heffoo wrote: » Score !!! Im 215mtr ish up the wicklow hills around 4to 5mins drive from lug
Kippure wrote: » We need photos.There has to be snow lying in the wicklow mountains by now for sure
Lagoona Blue wrote: » hey everyone so it's happening ..... it's actually happening ?snow :eek::D *reads MT's update and falls off chair *
Dead_Rabbits wrote: »
Lagoona Blue wrote: » hey everyone so it's happening ..... it's actually happening ?[SIZE="4"]snow[/SIZE] :eek::D *reads MT's update and falls off chair *
Good luck to ireland- the NE part is in a big sweet spot tomorrow- maybe 20cms & beyond... similar to that easterly from a couple of years ago that landed 12 inches- cant remember the year?
M.T. Cranium wrote: » Pack a lunch or two because it won't be going a lot faster than walking pace, but I do think it will call just about everywhere before it reaches Cork on Monday. .
leahyl wrote: » Where do you find those moving pictures??!!
Pangea wrote: » Meanwhile in Cork
M.T. Cranium wrote: » Remember the Greenland Express? This will be more like the Scotland Slow Train stopping at all stations, but it has set out on its journey and the first stop is Ulster east, then Ulster west, then north Connacht then on to Dublin. Pack a lunch or two because it won't be going a lot faster than walking pace, but I do think it will call just about everywhere before it reaches Cork on Monday. Put into forecasting terms, this looks like being a gradual north to south replacement of mild Atlantic air now present by snow-chilled air masses seeping into the increasingly easterly circulation from a much colder Britain. The process starts late Friday night when tonight's frontal system stalls and gets pulled back into low pressure near Donegal. That should place most of Ulster in the colder variety of air masses near -1 C with sleet changing to snow, and there could be heavy falls on higher terrain. Expect 5-10 cm in places but 15-25 cm on some hills in the north by late Saturday. The seepage continues all day Saturday placing parts of inland Connacht and north Leinster on the cold side of a frontal boundary but also the air mass to the south of the boundary will lose its connection to the milder Atlantic source and will begin to modify itself, with temperatures sinking towards 2 C by late Saturday. That will turn showers in the milder air mass more wintry while snow is pushing south. By late Saturday night the frontal boundary will dissolve and all regions will be getting a roughly equal easterly feed of colder air that will now be modified only by crossing the Irish Sea. I would expect streamers to develop with mixed sleety showers near sea level and heavy snow potential in higher parts of Dublin and Wicklow. If any stronger low pressure does develop in the Atlantic and begins to interact with all of this, heavy snow could develop, but if not, the process will remain gradual with further outbreaks of light snow here and there across the central and eventually southern counties. The last district to fall to this process would probably be west Cork and coastal Kerry and that might take most of Monday to finish up, with the possibility that one or two really mild spots could stay above freezing throughout. I think that by mid-day Monday about 50-70 per cent of the country will have snow cover with an average depth of perhaps 2-4 cm and some fairly isolated falls of 10-30 cm are possible. The most likely places to see heavy snow would be hills in south Donegal and about halfway up the eastern slopes in Wicklow and south Dublin (around 350m might see the heaviest accumulations). I expect reports to be highly variable simply because there won't be strong organization taking place in this colder pattern. Overnight temperatures could eventually fall to about -7 C (would say -3 C for Dublin at some point mid-week) so today would be the day to get yourself some de-icing materials for both the vehicle (if you park outside, expect some hassles with frozen locks and iced over windscreens) and the pavement around your home.
Dead_Rabbits wrote: » The answer you seek is on the "MOVING PICTURE"
lucy2010 wrote: » MT any chance you could spare some travel info with regards flights over next few days - flying Into paris in the morning then back Monday night ? Thanks
leahyl wrote: » :mad:
zidewayz wrote: » Are you on the east or west side. If MT's forecast is correct east side of mountains should get more snow.
maquiladora wrote: »
Pangea wrote: » Brillant
tomcosgrave wrote: » Folks, the one question I haven't seen asked is - will there be any graupel? And what is graupel anyway?:D:D
Confab wrote: » It'll be mostly graupel. Soft snow pellets.
Pangea wrote: » Meanwhile in Cork AND CLARE
irish1967 wrote: » BEFORE THE SNOW ARRIVES TOMORROW COULD EVERYONE ENSURE THEY HAVE THEIR LOCATION LISTED AND IF POSSIBLE THEIR HEIGHT ABOVE SEA LEVEL. THANKS
Harry Deerpark wrote: » Do you know of a website where I can find my altitude?