Weather

Ditto LadyA. It’s glorious by our standards. Wall to wall sunshine and 14C. This has been the best summer I can remember here. Rainy nights, sunny days. Just what every crofter wants. Downside - a midge paradise. But you can’t have everything! ?.
 
Hen-Gen said:
Ditto LadyA. It’s glorious by our standards. Wall to wall sunshine and 14C. This has been the best summer I can remember here. Rainy nights, sunny days. Just what every crofter wants. Downside - a midge paradise. But you can’t have everything! ?.
We've had a very wet Summer. Most people are quite glad to see Autumn come in, because they have had enough of being wet, but too warm for a jacket. And of course, the warm, damp conditions have led to rampant growth, but you can't get a mower on to the lawns.

I'd hurt my back earlier in the week (an old and regularly recurring problem), but yesterday it felt quite a lot better. So, of course, I overdid things! A long walk, about an hour with the strimmer, and about two hours standing, bottling pears. It took me ages to get dressed this morning. I can hardly move! Took ages to get my socks on. Lesson learned! Today, I have to go get mum's groceries but other than that, I will be lying low and doing nothing!
 
Pea souper here tonight in the Chilterns, visibility down to 100m when we put the chickens to bed.
 
Currently 1C here. Looks quite clear where I am, but I know there are fog warnings out for around the country. Yesterday, it was clear where I live, but foggy in town, about 10k inland from me. Usually, it's the other way, and we get coastal fog, and it can be clear and sunny just a couple of km inland.
Yesterday morning, I had a long walk. I was mostly warm and toasty in my insulated trousers and what's actually a ski jacket (my go to Winter jacket, as cold and wind don't get through it!), but I had forgotten gloves, and my fingertips were so painful, with the cold!
 
3C and thick fog here, not deterring the crowds queuing for Debenhams or Primark though, or wanting to jump on a bus to go into Tier 3 Kent to the Bluewater shopping Centre
 
bigyetiman said:
3C and thick fog here, not deterring the crowds queuing for Debenhams or Primark though, or wanting to jump on a bus to go into Tier 3 Kent to the Bluewater shopping Centre
My daughter had to run in to town yesterday to collect something. She said she was quite shocked at the size of the queues outside our equivalent of primark.
 
Pond and drinker frozen today for the first time this winter. I had a haircut booked at 9.00 but didn’t realise how frozen the windscreen was until I tried to drive off. Took an extra 5 mins to clear it and then country roads too dicey to speed up! Traffic lights red in local town, problems parking - just got there in time, luckily. All slots to talk to GP booked except the one at 9.30;, when I was being beautified, so hairdresser had to listen to conversation detailing the latest saga about my blood pressure. I felt I’d earned my coffee when I got home at last!
 
Just damp and foggy here. The parking and traffic lights must have done wonders for your blood pressure.
Only exciting medical thing here was OH getting her two yearly bowel cancer check kit, which has evolved since her last one, to just one sample rather than 3 days. Always seems odd popping in the post though
 
I noticed on the forecast a couple of days ago that we were the warmest place in the country. Not had frozen drinkers for 7-8 years and then only once. But all smugness vanishes in the face of the unending wind. It would be so nice not to spend the time putting on coats, hat, gloves, waterproofs and wellies. Just a walk with the dog on a still, crisp morning is obviously something I’m never going to experience again.
But we are planning a socially distanced Burns Night. So lucky to have a woman on the island who plays the strangled cats!
 
We have had a couple of frosty mornings here, but today is very dark, overcast and mizzling. I'm off shortly to collect the shopping for mum & myself, do her banking and drop another meal off outside daughter's gate, without going in and seeing them! Her husband caught a bad cold at the weekend, and although he's on the mend now, the 1 year old caught it, and has been utterly miserable, as his (cute little button!) nose keeps blocking. The older boy (4) is talking about this mysterious "magical fairy" who sneakily leaves dinners, groceries and treats outside their gate! :lol: HOwever, with mum so vulnerable, and I work in Home Care, we couldn't take any risks of me picking anything up, even though they were 99.99% sure that it is just a cold.
 
It has been very warm here the past couple of days, the weather clearly doesn't know what to do with itself. So much so, that I have had to kill two Queen Wasps today that made their way into the house. It was warm enough that we had a rainbow today.
 

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It is here as well after a huge downpour at 7am. Looks like a wet day tomorrow though
 
Now I know weather is a perennial British obsession but we have had exceptional weather for here for a week now and it’s forecast for another week.
That is ground frozen hard, wind blown snow that’s so cold it crunches and squeaks underfoot (ringing sands of Eigg anyone) no wind and best of all sparkling light. Gone are the gales, the driving rain, the gloom and the wading through a sea of mud. It looks and feels like the tundra. Cockerels crowing! Long may it last.
 
We're forecast a (maybe) "significant" snow storm next week, similar to the Beast from the East storm two years ago. Have to say, I wouldn't really care except that my mum needs daily care, and lives a half hour drive away. If I didn't have to go anywhere, it wouldn't bother me too much, but unless I get totally snowed in again, I will have to try and get out.
 
I think the Shetland weather has broken lockdown and come down to Kent for a holiday. You're welcome to have it back, Hen-Gen :-)
 
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