Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Climate fail

This stuff is all over the place. I wonder how the ancients did it.

Old Wives' Summer     24 Sep     4 Oct     29 Sep     64% frequency
Early-Oct storms     5 Oct     12 Oct     9 Oct     67% frequency
St Luke's Summer     16 Oct     20 Oct     19 Oct     67% frequency
Mid-autumn storms     24 Oct     13 Nov     29 Oct     100% frequency
St Martin's Summer     15 Nov     21 Nov     18 Nov     66% frequency
Early-Dec storms     24 Nov     14 Dec     9 Dec     98% frequency
Mid-Dec settled     18 Dec     24 Dec     21 Dec     56% frequency
Christmas storm     25 Dec     1 Jan     28 Dec     84% frequency

After a further sixty years these singularities are still identifiable on many occasions. Even in this era of high-tech weather forecasting, the list can still come in useful from time time: for example, when medium-range ensemble forecasts point in two contrasting directions the real atmosphere is most likely to follow the route closest to any relevant singularity. 

http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/reports/philip-eden/Singularities.htm

A record breaking St Martin's Summer must have rocked the faith of my little flock. I am glad you stuck with me. More to the point is that the weather can not remember things. Therefore the earth was passing some pretty effective I know not what of Majicnetics. Your guess is as good as mine but since it does whatever it does fairly regularly we only have to find out what sort of obastacle/obstacles are missing/present two thirds/one third of the time.

In other words what planets are there either 2/3 or 1/3 of the time. It should be a reasonably easy question that any ancient philosopher could answer (once they invented a telescope.)

Well I don't know about you but my brain is fried after dealing with all that. I am very tempted to have a coffee. This mint tea reminds me of some sort of exotic pains solvent. That's one of life's little rewards for getting old and sick.

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