold front.

    OUTLOOK ... Showers and breezy, turning cooler Friday, highs near 12 C, then a colder weekend with partly cloudy skies and possible slight frosts.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... A brief colder interval will continue over the northeast U.S. and Great Lakes although with first signs of a warming trend that will intensify Sunday and persist most of the week. Further west, this milder weather is already well established and most of the central states and even western Canada will be well above normal (10-15 C north to 20-25 C south), with rain or thunderstorms spreading into Texas. Also wet on the west coast with rain tapering off to showers.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Friday was a wet and mild day with highs of about 12 C, with about 25 mms of rain. Foggy and drizzly tonight.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Sunday, 11 March, 2012
    _______________________________

    TODAY ... Early cloud or mist slowly brightening to hazy sunshine in most places, some persistent coastal low cloud ... very mild with highs 12-16 C. Light winds with a slight southeast flow.

    TONIGHT ... Hazy to foggy again with lows 3-7 C. Some dense fog by morning, lifting rather slowly.

    MONDAY to THURSDAY should continue about the same, relatively warm with some hazy sunshine most days, more inland than near coasts, and highs generally 12-16 C. Lows will remain in the range of 4-7 C for most.

    FRIDAY will then become showery and more breezy from the southwest to west, turning colder mid-day, highs 11-13 C.

    WEEKEND OUTLOOK is for much cooler but mainly dry conditions, isolated showers mainly north, moderate westerly winds and highs 8-11 C. Slight frosts are likely.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Extensive mild to warm weather has returned to the east, and a weak but potentially rather wet frontal system is edging east from TX-OK towards the Mississippi valley. Highs in most of the regions ahead of this rain will be 20-24 C (to about 15 C north). The front will link up through an area of cloud to a second low in Alberta which is also edging east and ending very mild weather as seasonable March temperatures and sleet or snow showers develop from the Rockies.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Saturday was a mainly cloudy and dry day with some light rain moving back in during the late afternoon, highs 8-10 C.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Monday, 12 March, 2012
    ________________________________

    TODAY ... Extensive cloud, mist over higher terrain, but some breaks allowing some sunshine in a few locations ... as usual, seems that the best chance for sunshine will be in some coastal areas near hills, but the cloud may break up eventually if not today then possibly tomorrow ... highs 11-14 C.

    TONIGHT ... Cloudy with some fog and mist, lows 3-8 C.

    TUESDAY ... Cloudy with some hazy sunshine developing in a few places, mild again, highs 12-15 C. (morning lows 3-7 C)

    WEDNESDAY ... Partly cloudy to sunny, mild, highs near 14 C.

    THURSDAY ... Increasing cloud, showers developing, mild, highs near 15 C.

    FRIDAY ... Variable cloud, somewhat colder with showers and some hail, breezy (SW 20-35 mph) with highs near 10 C.

    WEEKEND OUTLOOK ... Colder than most of this month, with some slight frosts and chilly daytime highs, showers turning to more of a steady rain by Sunday. Highs only 8-10 C.

    FURTHER OUTLOOK ... Milder again later next week.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Warm in the east, with extensive rain or thunderstorms in central states, all with highs near or above 20 C (trending to 11-15 C in the Great Lakes, although much colder near some shorelines). ... Also rather mild in western Canada and the northern plains, trending more to below normal near the west coast although just by a degree or two, with mountain sleet showers turning to rain mid-day.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Sunday was at least somewhat brighter although not quite sunny, and dry. We have already changed our clocks to daylight savings time which means it is now 1230 am at 0730h there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Tuesday, 13 March, 2012
    _______________________________

    TODAY ... The day will start out similar to yesterday with extensive low cloud, mist and coastal drizzle. There is some chance of somewhat improved conditions later due to a slight southerly gradient which may help break up some of the cloud, at least away from the south coast which seems most likely to remain socked in. So, becoming partly cloudy to sunny, and milder, highs 11-14 C for most, 9-11 C near south coast.

    TONIGHT ... Variable cloud (if clear, check out the evening conjunction of Venus and Jupiter at its closest today) ... lows 3-7 C.

    WEDNESDAY ... Little change from today, highs 11-14 C.

    THURSDAY ... Increasing cloud, showers developing, mild, highs 12-15 C.

    FRIDAY ... Variable cloud, somewhat colder with showers and some hail, breezy (SW 20-35 mph) with highs near 10 C.

    WEEKEND OUTLOOK ... Colder than most of this month, with some slight frosts and chilly daytime highs, showers turning to more of a steady rain late Saturday, then variable cloud on Sunday with some leftover showers. Highs only 8-10 C on Saturday, 10-12 C Sunday.

    FURTHER OUTLOOK ... Showery warm fronts late Sunday into Monday morning and a return to somewhat milder weather for a few days.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Warm with showers and thunderstorms moving towards the east coast by later today, highs 17-22 C. No cold air follows this front and very mild conditions redevelop except in a few places affected by cold lake breezes in the Great Lakes region. Very warm in the central plains states, 20-25 C. Windy in parts of the west, mountain showers or flurries.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Monday featured strong southerly winds which did considerable damage not too far away on Vancouver Island where some gusts to 70 kts were noted but it was more like 45-50 kts here, with periods of rain and highs about 7 C. The storm has dissipated over the Coast Ranges this evening.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,068 ✭✭✭Iancar29


    " THERE WILL BE NO WEATHER ON WEDNESDAY " .... :rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Wednesday, 14 November, 2012
    ________________________________________

    The "groundhog day" aspects of this weather pattern have clearly caught up with me, will try to include all the days this time ... :o

    TODAY ... Mostly cloudy to start, with a few brighter intervals developing, light southerly winds and highs 11-14 C (milder likely inland south to east).

    TONIGHT ... Cloudy with some clear intervals, lows 3-7 C.

    THURSDAY ... Increasing cloud where any morning sunshine develops, mild with rain arriving in the west mid-afternoon. Moderate S-SW winds 15-30 mph and highs around 12-13 C.

    FRIDAY ... Variable cloud, showers, some with hail or thunder ... moderate southwest to west winds 20-35 mph, cooler. Lows 3-5 C and highs 9-11 C.

    SATURDAY ... Mostly cloudy, showers merging to periods of rain later, some snow likely to re-appear on summits by Sunday morning although not expecting any below 500m. Lows 2-4 C and highs 7-10 C.

    SUNDAY ... Morning showers mainly southeast, then variable cloud with some longer sunny intervals developing west-central counties, winds generally from a northerly direction backing more to northwest and in the range of 15-25 mph mainly. Lows 1-4 C and highs 8-11 C.

    OUTLOOK ... Gradually getting back to this week's sort of cloudy to partly cloudy, mild pattern although with some rain grazing north coasts at times, light to moderate southwest winds.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Very mild and partly sunny conditions continuing most eastern states and southern Ontario, trending to very warm in the central plains states where highs could reach 27-30 C in places. A cooler high over Quebec will push cooler east winds and cloud a bit further south in central Ontario and upper Michigan. Outbreaks of heavy showers or thunderstorms in a few places near the Gulf of Mexico. Western states and British Columbia cooler and in some places showery with hail or snow not too far above sea level.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Tuesday was quite chilly with some sunny breaks, and passing showers that turned to snow pellets or hail nearby (didn't see this at my place), some accumulations on hills. Highs only about 4-5 C. Frosty this evening, a nice view of the planets earlier.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Thursday, 15 March, 2012
    _________________________________

    TODAY ... Mostly cloudy with a few brighter intervals possible in the east, as light rain moves across western and northern counties giving 2-5 mms in places. Some drizzle likely in east and south by afternoon or evening. Winds will finally pick up to more moderate speeds from SSW (15-30 mph) in advance of fronts, and highs will reach about 12 C.

    TONIGHT ... Further drizzle or light rain, fog or mist patches, lows 4-7 C.

    FRIDAY ... Variable cloud with intervals of rain developing then becoming rather heavy at times, 10-20 mms possible. Highs 9-11 C. Moderate SW winds at 20-35 mph.

    SATURDAY (St. Patrick's Day) ... Cloudy, cold and unsettled with some rather heavy showers and the risk of hail or mountain snow (the snow line is likely to be quite high up, around 450m). Some thunder possible with the heavier showers. Brief sunny intervals may develop and the temperature range will be from 2-4 C morning to 7-9 C afternoon (5-7 in some higher districts). Sometimes rather breezy near showers.

    SUNDAY ... Overnight frosts and icy conditions in some places as mixed wintry showers could continue mainly on higher terrain, then a mixture of sun and cloud for the daytime with moderate northerly winds backing later to northwest 20-40 mph. Lows -1 to +3 C on average, highs 8-11 C.

    MONDAY ... Milder by mid-day after another frosty morning in places, cloudy with sunny intervals, lows 0-3 C and highs 11-14 C.

    OUTLOOK ... Dry and mild, with some chance of sunshine although probably more cloudy than not, also a warmer set-up than this past week may develop due to more of a southeast source although potential highs look to be around 14-15 C rather than anything more record-threatening.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... The very warm spell continues for almost all of the central and eastern U.S. but a cooler air mass over the northern Great Lakes is continuing a slow push south and setting off a frontal wave moving east across Michigan into Ontario with showers and thunderstorms. Highs for many places in the eastern and central states could set records for the date (25-28 C possible, locally cooled by cloud or lake breezes). The cooler air mass brings temperatures closer to 10 C. Meanwhile the far west remains in a much colder upper-level trough with widespread sleet or even snow inland and coastal rains.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Wednesday was a gloomy day with wet snow changing to rain, no real accumulations of snow, but chilly at 5-6 C through the afternoon, now closer to 8 C with rain and moderate southeast winds as a front passes.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Friday, 16 March, 2012
    _______________________________

    TODAY ... Showers, heavy at times, with 10-20 mms of rainfall and moderate southwest winds 20-35 mph ... slight risk of hail or thunder ... highs 11-13 C. The heaviest rain should be found in west-central counties this morning and eastern counties by afternoon.

    TONIGHT ... A few lingering showers and chilly, fog patches developing, lows about 3-5 C.

    SATURDAY (St. Patrick's Day) ... Mostly cloudy, chilly with frequent showers in the south, more isolated and light showers further north, some wintry on higher terrain by afternoon ... highs 7-9 C ... winds mainly light westerly but could pick up near showers, veering northwesterly later.

    SUNDAY ... Variable cloud, a few more scattered showers, lows 1-3 C and highs 8-11 C. Slight risk of frost or icy roads in a few higher sections early.

    MONDAY ... Cloudy with afternoon sunny intervals, milder. Lows 0-3 C and highs 9-12 C.

    OUTLOOK ... Reasonably mild and dry, some risk of frost where skies clear, highs generally 11-13 C in a light southeast flow. Due to this the west coast may see less of the persistent low cloud and drizzle of the previous mild spell, but it may not be quite as warm for the Dublin-Wicklow coastal region.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... The weak frontal wave will move across New England into Nova Scotia with outbreaks of light rain, but very warm air will flood back north across the Great Lakes and extend the reach of the warm spell as far as southern Manitoba, with highs predicted to reach 20 C there and 25-30 C widely in the central plains states. A strong frontal trough is developing over the Rockies so there will be outbreaks of snow in higher elevations and valley showers, with a major severe storm outbreak slowly developing over the weekend and Monday-Tuesday in the plains states. But ahead of that, there will be several days of record breaking warmth.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Thursday was a milder day with gusty (and cold feeling) southwest winds and highs about 12 C. The sun broke through for a few hours before more overcast arrived.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Saturday, 17 March, 2012
    ________________________________

    ALERT ... Some icy roads may be encountered in rural parts of eastern counties and more generally on higher terrain this morning, and sleety showers could develop on higher portions of the country, especially Connacht, east-central and southern counties.

    TODAY ... Mostly cloudy with widespread showers, some of these sleety or turning to hail and snow on higher ground, leaving some hilltops with 3-5 cms covering later. Closer to sea level, hail or rain showers could briefly mix with snow and also could contain some thunder. Rainfalls 10-20 mms and highs only 7-9 C. Winds generally light but could become gusty near some showers.

    TONIGHT ... Variable cloud with a few residual showers, heavier in the southeast, with upland sleet or snow showers. Lows 0-3 C in the south, but elsewhere, a rather sharp frost is possible with lows -3 to -1 C. Winds light and variable.

    SUNDAY ... Intervals of cloud and sunshine, further light showers developing mostly in Connacht and west Ulster, moderate N to NW winds 20-35 mph. Highs 9-12 C.

    MONDAY ... A frosty start for some under clearing skies, then variable cloud with afternoon sunny intervals in some places, lows -2 to +2 C and highs around 12 C.

    TUESDAY ... Some hazy sunshine with cloudy intervals, lows 0-4 C and highs 11-14 C.

    OUTLOOK ... A somewhat warmer end to the week is possible if cloud amounts remain moderate, and as mentioned yesterday, the southeast flow will help warm up the western counties rather than the onshore low cloud of the past spell. The flow is going to be rather slack so there may not be a correpsonding onshore cloudy flow for the east although we can't rule out patches of sea fog or low cloud near the south coast in this spell.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... The eastern two-thirds of the U.S. and adjacent southern Canada remain unseasonably warm for the weekend and Monday. Highs of 20-25 C are widespread and some local 25-28 C values well away from the somewhat cooler east coast and Great Lakes shorelines. Some Great Lakes locations can remain 5-10 C with fog in these warm spells (for example, Hamilton near the west end of Lake Ontario yesterday). A few heavy and borderline severe storms will drift through eastern TX into AR/LA and later MS. A more organized front is developing over the Colorado Rockies and may bring high elevation snow and valley showers there. West coast remains cooler and unsettled.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Friday was a variable sort of day with a few sunny breaks and some passing showers with soft hail mixing in, highs near 9 C.

    Happy St. Patrick's Day to all wherever you may be celebrating.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Sunday, 18 March, 2012
    ______________________________

    ALERT for some slippery or icy sections on roads in the higher elevations around southeast Ireland to about 0930h.

    TODAY ... Any mixed or wintry showers in the southeast should pull away by mid-day and then most places should enjoy a mainly dry day with some sunny breaks, although there could be isolated showers redeveloping more frequent in the northwest, as winds start to increase to NW 20-30 mph. Highs around 9-11 C but it may stay quite chilly in parts of the east until past mid-day.

    TONIGHT ... Cloudy with clear intervals, chilly or frosty, lows -2 to +3 C.

    MONDAY ... Cloudy with some sunny intervals, light rain possible in far northwest. Highs 9-12 C.

    TUESDAY ... Hazy sunshine in most places, some lingering cloud south and east, lows 0-3 C and highs 10-13 C.

    WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY ... Variable cloud, some sunny intervals, mild. Lows around 4 C and highs around 13-15 C. Light southeast winds.

    FRIDAY ... Cloudy with some sunny breaks, not quite as mild. Drizzle may spread towards southeast coast (expecting light rain across southern England and Wales). Highs near 10 C southeast to 13 C northwest.

    OUTLOOK ... Continuing dry and mild in most places.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Little change as unseasonable warmth remains locked into most regions except the far west which will remain seasonable. Some scattered showers and thundershowers drifting across the lower Great Lakes and Ohio valley, reducing temperatures locally but otherwise many places around 22-27 C. Somewhat cooler around NYC due to marine layers then considerably cooler in parts of northern and eastern New England as a cold high drifts southeast from Quebec into the Maritime provinces of eastern Canada. A few isolated storms later in Texas will be the first portion of a major outbreak of heavy to severe storms for Monday-Tuesday.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Saturday was cloudy with a few sunny breaks, breezy and rather cool at 9 C.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Monday, 19 March, 2012
    _________________________________

    TODAY ... More cloud to north, fair skies in south, and also breezier to north (SW 20-40 mph) ... some light rain could brush northwest coast mid-day. Milder especially south and east, highs 10-12 C in west and north but 12-14C in south and east.

    TONIGHT ... Some clearing will allow rather cool overnight lows in southeast, 2-4 C, but more cloud elsewhere will keep lows around 5-8 C with moderate southwest winds dying out by morning.

    TUESDAY ... Partly cloudy but with some pleasant sunny intervals in south and east, winds more southerly backing to southeast and generally 10-15 mph, highs 11-14 C.

    WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY ... Fair skies, chilly overnight lows -1 to +3 C with isolated frost central counties, but mild and spring-like days, highs 12-15 C. Some cloud and drizzle could reach southeast by later Thursday.

    FRIDAY ... Somewhat more extensive cloud moving across southern and later western counties from southeast with patchy light rain or drizzle there, lows about 3-5 C and highs 10-13 C.

    WEEKEND OUTLOOK ... Fair skies returning after perhaps a cloudy and drizzly start in some areas, warmer by Sunday with highs about 13 C Saturday and possibly 15-17 C Sunday. This warmer spell may last for a good part of the following week.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... The record-breaking warm spell continues in the eastern and central states and southern Canada although parts of New England and the Maritime provinces have somewhat lower temperatures due to marine cloud and fog. Otherwise, highs are reaching near 20 C in southern Canada to 25-30 C in much of the U.S. However, a developing strong front in Texas is spreading northeast and will bring outbreaks of heavy rain with some severe storms embedded. The dynamics look less than ideal for worst-case tornado development but there are bound to be one or two in the mix from Nebraska south to Oklahoma and Texas. The warm air is over-running cold arctic air in the western prairies leading to 15-30 cms of snow near the border of Alberta and Saskatchewan, trending to rain in central-eastern SK and thunderstorms in parts of Manitoba, where records were shattered by as much as 10 degrees over the weekend. The west coast remains unsettled and chilly with outbreaks of snow not far above sea level (200m on Sunday for example).

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Sunday was cloudy and rather cool with outbreaks of light rain or hill snow in the region. Highs were only 7-8 C.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Tuesday, 20 March, 2012
    ________________________________

    The vernal equinox occurs today at 0516h (in other words, just before I typed this). The last time it occurred earlier was in 1896. It will be a few minutes earlier every leap year this century. By 2096, the vernal equinox will be around 1400h on 19th of March. But by dropping 2100 as a leap year the seasons will be jogged back on track.

    Forecasts remain similar to yesterday. A long dry spell may develop in many areas apart from lingering coastal drizzle.

    TODAY ... Partly to mostly cloudy but with some pleasant sunny intervals by mid-day or afternoon in south and east, winds more southerly backing to southeast and generally 10-15 mph, highs 11-14 C. Coastal drizzle at times in parts of Connacht and Ulster.

    TONIGHT ... Clear intervals south, remaining rather cloudy north, lows 3-6 C in south and 5-8 C north. Ground frost possible in some central valleys.

    WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY ... Fair skies, chilly overnight lows by Thursday morning, -1 to +3 C with isolated frost central counties, but mild and spring-like days, highs 12-15 C. Some cloud and drizzle could reach southeast by later Thursday.

    FRIDAY ... Somewhat more extensive cloud moving across southern and later western counties from southeast with patchy light rain or drizzle there, lows about 3-5 C and highs 10-13 C.

    WEEKEND OUTLOOK ... Fair skies returning after perhaps a cloudy and drizzly start in some areas, warmer by Sunday with highs about 13 C Saturday and possibly 15-17 C Sunday. This warmer spell may last for a good part of the following week with highs 16-19 C possible. Nights will remain somewhat chilly except in some coastal locations where low cloud may hold temperatures up.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Heavy rain widespread in south central states as the warm and humid air mass is pushed slowly east. A few severe storms in east Texas and Louisiana. Further north, some showers or thunderstorms, mostly non-severe, reaching the western Great Lakes. Further east, very warm, highs 20-25 C at least except where cooled by local sea or lake breezes. A transitional air mass has developed behind the rain system and will bring some sunny intervals and highs near 15 C to the high plains and foothills, followed by cloud and mountain mixed wintry showers in the far west.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Monday was a cloudy day with some light rain developing late, but dry for the most part except for some early morning snow that lingered until mid-day (2-3 cms mostly on grassy surfaces). Highs reached about 9 C by afternoon.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Wednesday, 21 March, 2012
    _________________________________

    TODAY ... Partly cloudy and mild with light south to southeast winds, highs around 13-14 C.

    TONIGHT ... Clear intervals then fog patches or mist developing, colder with slight risk of frost well inland, lows generally 3-6 C.

    THURSDAY ... Increasing cloud where morning fog dissipates to sunshine, although some coastal locations could remain cloudy, drizzle by late afternoon or evening near southeast coasts. Highs 10-13 C.

    FRIDAY ... Cloudy with some brighter intervals in Ulster, while light rain or drizzle moves across southern counties towards the west ... lows about 5 C and highs near 12 C.

    SATURDAY ... Cloud gradually clearing away, warmer. Lows near 6 C and highs near 14 C.

    SUNDAY ... Sunny intervals, warm except near some south or east facing coastlines ... lows near 5 C and highs near 16 C (possibly 18 C well inland and towards west).

    MONDAY - TUESDAY ... Sunny intervals, warm. Highs near 18 C inland, 12-15 near coasts.

    OUTLOOK ... The weather pattern will remain fair and generally warm although another episode of cloud and light rain or drizzle could rotate around the high pressure later next week, similar to what's expected on Friday. This is not too certain yet and it may just be an increase in cloud and a slight drop in temperatures.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... The warm spell persists in the eastern half of the U.S. and in much of Ontario and Quebec, and will spread further east into the Maritimes, but rain is also advancing slowly east through the central states, due to reach the Mississippi valley later today. Ahead of that front, highs will once again break records in the 24-27 C range except where cooled by lake breezes. In the rain it drops to about 15-17 C. A somewhat cooler air mass further west is now filling up with cloud under developing low pressure leading to a second rainstorm in Kansas but this one has much cooler temperatures near 6-8 C. All of these systems will continue a slow northeast drift and the cooler of the two rainfall events will reach the lower Great Lakes this weekend. Colder air has pushed south across the Canadian prairies bringing record warmth to an end but it remains rather mild for mid-March, trending towards 2-4 C with mixed showers behind the fronts. The west coast remains chilly under a deep upper trough but the weather is fairly bland.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Tuesday was cloudy with afternoon and evening sunny periods, and chilly with quite a cold breeze. Highs were about 7-8 C.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Thursday, 22 March, 2012
    _______________________________

    TODAY ... Outbreaks of drizzle or light rain will gradually overspread the south coast and some distance inland, with less cloud in Ulster and north Connacht, rainfall amounts in the south 2-5 mms, fog and rather chilly near the south coast ... highs will vary from 10-12 C south coast to 13-15 C central into parts of Ulster, then about 12-14 C east and north coasts. Winds moderate southeast at times in southern counties.

    TONIGHT ... Further outbreaks of light rain or drizzle, possibly a briefly heavier downpour with a little thunder, and all of this spreading gradually north with amounts 2-5 mms on average (east Ulster could remain dry). Lows will be about 5-7 C.

    FRIDAY ... Rain becoming more showery and confined more to west, spreading north into Mayo and eventually Donegal, a further 3-6 mms for these counties although the east could dry out. Mostly cloudy and rather chilly due to marine source of the flow and lack of sun, fog on hills. Highs about 11-13 C.

    SATURDAY ... Any lingering drizzle should be confined to outer coasts with sun breaking through the overcast at times, perhaps for longer intervals well inland by afternoon. Warmer, lows near 7 C and highs near 14 C inland (still about 10-12 C coastal south and east).

    SUNDAY ... Despite some patchy low cloud mostly near east and south coast, most places could enjoy a sunny and warmer day with lows 5-8 C and highs 14-17 C.

    OUTLOOK ... Monday to Wednesday should be a warmer spell with sunshine away from foggy coastlines and highs well into the teens perhaps reaching about 18 or 19 C inland and west. Nights will be chilly towards sunrise with some rural overnight lows of 3-6 C. Another cloudy and drizzly spell from a southeast flow of moist air could develop about the same time next week (as this week).

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Honest, I am updating these, but the weather is moving about at walking pace with fronts gradually spreading east, today the heavier rain will be closer to Chicago and Louisville by late in the day. The warm, dry spell continues further east with more record highs expected. As stated yesterday, a second disturbance follows with cooler weather and rain for the central plains, and all of this will eventually form a more powerful frontal wave this weekend that will finally end the long warm spell and in fact may change the weather in New England back to wintry for a day or two as arctic air, poised over north central Canada today, rushes southeast to energize a storm off Nova Scotia (around Sunday into Monday).

    While all this slowly develops, the west remains in a rather unsettled cool air mass with sporadic mixed showers turning readily to snow in the mountains.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Wednesday was quite variable with some pleasant sunny intervals and a few drifting showers that produced snow pellets and soft hail mid-afternoon, dropping the temperature from about 9 C to 3 C for a few minutes. There was quite a gusty wind around these shower cells but otherwise a rather slack flow. Local mountains appeared briefly through breaks in the overcast and they are loaded with fresh powdery snow, some regional highways were closed due to snow or avalanche hazards in central B.C. earlier on Wednesday.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Friday, 23 March, 2012
    _______________________________

    The new moon occurred yesterday so get ready for some celestial treats where skies are clear on Saturday and Sunday evenings as the crescent moon will glide past Jupiter then Venus on successive nights.

    TODAY ... Mostly cloudy with a few brighter intervals developing as sporadic light rain and one or two heavier showers drift north ... most places should see only 1-3 mms of rain but 5-10 mms could fall in a few locations under the shower cells. Winds southeast 15-30 mph, some lingering fog near south coast and on hills. Highs 12-15 C.

    TONIGHT ... Fog or mist patches, drizzle in some areas, but essentially dry with trace to 1 mm rainfalls ... lows 7-9 C.

    SATURDAY ... Cloud gradually breaking to sunny intervals, although some fog, haze or mist remaining near south coast. Highs 14-17 C although it may remain 11-13 C near outer south coasts.

    SUNDAY ... Foggy in some inland valleys early morning, but mainly sunny and quite warm daytime, lows 4-7 C and highs 14-18 C, with light south to southeast winds, which should allow even west coast to enjoy some of the warmth.

    MONDAY to WEDNESDAY ... Little change, some fog but otherwise clear nights and sunny and warm daytimes, lows 4-7 C and highs in the same range as Sunday, 14-18 C. A few places might see slight frosts and lower minima in the usual "cold drainage" locations.

    FURTHER OUTLOOK ... Some chance of another minor incursion of cloud and drizzly precip later in the week, details should be clearer by Monday or so. But the longer range outlook keeps Ireland under the influence of persistent high pressure with just hints of a cooling trend sometime in early April.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... The slow eastward drift of systems continues, and it should remain very warm in the eastern U.S. and Great Lakes region, with the band of showers and rain reaching a line from about Indiana to Alabama. A second area of rain with temperatures around 10-13 C follows and will drift across Missouri towards Iowa. A strong cold front is heading southeast from northern Canada but won't affect populated areas of the prairies until perhaps Sunday, as a modified mild air mass remains in place with highs 7-10 C. The western provinces and states remain a bit cooler than average with mostly cloudy skies.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Thursday was a cloudy day with a cold breeze. The highs were about 6 or 7 C. Virga was often present but the ground remained dry (locally at least).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Saturday, 24 March, 2012
    ________________________________

    TODAY ... Cloud more persistent in the west, gradually breaking to sunny intervals, although some fog, haze or mist remaining near south coast. Highs 14-17 C although it may remain 11-13 C near outer south coasts.

    TONIGHT ... Partly cloudy with some clear intervals, mild for most, could briefly chill early morning in central valleys (lows there 3-6 C) but many places may remain 6-9 C.

    SUNDAY ... Any fog patches should clear soon, except for some more persistent fog near south coast; otherwise, mainly sunny east, cloudy west and quite warm with highs 14-18 C, with moderate south to southeast winds, which should allow even west coast to enjoy the warmth. Highs may be restricted to 12 C near the southeast coast.

    MONDAY to WEDNESDAY ... Little change, some fog but otherwise clear nights and sunny and warm daytimes, lows 4-7 C and highs in the same range as Sunday, 14-18 C. A few places might see slight frosts and lower minima in the usual "cold drainage" locations.

    FURTHER OUTLOOK ... There is still some chance of another minor incursion of cloud and drizzly precip later in the week, and details should be clearer by Monday or so. But the longer range outlook keeps Ireland under the influence of persistent high pressure with just hints of a cooling trend sometime in early April.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Persistent rain has finally reached the northeast states although New England should remain dry for most of today. Highs will be a bit less extreme in the 15-20 C range mostly. Rain continues further back to the west where it's closer to 10 C, then another warmer, dry slot develops for the central and northern plains states in advance of a front in central Canada, behind which snow can be expected at times. Much colder air is moving southeast from the arctic towards northwest Ontario. This will show up in the Great Lakes region later this weekend or Monday, and in the northeast states on Tuesday. The west coast is now slowly warming under higher pressure but is still somewhat below average.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... We finally enjoyed unbroken sunshine but the day was chilly in the shade, pleasant enough in the sun at 10 C. There is still only a hint of spring blooming due to the persistent chilly weather (here).


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,033 ✭✭✭✭M.T. Cranium


    Sunday, 25 March, 2012
    _____________________________

    TODAY ... Hazy sunshine should develop with cloud tending to become more broken, but with the dry weather there is some risk of smoke haze in a few places all week ... very warm away from the cooler south and east coasts, highs 16-20 C (but 12-15 C with sea breezes).

    TONIGHT ... Continued hazy and mild, lows generally 6-10 C but may stay milder most of the night especially in northwest (part of the reason is a weak downsloping effect in southeast breezes).

    MONDAY to THURSDAY ... Expect a long spell of warm, dry weather in most places with the cooler sea breezes remaining mostly a local issue for the south and southeast coasts. Nights will be generally clear to partly cloudy and mild but could briefly become chilly before sunrise in a few spots. For most places, lows will average 7-9 C and highs 16-19 C, but a few places could reach or even surpass 20 C.

    FRIDAY-SATURDAY ... The concern about moisture or cloud moving in from the southeast has diminished, but the latest guidance suggests that the warm spell could modify to more seasonable temperatures in a weak north to northeast flow as the high pressure drifts a bit to the west of Ireland. High temperatures will drop off to about 13-15 C and nights could be chilly with isolated ground frost.

    FURTHER OUTLOOK We'll have to watch for any signs of this trend intensifying because that could lead to a colder northerly regime, but so far it looks as though the ridge will be elongated east-west and stick around close to Ireland for another week before it weakens. I think that eventually it is likely to turn significantly colder as probability of blocking to the north increases slowly in April. It's not out of the question for snow to come at some point in that kind of pattern change, even for places that saw no snow all winter (or just traces) but this is obviously not "carved in stone" either.

    NORTH AMERICAN FORECASTS ... Rain or showers will move through the northeast with some locally heavy falls, but the Midwest clears rapidly and remains warm in advance of a cold front drifting southeast across Lake Superior this morning. Behind that, temperatures are well below freezing and some lake effect snow could develop by tonight (western Great Lakes) to Monday (eastern Great Lakes) although for most, there will be a dry frontal passage with a sharp temperature drop late tonight. For example, in Toronto it could be 16-18 C today and -5 C by late Monday.

    The cold air is shallow west of Manitoba and will moderate to above freezing rather easily, but most of the west remains a bit on the cooler side of normal anyway. Some snow will linger after falls of 5-10 cms in parts of the central prairies earlier Saturday.

    MTC's LOCAL WEATHER ... Sunny with a high of about 10 C on Saturday, still feels quite chilly in the shade but it's nice to feel some warm sun for a change. Good views of planets and crescent moon this evening.

    Astronomy note -- My earlier note on the conjunction of Jupiter, Venus and the moon needs a slight revision, the correct timing is that the moon will be fairly close to Jupiter this evening and very close to Venus after sunset on Monday evening. Check that one out in particular, should be a beautiful sight. Will mention it again on Monday morning.


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