Piers Corbyn predicts SUPER STORM for the end of November.

Piers Corbyn predicts super storm for the end of November.

This superstorm is supposed to hit east of the British Isles, mainly the Netherlands but also Belgium, Denmark, the South of Scandinavia, the North of Germany and up to St Petersburg.

It has caused a lot of fuss (and panic) in the Netherlands with a lot of online publications and debunking. So I am writing some free compilation of what I have learned.

Piers Corbyn is an astrophysicist who from a young age onwards has been studying a lot of solar activity (spots, magnetic storms and so on). His main thesis is that the solar activity guides a lot of the climate here on earth, not just some global phenomena like warming, but down to the day influences on ‘local’ phenomena like extreme heat, cold, rain, and … storms.

After his 1986 prediction of a very cold winter (with which he helped out some strikers), he claims he has refined his method many times, but has decided to conceal it for the rest of the world.
Today he runs a (one-man ?) company with a web site where people can retrieve long term predictions in exchange for money.

Last Monday (November 5th 2007) he made an exception. He felt he could not with hold his prediction for November as the outcome spells potential danger to extreme danger.

Here it is: from _http://www.lowefo.com/

Two periods for which Weather Action are 90% confident there will be damaging storms. These storms are very serious. Preparations should be made. Windspeed risk maps will be produced for the potential tracks of the storms.

8th-13th November.

Storm/hurricane force gusts and tornado type developments. The storm will bring damage to a band of N Europe which is likely to include (85% confident) Scotland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway. We estimate the max gusts in some places in the Netherlands as follows: 85% risk for over 110 km/h ; 50% risk for over 145 km/h; 15% risk for over 175 km/h

This storm, which we forecast ten months ago is raging as we write this update.

24th to 28th November.

Storm/hurricane gusts of 145 to 210 km/h. Likely track (80% confident) of damage eastwards from the British Isles: Netherlands, Denmark, North Germany, South Sweden and parts of the Baltic countries and Finland. This storm unfolds on the 304th anniversary of the devastating tempest of 26th/27th November 1703 and has potential similarities to it, but is likely to be less extreme. Still, it is likely to cause breaches of sea defences in West & South British Isles and the Dutch, German and Danish coasts. We estimate the max gusts in some places in the Netherlands as follows: 85% risk for over 120 km/h; 33% risk for over 160 km/h; 15% risk for over 210 km/h
Update due mid Nov.
There is only one classic meteorologist from the Netherlands who has published this information. All others share in a process of debunking to avoid panic or so they say and accuse Piers of being a scaremonger. There main thesis in the process of debunking is there claim that it is impossible to predict a storm for more than a couple of days in advance. I read and understand this to be … two days.

Do the classic meteorologists realise that they are shooting their own foot this way ? He has disclosed the prediction on the 5th of November which is already three to 8 days in advance. And if we believe that his prediction was done ten months ago as he claims in this disclosure, than it is nothing short of amazing.

We did have a serious storm in Belgium last night (8 to 9 Nov). Although it has weakened over here, from what I can read, it is still going on in the Netherlands. The classic climatology institutes indeed predict that it will keep on going till the end of Sunday with wind speeds of 90 km/hr.

And if he is right with this one, why would his prediction for the 24-28 Nov period be taken less seriously. Even if his calculated probability is only 80 %, I’d take it serious as we are talking about a potential Super Storm with winds that could top 210 km/hr. High towers, and many apartment buildings will not be able to stand such winds. Windmills can not be laid down as they can in regions where tropical storms regularly hit. Will the winds, if coming with such force level them ?

If something happens by the end of November, we have proof his method works, and he’ll be a very rich man.

If nothing happens we won’t have any proof, as it is still possible that we fell into the 20 % probability window.
 
From Wikipedia (not an authoritative source, but will do in this instance):

Piers Corbyn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Piers Richard Corbyn (born 10 March 1947)[1] is a British meteorological consultant best known for his claims of an ability to predict the weather up to one year in advance through the study of solar activity, specifically sunspots. [...]

Corbyn has primarily used the knowledge and predictions to bet on the weather in certain markets, and to act as a consultant for many corporations. Former clients of Weather Action include Yorkshire Electricity Group, now part of npower. A former employee, Mark Bailey, estimated Corbyn's forecasts as correct 70% of the time.[1] Weather Action itself claims that their record demonstrates "proven skill verified by independent academic statisticians and published in scientific literature," and has been verified in Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics.[4] The Journal study, the single academic work conducted involving Corbyn's work, was done by Dr. Dennis Wheeler of the University of Sunderland and took Weather Action predictions for the island of Britain for October 1995 to September 1997. Only predictions of gale force winds were analyzed. It uses a variety of statistical techniques to come up with success rates varying from 37% to 73% depending on the technique. 23 gales were successfully predicted, 21 gales were falsely predicted, and 18 gales occurred that were not predicted. Dr. Wheeler concluded, "that forecasts prepared by Weather Action would repay further attention. The results provide little evidence to dismiss the observed success rates as being attributable to mere chance or good fortune. Indeed the balance of evidence indicates that the system performs better than chance although it is recognized that the margin of success differs greatly between the seasons and is lowest in winter when gales are most frequent.”[5]

Corbyn's success has netted him and his company a series of corporate accounts. Filming crews often look to him for information on weather outlooks to plan filming (PolyGram staggered their release dates and promotional tours for the motion picture Bean around these predictions), and his predictions have valued the company at £6 million at its highest point.[1]

Corbyn's predictions are based on what is called "The Solar Weather Technique."[6] The technique "combines statistical analysis of over a century of historical weather patterns with clues derived from solar observations."[1] He considers past weather patterns and current solar observations, drawing correlations between cosmic radiation and cloud cover. This work has been criticized by some scientists who claim that such variations cause minimal impact on the Earth's atmosphere. As Corbyn refuses to publish his methods in any journal, scientists are further critical of his methods due to the low probability of his results.[1]

Corbyn is also a global warming sceptic. His beliefs stem from the same solar forecasting he uses for his predictions, and he's been quoted as a noted dissenter in reports about the storms in Europe in 2000[7] and in Martin Durkin's documentary The Great Global Warming Swindle.
 
An old article from 2000:

_http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/0000000053C3.htm
Julian Hunt and Piers Corbyn: global warnings?
by Helene Guldberg

Coming as it did in the wake of storms that ravaged Europe, the global warming summit in The Hague in November 2000 could not have happened at a better time for environmental campaigners.

Deputy prime minister John Prescott had warned that the 'water floods' should be 'a wake-up call for everyone on global warming', and was subsequently 'gutted' at the failure of his attempts to broker a deal between the USA and Europe in The Hague. Eco-worriers had filled newspaper pages with warnings about the havoc global warming was wreaking around the world: not only with rising sea levels, flooding and stormy weather, but also 'the invasion of alien species in rural Britain'. Prince Charles preached - once again - about humanity's 'arrogant disregard for the delicate balance of nature'.

But while many seemed to take for granted that the autumn's storms were nature's punishment for our destruction of the planet, how much do we really know about the extent, and consequences, of global warming?

Julian Hunt (now Lord Hunt) was director-general and chief executive of the Meteorological Office between 1992 and 1997 (1), and is now professor of climate modelling in the Department of Space, Climate Physics and Geological Sciences at University College London (UCL). I met him in his UCL office. Piers Corbyn, founder and managing director of the forecasters Weather Action (2), is more of a maverick and, according to Julian Hunt, an academic 'outsider' who could be likened to Prince Charles: 'he's a gadfly. But we need them. They shake you up.'

Corbyn's brother, Labour backbencher Jeremy, is supporting an e-campaign to persuade the US congress to agree to cuts in carbon dioxide emissions - yet Piers has gone the other way, and is highly sceptical about current fears about global warming. 'This whole thing has a dynamic of its own', he told me, in at his office in London's South Bank Technopark. 'Journalists say one thing, scientists want funding and politicians want bandwagons. Put these things together and they build up steam and carry on.'

So what do Corbyn and Lord Hunt think about the assertion that the recent floods were the consequence of global warming? 'It is not quite as the ministers have said', says Lord Hunt, before conceding that 'there is an element of correctness in what they say. It is quite a complicated pattern'. According to Lord Hunt, the weather models 'certainly show that there will be periods when you would expect wetter winters', but this is a statistical extrapolation. 'What is not absolutely clear is that we will have strong and extreme events', he explains. 'What we can say is that we will have rising sea temperatures. Rising sea temperatures mean more water in the atmosphere. More water in the atmosphere means increased precipitation. But, of course, the rain could come down in a beautiful drizzle every day for three months in the winter, as opposed to a few tremendous events.'

What does Lord Hunt think of the government's reaction to November's floods? 'I think "wake-up call" and "this is consistent" is all right', he equivocates. 'I think scientists are - as you can imagine - always slightly cautious as to what is being said. But I think that politicians have got to take some of the cautious words of scientists sometimes and say "wake up".'

'I think scientists are always slightly cautious' explains Lord Hunt
Predictably, Piers Corbyn is more critical of the government's warnings. 'It's nonsense. The weather is not more extreme', he states. 'For instance, there is no evidence that a rise in temperature causes more tropical cyclones. If there's any evidence at all it is the opposite and oceanography, as far as the Atlantic is concerned, shows it actually is the opposite.' Research conducted at the Benfield Greig Hazard Research Centre (3), across the corridor from where Lord Hunt works, shows that tropical cyclones have, if anything, decreased in the northern hemisphere in the 1990s - despite it being the warmest decade on record (according to Corbyn, as a result of El Ninos).

Corbyn may be a maverick, but he is not alone in some of his views. A number of climate experts have argued that the heavy rainfall across Europe this winter had nothing to do with global warming but a well-known weather system: the North Atlantic oscillation (NAO). Atmospheric pressure which forms over the ocean is known to produce a wide variety of weather. When the NAO is in a 'positive' state winters are wet, mild and stormy; when it is in a 'negative' state, winters are dry, cold and calm. According to Dr David Stephenson of Reading University, records show the NAO has flipped between the two states since the 1800s, at random, with no sign of a permanent change (4).

The late Robin Stirling was another critic of the assertion that Britain's weather is more extreme. His book, The Weather of Britain, shows that Britain has experienced storms far worse - both in terms of wind-speed and the amount of rainfall - than in October and November 2000, which have resulted in the loss of many more lives. The autumn storms were not exceptional in terms of intensity or rainfall: they caused extensive flooding because of their accumulated effect. Britain has also experienced significant changes in temperature levels. Going back a few hundred years, the Little Ice Age in the northern hemisphere brought a cooler climate to Britain - with temperatures in London at times falling to -40 degrees celsius - and ice several feet thick in depth covering parts of the Thames. Going back several hundred years further, to Roman times, Britain's climate may even have been three or four degrees warmer than today (5).

Given the evidence to the contrary, why do we hold so strongly to the assumption that today's weather is more extreme? 'There's an important distinction between hazard and vulnerability', explains Lord Hunt. 'Hazard is the actual phenomenon and vulnerability is the effect on the community. So that if you have the same level of storms but everybody then lives on floodplains or the coast the weather is the same, but there is a much bigger insurance loss. So by comparison, although there's been a small change in the hazard, there is a huge change in the vulnerability.'

Nonetheless, Lord Hunt does believe we should be worried about global warming. 'The largest amount of climate- and weather-related deaths are nothing to do with the extremes of flooding or wind, but to do with heat', he says. 'In America, thousands of people die every year in heatwaves. If there are more occasions when it is hotter you will get many more people dying.' After a few quick calculations his estimates have reached 'thousands and thousands, in fact even tens of thousands'. But heatwaves in the northern hemisphere kill precisely because they are sudden and rare. Surely if heatwaves became more frequent, society would find ways of adapting to them. In Norway, for example, winter temperatures will frequently drop to -30 or -40 degrees celsius, and few lives are lost as a result. Yet similar temperature drops in Britain would have devastating results, because we would not be prepared for it. In fact, twice as many people die in Britain as the result of cold winter nights as they do as a consequence of hot summer days. You could even argue that global warming, in Britain, would cost fewer lives.

Not that we actually know how much the globe is likely to warm this century. There is no clear consensus on this vital question. Five years ago the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) forecast that the globe would warm by between 1.5 degrees and 3.5 degrees over the next hundred years. Now the range has widened to between 1 degree and 6 degrees. Why the increasing uncertainty? According to Lord Hunt, 'the IPCC has become more political' with more countries wanting to join and push their own agendas. Though he would not disagree with this explanation, Piers Corbyn emphasises the problems with the models upon which the IPCC makes its predictions.

Global warming, argues Corbyn, is caused by solar activity, not carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. 'The levels of CO2 are governed by global temperatures which are governed by particles from the sun. Mankind is adding some CO2 - this is true - but at levels which will, generally speaking, be reabsorbed by nature quite rapidly.' Nature produces large quantities of CO2, but it also reabsorbs CO2. 'The add-on effect of man is like having a bath full of water with the tap on full and the plug open', he says. 'If you add a little more water - like pouring a cup of tea in there - all you get is a slight increase in the water level. And that is all man has contributed to Earth's carbon dioxide levels.' Corbyn goes on to explain that the biosphere is like a suction machine that removes carbon dioxide. 'It is very efficient, which is why we've got limestone everywhere. Take the white cliffs of Dover. That carbon dioxide was once in the atmosphere. It has been sucked out.'

Proposals to cut fuel duty on ultra-low sulphur diesel would raise temperatures, not lower them
When I put Corbyn's argument to Lord Hunt, however, he was not impressed. 'He has not done a calculation to demonstrate that. Anybody can produce an argument.' The point, according to Lord Hunt, is that 'yes, there's absorption in trees, and the amount that goes into and out of the ocean is very sensitive to temperatures. But it is like a positive feedback loop: a small change in carbon dioxide leads to higher temperatures. This leads to more water, and more water leads to more trapping [of sunlight] and so on. So it is a slightly unstable situation. That's the whole point'. He has more sympathy with Corbyn's other argument: 'that, is solar variation. It is a very reasonable criticism of the earlier IPCC reports that this wasn't adequately allowed for.' It seems that we do not know enough about how much global warming is caused by changes in solar activity rather than man-made pollution.

Yet according to Lord Hunt, our understanding of the impact of pollutants on global temperature has vastly improved. 'The first big reports on climate change that came out in the early 1990s had very large predicted increases in temperatures - of five or six degrees - on average over the next 100 years. However, when they plotted these graphs back the predictions were clearly bigger than anything that was being observed.' The reason for this was that they were only considering the greenhouse gases, not pollutants that had the effect of reducing temperatures. 'They weren't considering the fact that combustion - burning forests, petrol and things - lead to small particles in the atmosphere that slightly reduce the amount of radiation coming in. These are called sulphur aerosols. When this effect was introduced, all the computer models dramatically improved in accuracy and made the predictions for the next 100 years considerable lower.'

Ironically, in a move designed to mitigate global warming, Chancellor Gordon Brown made a pre-budget proposal in November 2000 to cut fuel duty on ultra-low sulphur diesel. Given that the impact of car driving on global warming is minute, the difference that this fuel would make is negligible. But this negligible difference would be to raise temperatures, rather than lowering them.

As for carbon dioxide emission - if this does have a deleterious effect, how should we deal with the problem? Some scientists on the IPCC panel claim that the world should cut carbon dioxide emission by up to 60 percent if global warming is to be kept under control. But we can safely say that this will not happen. As Corbyn says, 'The economic interests are not there to close down industry'. Lord Hunt also recognises that dramatic reductions in carbon emission are not realistically achievable and believes that while reducing our emissions through the more efficient use of energy we should also develop hi-tech solutions to combat the effects of a warmer globe. This would include building defences to combat rising sea-levels. We should, he states, push ahead with the technology that would allow for the possibility of carbon dioxide being removed, solidified and dispersed at the bottom of the ocean, while recognising that in the short term it is impractical. And we must maintain our capacity for nuclear energy, he argues.

Lord Hunt believes we need to use science and technology to deal with the potential problems of a warmer climate. The frugal environmentalist ethic of 'doing without' and suffering for our sins does not feature much in his worldview. In the current political climate, this is refreshing. But he also seems excited by the green lifestyle changes we are more used to seeing advocated: like the possibility of consumers being told, in their energy bills, how much energy they have consumed relative to the amount expected of a 'good citizen'. Given that we have a government far more comfortable with small-scale bossiness than hi-tech changes, we know we can expect more bills - and fewer defences.

Helene Guldberg is managing editor of spiked

(1) See the Met Office website

(2) See the Weather Action website

(3) The Benfield Greig Hazard Research Centre research can be found at here

(4) Dr David Stephenson's research can be found here

(5) The Weather of Britain by Robin Stirling, 1997
 
Down here in Oz we have a long range weather forecast provided by =http://www.worldweather.com.au/HomeFrame.htm
As a farmer I have watched
their predictions for the last 20 years and find them mostly accurate.
Quote:
Haydon is the Research Director and the company predicts the weather 12 to 18 months in advance, although short termed forecasts are also available if required. Weather patterns and predictions are developed by monitoring solar flares, analysing historical data, and observing planetary relationships and orbital patterns.
It use to be called Weatherscope as in horoscope for the weather and Haydon is continuing the work of his father Lennox Walker ,we also used to call it the Lennox Walker and the country channel used to air it together with the latest life-stock market results
Piers Corbyn method seems to be a similar one ,Hayden is more forth coming as how he get his results
RRR
 
Take a look at the following photos of the "Moscow storm" that were posted on 8/11/07 on "English Russia" site:

A few days ago a big storm clouds brought by a strong wind covered Moscow. People don’t know what was the reason for this, nor nothing was in the news. A few people managed to make a photos like this ones of the sky.
1.jpg


2.jpg


3.jpg


4.jpg


5.jpg


6.jpg


One of the visitor commented:

Nothing to fear about those clouds. They are called “shelf clouds” and appear at the edge of a cold front. This type of stormcloud is quite common out in the American Midwest.
I wonder if those clouds also common in Russia.
 
It really is bizarre for someone in Russia to say "Nothing to fear about those clouds... this type of stormcloud is quite common in the American Midwest."

I mean, say what?!

That's like saying "Nothing to worry about an ice-storm and sub-zero temps in Bogota Columbia... that's common in the arctic." !!!

 
Oh, sorry for misunderstanding. I think that the comment was made by someone in US.

Here his comment including couple of others from US

Comment by Sedgwick
2007-11-08 17:11:07

Nothing to fear about those clouds. They are called “shelf clouds” and appear at the edge of a cold front. This type of stormcloud is quite common out in the American Midwest.

Google Image Search: Shelf Clouds.

Reply to this comment
Comment by John from Kansas
2007-11-08 17:24:49

Yes Sedgwick, you are right. Such cloud formations often preceed thunderstorms and can bring a marked change in local weather.
Reply to this comment


Comment by Cigar Jack
2007-11-08 18:00:13

Growing up in the American Midwest I used to see a couple storms a year start like that.
But I found another picture on other Russian site about similar storm.
_http://www.panoramio.com/photo/1270920
Pictures were taken on 5 of June, 2006 at 5:00 am.

%D0%93%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B7%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%BE%D0%B9-%D1%84%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%BD%D1%82.jpg


Dann Cianca said:

That is a fantastic shelf cloud!! Do you get many good storms in Russia? I often wonder whether the US seems to get more tornadoes because there is a pretty tight observation network. Of course, you don't have a lot of warm, moist air to work with in Russia, but it's got to be possible ...

Dann.
Posted May 29

Ivan Shkalikov said:

Hi, Dann Cianca! Yes, we have sometimes storms and hurricanes on the most territory of Russia. But tornado (twister) is a relative infrequent event for us.

The most famous tornado outbreak in Russia is dated 1984/06/09. A lot of people died that day. There were several tornadoes in western Russia on June 9 1984, but the most deadliest one hit Ivanovo and Balino. Unfortunately, it's hard to find information about this event because it happened in time of USSR. All the bad news were dissembled or minimized. I heard that over 400 were killed, that actually means over 700, I guess, or even more (sorry for my english).

Btw, I found in WEB more photos of this shelf cloud in Moscow (2006/06/05)
And surprise! on this page I found the same photos that presented on englishrussia as something new.
So those pictures actually dated 05/06/06
Sorry for the mess
teu46.gif
Moderator can move this elsewhere.
 
Well it looks like we already got the preview today,
have you seen morning news - Norther Gemrany and parts of England were affected with extremely bad weather and floods,
even here in Malta there is almost hurricane strong wind, unlike anything that ever happens in this part of Europe
 
Keit said:
One of the visitor commented:

Nothing to fear about those clouds. They are called “shelf clouds” and appear at the edge of a cold front. This type of stormcloud is quite common out in the American Midwest.
I wonder if those clouds also common in Russia.
Well, you do see clouds like that in the Midwest, though they are not as large and not as white. Stormclouds in the Midwest are usually much darker than those pictured above.

Either way, some of those pics remind me of the large UFO's from Independence Day...
 
It's like some sort of "presence" in these clouds.

C's said:
Q: (L) Will there be a war in the sky with the aliens?
A: Yes.
Q: (L) Will it be between Orions and the Federation?
A: Yes.
Q: (L) Will it be visible on earth?
A: Oh, yes.
Q: (L) When will this be?
A: It has already started. Will intensify steadily.
Q: (L) Why are we not aware that it has already started?
A: It is disguised at this point as weather. It is still in other
dimensions. Will go to this one within 18 years. Anytime within this
period. The absolute time is not determinable as to exactly when. It
could be tomorrow or 18 years from now.
Q: (L) 18 years from now is 2012. Is there some special significance
to that time?
A: Yes.
 
beau said:
Either way, some of those pics remind me of the large UFO's from Independence Day...
That is what I thought as well when seeing those pictures. Interesting. I suspect we would be seeing more of these weathers as the wave approaches...
 
Remember that Pierce Corbyn also predicted a storm (possibly super - ) for the 24- 28 november period the coming weekend).

Classic meteorology doesn’t expect any high winds for the coming weekend, on the contrary even. I guess this explains why they feel “more at ease” to attack Pierce Corbyn’s forecasts as being unscientific and accusing him of being a scaremonger or doomsayer. The fact that Corbyn does not follow the official line of “global warming and we owe this to ourselves” of course, for sure heats their blind emotions even more.

We will see. He WAS very accurate with the forecast of the 8-11 Nov storm that hit the coast line of the Netherlands.

And also, there still ARE some classic forecasts that do predict a storm for the coming weekend.

See for instance:
_http://www.windfinder.com/forecasts/wind_europe72.htm

and start watching the predictive map for the night of Saturday to Sunday (or Sun: 25.11. 1:00) and open the following ones. You can see how a storm develops over the North Sea and a day later also along the Cote d’Azur.

The site of Pierce Corbyn holds on to the original forecast, and he himself claims to have predicted the storm that recently hit Bangladesh which killed over 3000 people. So I wouldn’t throw away his prediction as most classic meteorologists are doing.

From his site: _http://www.lowefo.com/forecast.php?s=Netherlands

1. Standard meteorology will underestimate winds and rain even from 24hours ahead particularly for forecasts of weather in period 24th to 28th Nov.
Our estimation of top gusts over 90mph very likely in the region of the storm track remains, with 100mph likely to be topped in exposed North sea/Island/and perhaps some headland parts.

2. FORECAST USERS should note our projected storm tracks and short range information for estimating top gusts in their area. From 24 hours ahead standard meteorology will probably be reasonable about storm tracks but underestimate wind strength and rain.

The core regions under threat in our long range forecast map for Storm wave 1 remain Scotland, parts of NE England and Central/South Norway and - to a lesser extent - North Denmark.

Forecast Users in Holland and Belgium please note that they were never forecasted to be in the core storm track for storm wave 1 and will not be in it. (Wave 2 is likely to be more important in wind terms for Holland and Belgium). The main threat to Holland and the East/SouthEast coast of England from storm wave 1 (and probably also storm wave 2) will be the North Sea storm surge which will coincide with a series of exceptionally high tides - close to highest possible tides on and after 24th November. The Full Moon on 24th is also a lunar perigee full moon (i.e. closest to Earth) which makes the Moon look a little bigger and make it most effective at tide raising. We cannot say at this stage if the high tide and the timing of the peak of the storm surge will combine for maximum possible effect but there is a high risk of dangerous overlap. Such detaled timing should come from short range forecasts and sea defence warning systems.
See also :
_http://www.lowefo.com/pdf/Storm%20update%2015.11.2007.pdf
for a more detailed prediction.

Like before, extremely high tide falls within the same time window, only this time high water will also be created with a moon that is at its closest to the earth.
 
Those who have checked _http://www.lowefo.com/forecast.php?s=Netherlands the past days, have noticed how the forecast changed a little as we went through the 24th- 28th period. Apart from the fact that 26th was exceptionally windy (more than forecasted) he extended the period of danger towards the 1st and 2nd of dec.

I want to make it short as it is way too late here. In general their prediction model does add to some sort of forecast, in that it seems to predict whether the classic forcasts will become more extreme or not. But it also seems to predict long term. He doesn't disclose the system used. Maybe he is using a meticulously kept archive, and falls back on historic patterns. Maybe he is charting out the cycles in which we live, and the cycles within the cycles?

Frankly I don't know ... but I'd like to know.

Anyway, for those interested, a revisit to his site today learned me about our sun waking up again after a few years of slumber. And also, how three solar eruptions happened the night from 29th to 30th of nov.

This urged me to pay a visit to
_http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/LATEST/current_c3.gif
(where you can see a gif animation that also has data that change over time. So save em if you want to look at them later.)

It takes quite a lot of bits (plus 25.000 KB) to open it or store it. But if you do (or are able to) you can see a solar eruption on the left and than one on the right, with a second one following on the right. Nothing spectacular actually. I've seen way wilder pictures looking at that site.

The reason for me sharing this is how that last one slowly unfolds like a rolling circle swung away from the solar surface, pushed away and opening up further, to unfold like a growing bishops or shepards staff ...
 
Charles said:
Those who have checked _http://www.lowefo.com/forecast.php?s=Netherlands the past days, have noticed how the forecast changed a little as we went through the 24th- 28th period. Apart from the fact that 26th was exceptionally windy (more than forecasted) he extended the period of danger towards the 1st and 2nd of dec.
And th storm happened indeed during the 1st and 2nd of dec. Here's an french forum that monitored the event minute by minute :
_http://www.lameteo.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=7901&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0

Maximum recorded wind was 135 km/h at sea near Cherbourg.
 
He missed the one in the US Pacific NW. Last night maxiumum winds 210 kmh. I just find it kind of odd he focuses on a specific area and is seemingly blind to greater severe weather in other areas.

Axel_Dunor said:
Charles said:
Those who have checked _http://www.lowefo.com/forecast.php?s=Netherlands the past days, have noticed how the forecast changed a little as we went through the 24th- 28th period. Apart from the fact that 26th was exceptionally windy (more than forecasted) he extended the period of danger towards the 1st and 2nd of dec.
And th storm happened indeed during the 1st and 2nd of dec. Here's an french forum that monitored the event minute by minute :
_http://www.lameteo.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=7901&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=0

Maximum recorded wind was 135 km/h at sea near Cherbourg.
 

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