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Weather experts warn of 'worst winter'

Weather experts warn of 'worst winter' Weather experts warn of 'worst winter'

“WE are on course for the worst winter on record.”

That was the warning from weather experts last night as they forecast no let-up in the freezing conditions currently engulfing Hampshire.

Temperatures are unlikely to rise above freezing for at least another ten days and at night there could be a wind chill of –20C, they warned.

The county is also set for another dump of snow next week that could see the county grind to a standstill again.

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Independent weather expert and Daily Echo columnist Mark Ching, right, said that there was no sign of the cold snap easing its grip on Hampshire until the middle of January – and it could last a lot longer.

He said: “The cold weather is not going anywhere soon.

“The weather we have been experiencing recently is the worst we have had in 30 years.

As soon as any schools decide to close, we will post the information on this website.

“If it carries on like this towards the end of January and beyond we could be looking at a comparison with the legendary winter of 1963, which is the benchmark for modern winters.”

Mr Ching added that more snow is on its way next week for Hampshire, bringing with it similar icy conditions to those experienced this week with temperatures unlikely to get above freezing during the day. The Environment Agency confirmed that temperatures in Hampshire on Wednesday night plummeted to the lowest in nearly 20 years.

Hydrology expert Andy Roberts said that the air temperature on Wednesday night at their Otterbourne weather centre dropped to -8.8C, the lowest it has been in Hampshire since 1991.

“There is a chance that it’s going to get even colder as we’ve had clear skies and with wind chill taken into account it could get as low as -20C,” he said.

Yesterday the Met Office issued a severe weather warning for widespread ice on the county’s roads in a repeat of weather conditions which have brought the county to a standstill this week.

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Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service said that it had plans in place to ensure its emergency response during the cold snap and urged Hampshire residents to play their part in remaining safe and heed warnings about not travelling unless necessary.

The service has been working with South Central Ambulance Service, Hampshire Constabulary and local authorities to provide rescue services.

A spokeswoman for Royal Hampshire County Hospital said that all outpatient therapy appointments had been cancelled due to staff shortages but routine appointments were continuing as normal.

The treacherous conditions left wheelchair-bound residents trapped in their Romsey home.

Clients at the town’s Fryers House Leonard Cheshire centre have been stranded because the side road leading to the site is icebound.

Their carers have also struggled to make it into the building.

Meanwhile, business leaders in Hampshire said that companies around the county were finding ways to deal with the problems caused by the weather.

Captain Jimmy Chestnutt, director general of the Southampton and Fareham Chamber of Commerce, said: “We have seen varying levels of disruption affecting different sectors in different ways.

“Footfall in the city centre is down, which will have had an effect on the retail and hospitality sectors. Supermarket shelves aren’t quite as stocked as normal but deliveries are now getting through.

“However it seems most businesses are fully attended. It is difficult and tiresome and people are having to work a lot harder but businesses are just getting on with it.”

But as snow and ice trapped workers at home, 15 shops in Market Street, The Swan Centre closed yesterday. Several others were closing early.

In contrast it has been boom time for DIY giants B&Q and Homebase, who reported a rise in sales of weather-related items.

John Lennard, store manager at Homebase in Millbrook, said: “There’s been a real flurry of people buying essentials such as deicer, shovels, pipe lagging and heaters to combat the cold weather.

“We sold out of grit about a week ago and we have had none come in since. It’s been a real nightmare.”

Chandler’s Ford-based B&Q was reporting sales of rock salt up by 150 per cent, shovels up by 200 per cent and wellies up by 120 per cent.

Southampton Airport was last night operating normally, although some flights had been cancelled due to the knock-on effect of the poor weather.

Last night the Adverse Weather Office, based in the Hampshire Police Control Room, was closed.

It had been in operation since Tuesday afternoon, when the first of the snow hit Hampshire. A spokesman said that the rescue phase of the operation relating to the snowfall has been concluded.

Comments(19)

southy says...
6:39pm Fri 8 Jan 10

well so far its not has bad had the winter of 63 to 64, this time back in 64 there was at lest a 9inch of ice on the ground.
the river test had ice on it above the bridges, you could ice skate on the roads. cars was frozen to the ground.
no this is more like a lead up to a winter thats is coming that will be has bad. maybe next winter.

memush says...
7:32pm Fri 8 Jan 10

yeh some way to go yet.
62-63 cold spell started snowing on st. stephens day and snow was still around on st. patricks day.

southy says...
7:44pm Fri 8 Jan 10

memush wrote:
yeh some way to go yet.
62-63 cold spell started snowing on st. stephens day and snow was still around on st. patricks day.
that was the winter of 63-64, but 62-63 winter was a very cold one to, if i remember rightly we started to get real hard frosts at the end of sept then at the end of nov we had rain and high winds then back into hard frosts again then in the mid jan we had that snow that last for a mth and even when that snow had gone it still remained very cold.
winter of 81 to 82 recorded a temp of -22c in a greenhouse in glos

stickymcglue says...
7:49pm Fri 8 Jan 10

this "expert" should be sacked.
Meteo france and Weather channel both say the slow thaw will gather pace on wednesday and next weekend will see just below seasonal norm and much rain.
Low pressures are building in the atlantic and the scandinavian high will slowly retreat .....

News Fanatic says...
8:17pm Fri 8 Jan 10

The winter of 62-63 will take some beating. Most houses did not have central heating in those days and even heaters in cars were a luxury not installed as standard in the basic models. I went to school nevertheless and sat in my duffel coat in a freezing classroom for lessons. Kids these days have it easy.

Of the Ilk says...
8:27pm Fri 8 Jan 10

The winter of 62-63 (please note southy) was bad. Snow started on Boxing Day after freezing for many days before hand. Then there was a period of freezing rain putting a layer of ice on top of the snow and then more snow. Admittedly my memories are of Hertfordshire, where I spent my childhood, so it might not have been as bad in Hampshire.
We lived on a hill, a very local road, and I was always annoyed when the local council sent gritting lorries around on the first or second day after snow and ruined the tobogganing run - pity they are not able to clear the local roads these days!

eurogordi says...
8:52pm Fri 8 Jan 10

"Weather experts warn of 'worst winter'" - are these the same experts that predicted a barbeque summer and a mild winter? I'm no expert, but just looking at nature and the thick coats on the animals I keep, I'm predicting that cold, wintry weather will last until mid-March. I might be wrong, but if I'm proved correct please remember who told you first!!

southy says...
8:58pm Fri 8 Jan 10

no that was the winter of 63-64 i remember it to well, sunbathing in the morning on boxing day ( i was sat on the door step drinking a cup of tea with just my shorts on) that afternoon it was the family get together, it stated to snow about 4pm that afternoon it snowed for a few days, then warmed up a bit we had a bit of drizzle then it frozed up again and we had more snow on top off the ice and it then it happen again with a bit more drizzle and that frozed up with more snow on top in feb. i have a picture of it with my brother standing along side dads car (old trumph 7) and its dated picture taken on march 2nd 1964, that car had to be scrap to much damaged was done. we had no school till the end of the easter holidays and that was the only time in my school days was a the schools closed) but like you said it could of been different where you was at the time,
being in this part of the world in lowest spot in hampshire (the hampshire basin) our snowest and coldest winter winds weather all ways comes in from the south east, if its comes in from any other direction we escape the worse off it. like we did this time.

southy says...
9:10pm Fri 8 Jan 10

all though the 60's the winters was long and hard, remember seeing on the news that the raf and royal navy helicopters where dropping of food for people and animals all over the country where towns, villages and farms where cut off, and that did seem to happen year after year in the 60's
has that happen this time round the raf and navy dropping off food by helicopters.

Vconfused says...
10:11pm Fri 8 Jan 10

No. It was definitely 1964-5. You are both wrong. I remember the snow and the freezing temperatures from December 21st to the 5th February. And it was so much worse because we didn't have a car, and had to walk for hours to get to school when the bus wasn't running. We also only had a coal fire in the kitchen, and of course we ran out of coal and after a valiant attempt to gather wood we had to huddle together under our one quilt wearing all our clothes. Sob. sob.

Derek of Dibden Purlieu says...
10:59pm Fri 8 Jan 10

I know the redbridge sage is seldom right but he's wrong again. Just Google 'Winter 62-63' for the facts. Here's a quote from the lead page :-
"A Daily Summary of the Winter of 1962-63, the coldest since 1740 in many parts of England"
I'm not sure whether this was before the roads were resurfaced five times a day or after.

southy says...
11:22pm Fri 8 Jan 10

Vconfused wrote:
No. It was definitely 1964-5. You are both wrong. I remember the snow and the freezing temperatures from December 21st to the 5th February. And it was so much worse because we didn't have a car, and had to walk for hours to get to school when the bus wasn't running. We also only had a coal fire in the kitchen, and of course we ran out of coal and after a valiant attempt to gather wood we had to huddle together under our one quilt wearing all our clothes. Sob. sob.
lol yes that old coal fire in the kitchen, we had one of those new world coal boiler in the kitchen, that use to get very hot that it use to glow. and when the pipe became clogged with lime scale the noise it use to make. lol

southy says...
1:14am Sat 9 Jan 10

what derek dont tell you that big freeze that year started to thaw out on the 15th feb 63 and was all over on the 1st march. and the coldest feb on records was in 1947. but this is taken has a country average has a whole.
its like the great blizzard of 67 west southampton got hit the hardest. its like Of the Ilk, Eastleigh has said "Admittedly my memories are of Hertfordshire, where I spent my childhood, so it might not have been as bad in Hampshire."

espanuel says...
11:26am Sat 9 Jan 10

Southy, It was 62/63 and the snow started falling on boxing day, how do I know the year? I had just come back to the UK after a year away at sea and had two months leave and if YOU remember rightly it was still snowing in the March 63 oh I remember 1947 as well and 1952 anymore you want?

southy says...
1:03pm Sat 9 Jan 10

dad use to tell me about that feb in 47, that was his first winter at home after being de-mob after 8 years in the RN.
accourding to records and i have to refer to records when talking about the weather out side this area. why they call that year the big freeze 62-63, was because that year the river thames had frozen pass romley locks, the first time since 1876/77/78, and the time before that was in the 1700's,
any way if you look at the met office records for the winter of they show that the wind direction for that year was coming from the north east, the downs and plain protects us down in this part of the world from the worse of it, yes it would of been cold, but we would escape from the worse of the snow fall, the same thing happen on wed just gone, while people was posting it had started to snow, here it was raining and a guy over in totton said it was raining there to, even in woolston it snowed at the time it was raining here, thats because that snow had been caught in the itchen valley and traveled downed the valley, even lo they still did't get has much snow when you compare out side the hampshire basin. any way according to records for 62-63 the thaw had set in on feb 15th and it was all over on mar 1st,
the following winter of 63-64 the wind direction was different it was coming in from the south east, a direction that brings us the hottest weather in the summer or the coldest weather in the winter for us here in the hampshire basin. and it was the winter that it was the basin turn to get the worse off it, while out side the area they had a lot of snow and it was not so cold for them, but down here in the basin it was different.
watch and see happens on sunday and monday if the weather forecasters are right, that wind direction will be coming from a east to south east direction. and it will be bring snow with it. a more eastly direction and the downs will push the worse of it to the north, a more south east direction and it will dump most of it here has it travels up the 2 river valleys.

espanuel says...
1:14pm Sat 9 Jan 10

I dont know why I bother.

southy says...
3:02pm Sat 9 Jan 10

espanuel wrote:
I dont know why I bother.
espanuel it can be really cold, for a long time and i not saying it was not cold the whole of the 60's was cold winters. but you get snow coming in from northley direction the snow clouds have to get over the downs or the plain to get into the hampshire basin, and what happens when clouds start to rise, it dumps its load, thats why we escape the worse of it.
but when the the snow clouds come in from east end of the channel and comes up the river valleys the clouds start to rise and again it will dump its load and thats when we coup the worse of it. and the other side of the downs escapes the worse of it. its the same with rain.
you should know this being an ex-seaman, heck you should of been taught this in junior school

Derek of Dibden Purlieu says...
3:31pm Sat 9 Jan 10

espanuel wrote:
I dont know why I bother.
I think the village idiot is getting worse!

southy says...
4:47pm Sat 9 Jan 10

derek i cant help if you did not want to listen to your geography teacher. trying to teach you the basics, i bet you was the sort of kid because you did not like the lesson. you disrupted the rest of the class.

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