Warm Front

10.50 a.m., Carr Lodge Park, Horbury

“Is that a red kite?” I ask Barbara, because it doesn’t sound quite right to me.

“No, it’s a buzzard,” she suggests.

I scan around but I can’t see one circling.

Starling

We’re both wrong: a dozen starlings are gathering in the tree tops at the edge of the park. Amongst the usual soft starling chatter, one of the birds is, every now and then, giving a passable impression of the peevish mewing of a buzzard.

Met Office Maps

Rainfall as a warm front approached from the Atlantic crossing Ireland this morning. Met Office website.

The low sun can’t cast shadows this morning as it shines through a veil of cloud. There’s no halo, caused by ice crystals in the upper atmosphere, so I’m guessing that these are alto stratus – mid-range stratus clouds. They’re at the leading edge of a warm front which this morning is sweeping in from the Atlantic across Ireland.

11 am, warm air approaching from the west, Met Office website.
Later in the day, the warm front arrives bringing heavy rain. Met Office website.

As I write this up later, just after sunset, the front has arrived and rain is lashing on my studio window.

Link

Met Office as well as predicted forecasts, the Met Office website enables you to go back through the previous 24 hours to see maps of actual observations of rainfall, temperature, windspeed, cloud cover and lightning strikes.

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