I awoke at 7am on Sunday 6th April and looked out of the bedroom window to see the picturesque scene of a blanket of snow.
Looking out towards the river from the front of our house:
Our cars covered in snow:
Our 12 year old Border Collie during his Sunday morning walk. He likes snow, but hasn’t seen it too often during his lifetime:
Another biscuit please, dad!
Jan Pompe says
Paul: go on don’t keep him waiting give him a biscuit.
Snow looks pretty just so long as it’s 10,000 miles away I don’t mind it a bit.
Seriously I take it that it’s unusual to have snow at this time of year.
Timo says
Paul,
Also have a look at ICECAP and
http://north.bensaunders.com/
Ann Novek says
In Scandinavia it’s perfectly natural to have spring snow and a ” spring backlash”. Farmers call spring snow as the world’s best fertilizer.
In our part of the world there are also lullabies stating things like this about nature in springtime ” try to sleep little trees, still it’s winter”….
Paul Biggs says
1981 was the last time I remember significant April snow, which was followed by one of the hardest winters in living memory, when we saw two weeks of temperatures below -20C.
Newport in Shropshire, a neighbouring county to Staffordshire, where we live, recorded the lowest ever instrumental UK temperature of -26.1C on 10th January 1982.
Paul Biggs says
Ann – this is your weather – from the Arctic to the UK!
Ann Novek says
Hi Paul,
Nice dog! I have one problem with my dog with snow, he’s a handsome Irishman ( Irish setter) with too long hair between the claws so there will be much snow attached to the paws.
Paul Biggs says
Hi Ann – eating the snow was the first thing my dog did this morning!
Paul Biggs says
Timo – Funny! Believe the Arctic hype and suffer the consequences!
Jennifer says
Thanks for the picture of your dog – wet nose and all!
And his name is?
Paul Biggs says
Lucky!
Neil Hewett says
I notice that only one of the five horses in the top photo is facing left whereas the other four are facing right. I wonder how their climate politics compare?
Paul Biggs says
You must have good eye sight, unless you’ve enlarged the photo!
The horses shouldn’t be there at all – it’s a flood plane that floods regularly – the river can just be seen where the bank is green.
Sid Reynolds says
Paul. I posted on another thread above, (off topic).. But did you see the pic of our Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, and wife attending church in Kent yesterday…. In heavy snow…After attending a conference of leaders of “Progressive Governments” on….You guessed it; “global warming”! Ha ha.
Re the cold winter of 1982; the UK apparently had a very severe winter in 1948. I believe I may have posted about this some time ago, after reading an account of it in Punch a couple of years ago. Quite graphic, some quotes from it.. “Skaters waltzed on the Trent, the Tyne and the Thames, where above the latter, Big Ben had not struck the hour for many days, with the hammer ice glued to the bell!”
Paul Biggs says
Indeed – the post war 1947/48 winter was severe from the point of view of its duration.
rog says
You know the old joke about this Russian, he was arguing with his wife about the weather, she said it would snow and he couldnt agree saying “rudolph the red nose rain dear”