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17 May 2009. 07:26

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Weatherlawyer

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May 16, 2009, 9:24:48 AM5/16/09
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Back to forecasting the easy ones at last.

Second quarter on the 17th May (2009) at 07:26.

This is a classic wet spell for Britain and traditionally flood plain
flooding in the South of France and North-west Italy.

The only salvation will come at someone else's expense if there are
major natural disasters such as tropical cyclones and major magnitude
earthquakes.

The "boat anchor" shaped occlusions through southern England and
central Ireland along with the low High pressure areas elsewhere on
the chart, shout volcanic activity.
http://www.wetterzentrale.de/topkarten/fsfaxsem.html

So maybe it won't be so wet after all.
http://my.opera.com/Weatherlawyer/blog/2009/05/16/17-may-07-26

smallbabe

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May 16, 2009, 12:54:06 PM5/16/09
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On May 16, 2:24 pm, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Back to forecasting the easy ones at last.
>
> Second quarter on the 17th May (2009) at 07:26.
>
> This is a classic wet spell for Britain and traditionally flood plain
> flooding in the South of France and North-west Italy.
>
> The only salvation will come at someone else's expense if there are
> major natural disasters such as tropical cyclones and major magnitude
> earthquakes.
>
> The "boat anchor" shaped occlusions through southern England and
> central Ireland along with the low High pressure areas elsewhere on
> the chart, shout volcanic activity.http://www.wetterzentrale.de/topkarten/fsfaxsem.html

You are correct! It is an easy forecast saying somewhere in the UK and/
or the South of France and/or Northern Italy will be wet tomorrow and
a floodplain here and there may get flooded as a result. It really is
very, very easy.

Now try the difficult one and use your theories to actually predict a
major volcanic eruption, as a result of; "occlusions through Southern
England and High pressure areas elsewhere on the chart". After all you
are hinting at it. Just don't come back and say you forecasted it, if
Krakatoa blows again in the next week, on the basis of the obfuscation
in that post!

Go on, stick your neck out of your shell and actually forecast
something. The whole scientific community and everyone who lives in
areas of tectonic activity is waiting for someone like you who could
actually tell them when something awful was going to happen. Just
think of the accolades if you begin to get this right, W!

smallbabe

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May 18, 2009, 6:58:11 AM5/18/09
to
On May 16, 2:24 pm, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Back to forecasting the easy ones at last.
>
> Second quarter on the 17th May (2009) at 07:26.
>
> This is a classic wet spell for Britain and traditionally flood plain
> flooding in the South of France and North-west Italy.
>
> The only salvation will come at someone else's expense if there are
> major natural disasters such as tropical cyclones and major magnitude
> earthquakes.
>
> The "boat anchor" shaped occlusions through southern England and
> central Ireland along with the low High pressure areas elsewhere on
> the chart, shout volcanic activity.http://www.wetterzentrale.de/topkarten/fsfaxsem.html

Well, it was wet yesterday, as all agencies (and you, well done) had
forecast and though the "The "boat anchor" shaped occlusions through


southern England and
central Ireland along with the low High pressure areas elsewhere on

the chart, shout volcanic activity", the tectonic world appears to
have not followed this particular shout, as the state of the world's
volcanoes doesn't appear to have changed a deal.

What happened, W? Surely you aren't going to say that it was wet in
the UK, therefore there has not been the volcanic activity shouted by
the weather maps at the end of last week??

Weatherlawyer

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May 18, 2009, 4:53:10 PM5/18/09
to
And now for something more of the same:

Parallel Conclusions.

Occluded fronts out at sea mean a set of large magnitude earthquakes
is pending. And maybe not just in one place. I have no idea if we are
in for more tremors and I have no ideas where these perhaps sets of
triplicates will occur.

Actually they seemed to have occurred in a number of places as befits
the motility of weather -which is like the wind more often than not in
blowing where it listeth.

What I do know is worth knowing, if you are willing to stick with it.

When a pair of parallel fronts like these arrive, they tend to cancel
out any meteorological convergence. This is the death of storms. So
the storm that is related to them can be backtracked.

HA!

That sorts it all out.

Now I can remember why I was confident that I had arrived at the
conclusions I arrived at in order to be able to state categorically,
that storms or anticyclones leaving the Carolinas tend to occur in
tandem with earthquakes in the middle of the Aleutian archipelago.

Now I know the meaning of the saying: "I have forgotten more than you
know." It means you won't have a chance of knowing what I keep
forgetting to mention. Maybe I aught to write it all down
somewhere.... Oh, wait...

Paulus

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May 18, 2009, 5:53:42 PM5/18/09
to

"Weatherlawyer" <Weathe...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:67f04797-c4a9-40eb...@b1g2000vbc.googlegroups.com...

Me thinks you display all the characteristics of a person suffering from an,
as yet unknown to medicine, variant of CJD.

Well, that or you've been snorting mercury again...

I worry 'bout ya Mike!

Paul

smallbabe

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May 19, 2009, 2:45:34 PM5/19/09
to
On May 18, 9:53 pm, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> And now for something more of the same:
>
> Parallel Conclusions.
>
> Occluded fronts out at sea mean a set of large magnitude earthquakes
> is pending. And maybe not just in one place. I have no idea if we are
> in for more tremors and I have no ideas where these perhaps sets of
> triplicates will occur.
>

hmmm. So you don't know where these earthquakes will occur, what their
magnitude will be, or even if we are in for them anyway. But you have
forecast them because of "occluded fronts out at sea" (but you haven't
stated which sea).

You sort it out. No-one else could.

smallbabe

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May 20, 2009, 2:50:41 PM5/20/09
to
On May 16, 2:24 pm, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Back to forecasting the easy ones at last.
>
> Second quarter on the 17th May (2009) at 07:26.
>
> This is a classic wet spell for Britain and traditionally flood plain
> flooding in the South of France and North-west Italy.
>
> The only salvation will come at someone else's expense if there are
> major natural disasters such as tropical cyclones and major magnitude
> earthquakes.
>
> The "boat anchor" shaped occlusions through southern England and
> central Ireland along with the low High pressure areas elsewhere on
> the chart, shout volcanic activity.http://www.wetterzentrale.de/topkarten/fsfaxsem.html

Still waiting for someone to hear the shouts of volcanic activity, W.

Weatherlawyer

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May 22, 2009, 11:54:35 PM5/22/09
to
[IMGCENTER=http://files.myopera.com/Weatherlawyer/albums/764367/thumbs/
17%20days%20Precipitation%20USA.png_thumb.jpg]

[IMGCENTER=http://files.myopera.com/Weatherlawyer/albums/764367/thumbs/
rain_index.png_thumb.jpg]

Not sure if these links will take so don't fret your little selves,
the inestimable Weatherlawyer has saved them for your posteriors

So this spell is over and you have all had an opportunity to see what
happens when the Weatherlawyer code give a lot of rain to the UK.

Perhaps I aught to go and find the regions where there was no rain so
everyone can see just exactly how their mileage varied.

Perhaps my fans will sort that out for themselves if they want to be
players in this rewriting of history. It's a good job I am just an
umble savant. (Nice to have a pattern to point to that wasn't flumoxed
by too much exteriorology.)

Weatherlawyer

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May 22, 2009, 11:58:27 PM5/22/09
to
http://my.opera.com/Weatherlawyer/blog/2009/05/16/17-may-07-26?cid=7741303#comment7741303

This link will take you to where the inestimable Weatherlawyer has
saved the basics for your posteriors (you may remain seated.)

Dawlish

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May 23, 2009, 12:54:31 PM5/23/09
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On May 23, 4:58 am, Weatherlawyer <Weatherlaw...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> http://my.opera.com/Weatherlawyer/blog/2009/05/16/17-may-07-26?cid=77...

>
> This link will take you to where the inestimable Weatherlawyer has
> saved the basics for your posteriors (you may remain seated.)
>
> So this spell is over and you have all had an opportunity to see what
> happens when the Weatherlawyer code give a lot of rain to the UK.
>
> Perhaps I aught to go and find the regions where there was no rain so
> everyone can see just exactly how their mileage varied.
>
> Perhaps my fans will sort that out for themselves if they want to be
> players in this rewriting of history. It's a good job I am just an
> umble savant. (Nice to have a pattern to point to that wasn't
> flumoxed
> by too much exteriorology.)

Still waiting for the volcanoes W.

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