Nigel and Steve among new UK storm names

Blackleaf

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Britain could one day be hit by a storm given the very British name of Nigel; or it could be battered by Steve.

The UK Met Office has decided it wants to start naming storms affecting the UK and Ireland and has asked the public for suggestions.

Barney, Desmond, Steve, Tegan and Wendy are among the names chosen by members of the public who gave their suggestions by email, Facebook and Twitter.

A storm will be named when it is deemed potentially able to cause "substantial" impact on the UK or Ireland.

The full list of names chosen for future selection are: Abigail, Barney, Clodagh, Desmond, Eva, Frank, Gertrude, Henry, Imogen, Jake, Katie, Lawrence, Mary, Nigel, Orla, Phil, Rhonda, Steve, Tegan, Vernon and Wendy.

Experts have found that attaching a name to a weather event makes it easier to follow its progress and simpler to reference on social media.

Nigel and Steve among new storm names


BBC News
20 October 2015



Barney, Desmond, Steve, Tegan and Wendy are among the names chosen by members of the public to identify future storms affecting the UK and Ireland.

The Met Office announced the results after receiving thousands of responses via email, Facebook and Twitter.

It is hoped that naming storms will help raise awareness of severe weather and ensure people protect themselves.

A storm will be named when it is deemed potentially able to cause "substantial" impact on the UK or Ireland.

The full list of names chosen for future selection are: Abigail, Barney, Clodagh, Desmond, Eva, Frank, Gertrude, Henry, Imogen, Jake, Katie, Lawrence, Mary, Nigel, Orla, Phil, Rhonda, Steve, Tegan, Vernon and Wendy.



They will be taken from the list, in alphabetical order, alternating between male and female names, meaning the next severe storm will be known as Storm Abigail, followed by Storm Barney.

There is a name for each letter of the alphabet, excluding Q, U, X, Y and Z, which is the same naming convention as used in the US to help maintain consistency for North Atlantic storms.

Experts have found that attaching a name to a weather event makes it easier to follow its progress and simpler to reference on social media.

Severe weather in October 2013 was referred to as the St Jude's storm as it was due to arrive on St Jude's day.



Eben Owen Derrick Ryall, head of the public weather service at the Met Office, said at the time the name search was announced in September: "We have seen how naming storms elsewhere in the world raises awareness of severe weather before it strikes.

"We hope that naming storms in line with the official severe weather warnings here will do the same and ensure everyone can keep themselves, their property and businesses safe and protected at times of severe weather."

Nigel and Steve among new storm names - BBC News
 

Blackleaf

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The name Wendy was popularised by J.M. Barrie in his 1911 novel Peter and Wendy. Peter, of course, being Peter Pan.

Before then, hardly any female was called Wendy.

 

darkbeaver

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The UK Met Office has decided it wants to start naming storms affecting the UK and Ireland and has asked the public for suggestions.

Hahahahhaha the very British weather masters, one of the most incompetant national public weather forcasting disasters on the planet. Billions in un or mis forcasted weather events.


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Blackleaf

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Hahahahhaha the very British weather masters, one of the most incompetant national public weather forcasting disasters on the planet. Billions in un or mis forcasted weather events.



All down to the fact that the Met Office is a big believer in global warming, and so bases its long-term forecasts on that. It still hasn't cottoned on yet, even when its long-term forecasts keep being wrong. They'll realise eventually just why those global-warming-based long-term forecasts keep being wrong.

Having said that, the Met Office is still the best weather forecaster in the world and actually trains weather forecaster from all over the world at its Met Office College in Exeter.

Like many things British, it is the original and the best (modern weather forecasting started, of course, in Britain) and sets the benchmark for the rest of the world to aspire to.
 

Blackleaf

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The Met Office's ridiculous Americanisation of the British weather system, in which it has decided to give names to storms as though they are domestic pets, has given Britain its first ever named storm.

We're currently being battered by Abigail.


Storm Abigail: Power cut, schools closed and ferries cancelled

BBC News
13 November 2015



Snow showers have followed Thursday's high winds and heavy rain

Gusts of up to 84mph and lightning strikes left 12,000 properties without power at the height of Storm Abigail.

About 800 customers remain without electricity after 30 faults affected the Western Isles, Shetland, Skye, Colonsay, Argyll and Angus.

Every school on the Western Isles and Shetland is closed for safety reasons.

The high winds and rain have been followed by wintry showers which have affected driving conditions on the A9 at the Slochd in the Highlands.

Hills, including mountain tops in the Cairngorms and Lochaber, have had fresh falls of snow.

SSE Power Distribution said engineers had restored power to most of the 12,000 customers affected by power cuts and its engineers were working to reconnect 800 still without power.


Waves crashing in at Saltcoats in Ayrshire


Repairs being made to wind-blown damage in Shetland

The Met Office had an amber "be prepared" warning in place on Thursday for northern and western Scotland, but this has since been downgraded to a yellow "be aware" warning.

Ferry operator Caledonian MacBrayne said 23 of its 26 services on the Clyde and Hebrides network have been disrupted.

A number of Northlink's Northern Isles ferry services have also been affected. Early morning sailings between Stromness and Scrabster were cancelled.

On Thursday, a ferry travelling from Skye to Raasay was prevented from docking for three hours due to stormy conditions.

The journey would normally have taken 20 minutes, but CalMac confirmed the vessel - which had five Portree High School pupils on board - was at sea for longer than usual.


A ferry, just visible in this picture, with five school pupils onboard had to contend with bad weather earlier on Thursday


Lochaber Mountain Rescue Team have rescued a hillwalker who attempted to climb Ben Nevis via Observatory Gully as the weather closed in.

After the operation on Thursday evening, the team posted on social media that "on the scale of difficulty this route is certain death".

The casualty was found with chest injuries and lowered to safety at about 20:30.

The team added: "A very difficult rescue in atrocious weather with a very good outcome."


BBC weather watcher Angela took this picture from near her home on the Isle of Skye


Storm Abigail: Power cut, schools closed and ferries cancelled - BBC News