Wild Weather with Richard Hammond

Blackleaf

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When he's not co-presenting the world's most-watched factual TV series, Top Gear's Richard Hammond is presenting science documentaries.

His latest - Wild Weather with Richard Hammond - started last night on BBC One. The new, three-part series will see Hamster travelling the world to look at some seriously wild and wonderful weather.

In last night's episode one, the presenter looked at wind. He visited Mount Washington in New Hampshire. The mountain is one of the windiest places on Earth and, in 1934, one of the highest wind speeds ever recorded on land was measured there - 231mph. The mountain is home to gale force winds for around a third of the year and Hammond has to wear protective gear to stop his body parts being blown off.

Hammond also witnesses a man-made "fire tornado" in Western Australia; visits tornado chasers in Oklahoma; and stands INSIDE a tornado in Ontario.

Episode 1

Wind: The Invisible Force


Richard Hammond on Mount Washington, one of the windiest places on Earth. In 1934, wind speeds of 231 mph were measured there

Richard Hammond investigates how wind actually starts. He visits one of the windiest places on the planet, walks into the centre of a man-made tornado and creates a 10-metre high whirlwind - made of fire!

Along the way he is part of a world first when he joins up with an American meteorologist called Reed Timmer and a bizarre vehicle known as The Dominator III. Their aim is to succeed in doing what no one has ever done before, fire a probe into a tornado to measure its speed where it is at its fastest - right next to the ground. As Reed explains, 'near the base of the tornado is one of the biggest mysteries of tornado science and it's also the most important to understand because those are the wind speeds... that cause all the destruction'. To put that right, Reed and his team take The Dominator into the middle of a real live tornado and attempt to fire a probe into the very heart of it.

Richard also visits one of the few places on the planet capable of duplicating a real-life tornado. The Wind Engineering, Energy and Environment Research Institute (or WindEEE for short) in Ontario in Canada, hadn't even opened its doors when Richard asked them to take part in an experiment. The 23 million dollar facility is one of the the world's first hexagonal wind tunnels. As Richard says, 'I've got goosebumps. And that's not just because it's cold in here!'

Richard braves the winds and temperatures of -50 degrees fahrenheit to take a trip outside on top of Mount Washington in New Hampshire. On April 12th 1934, that station measured one of the highest wind speeds ever measured on land - 231 mph.



Watch it here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b04tqghf/wild-weather-with-richard-hammond-1-wind-the-invisible-force
 
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Blackleaf

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Episode 2

Water: The Shape Shifter



Richard Hammond investigates the crucial role water plays. Without water there would be almost no weather: no rain, no snow, no hail, no clouds. So Richard goes in pursuit of water in all its forms. He tries to weigh a cloud in Dartmoor; he finds out how rain could crush a car; and he gets involved in starting an avalanche.

Along the way, he tries to find out why clouds float by building his own cloud with the aid of a cattle trough, some humidifiers and atmospheric scientist Dr Jim McQuaid. But will their cloud float in the air like a real cloud?

The Top Gear presenter visits his favourite place in the world - Borrowdale in the Lake District - which is, officially, the wettest place in England.

He also drops in on renowned hail scientist Charles Knight in his lab in Boulder, Colorado, to discover that there is far more to hail than meets the eye. In a scientific first, and with the help of Jim Stratton and Craig Zehrung from Purdue University, Richard sets about firing ice and hail at a board to find out which does the most damage.

Finally, in conjunction with the WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research SLF in Davos, Richard joins Walter Steinkogler as he starts an avalanche in an attempt to find out how something as delicate and fragile as a snowflake can travel at extraordinary speeds of up to 250mph on the ground.

Watch it here: BBC iPlayer - Wild Weather with Richard Hammond - 2. Water: The Shape Shifter
 

Blackleaf

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In this third and final episode, Hamster looks at temperature. Along the way he uses thermals to fly paper helicopters in a Bedfordshire quarry and travels to Australia - the source of most of the world's dust - to make a sandstorm. He also gets to HEAR lightning and SEE thunder.

Episode 3

Temperature - The Driving Force




Richard Hammond investigates the crucial role temperature plays in all weather. Without heat, there would be no weather - no clouds, no rain, no snow, no dust storms, no thunder and lightning.

Richard sets off to find out about hot air with the help of a quarry and a massive hot plate and discovers just why it is so hard to pull a sword out of snow. He discovers, by building his own massive dust storm with the help of a few friends and dust specialist Dr Nigel Tapper, just how sand from the Sahara bounces its way to the UK.

In Canada he creates his own ice storm. He also drops in on Dan Morgan who creates lightning bolts in his lab, where Richard is able to see thunder and hear lightning with the aid of some special cameras, light bulbs and a few candles.



Watch it here: BBC iPlayer - Wild Weather with Richard Hammond - 3. Temperature: The Driving Force
 

Mowich

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Eagle Creek
Looking forward to watching it when PBS or Knowledge get the series - sounds very interesting. Thanks, BL.