Meteorological Trip to Guernsey

News / Meteorological Trip to Guernsey

WQ Senior Meteorologist Ruby Warner took part in the PPL/IR Europe Spring Conference

Over the bank holiday weekend of the 23rd – 25th of May, Ruby, one of our Senior forecasters, took a trip to the Private Pilot Instrument (PPL/IR Europe) flying community Spring conference on the Isle of Guernsey. PPL/IR Europe is a non-profit organisation that assists with achieving and maintaining instrument qualifications on aeroplanes under EASA and UK-CAA certification [1]. Ruby flew out to Guernsey on a small aircraft, with conditions being bright and sunny. Once landed, Ruby underwent a tour of the Guernsey and Herm islands, before reaching St Pierre Park Hotel where the conference was being held.

The following day, Ruby delivered three two-hour long breakout sessions covering several meteorological topics relevant to aviation, including mid-latitude cyclone development and understanding tephigrams. The sessions focused on aviation hazards such as convection and how lightning and hail is formed, as well as cloud structure and icing. Ruby also highlighted some useful opensource resources which can be used to help identify potential meteorological hazards and gain confidence in the forecast.

Ruby had a fantastic time overall and found it incredibly rewarding sharing knowledge on understanding the weather pilots may be flying in, making aviation safer for all! Thank you PPL/IR Europe for hosting and allowing Ruby to take part!

  1. PPL/IR Europe, 2025 (https://pplir.org/instrument-flying/)

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RMetS East Anglia Centre: Up Next

News / RMetS East Anglia Centre: Up Next

Thank you to all those who came to an incredibly fascinating talk about why Tornado Alley and the Great Plains are so unique in producing large-scale storms. Hearing the anecdotal stories from Chris, and seeing his fantastic images alongside was awesome (hearing the NOAA Tornado Warning was our highlight)!

After the success of this first talk, the RMetS East Anglia Centre already has two more booked in. The first of which, on the 4th of November at 6pm in the University Of East Anglia’s Julian Study Centre, is a talk from the East Anglia Centre’s very own chairs, Berna McCaffrey and James Lester, about their journey from being students all the way to working as operational meteorologists. If you are a student looking to get into meteorology, this is definitely one for you!

Chris Bell talking about tornado probability.
Chris Bell talking about tornado probability.

The next, on the 2nd December, will be about how to hunt the Aurora Borealis (the Northern Lights) here in the UK. Led by James Rowley-Hill (who runs Aurora UK Facebook group), the talk will cover a basic understanding of reading and the interpreting the solar wind, how it is used to predict aurora, and some simple camera tips to help you capture some stunning photos of the lights themselves. With the number of times they has been visible recently, it is definitely a hot topic, and we can’t wait to hear how to improve our Aurora sighting bragging snaps!

We hope to see you there!For any more information regarding upcoming RMetS East Anglia Centre local events, please head to their website on the link below.

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Relaunching the RMetS East Anglia Centre

News / The RMetS East Anglia Centre

The Royal Meteorological Society East Anglia Local Centre is making a comeback! Two of our WeatherQuest forecasters (James Lester and Bernadette McCaffrey) are relaunching the Royal Meteorological Society’s (RMetS) East Anglia Centre this autumn. The Centre will meet 6 times a year, with topics aimed to meet a broad range of subjects from across meteorology and climate. Each meeting will be free of charge, and available to members and non-members. Professional meteorologists (working or retired), under- and postgraduate students, or members of the public with an interest in all things meteorology and climate, all are welcome!

The first talk, hosted at the University of East Anglia’s Julian Study Centre on the 7th of October, is from our very own Chief Communication Officer – Chris Bell. The talk will focus on Storm Chasing in the American Great Plains, and what makes them so unique for producing such large storms and tornadoes. Despite residing here in the UK, Chris grew up in Texas and has made many a trip back to the USA to chase storms through the infamous “Tornado Alley” of the Great Plains. Chris will talk about his own experience in storm chasing, where, why and how people do it, and then delve into the science behind the storms, explaining how they are produced, and what time of year these large supercells/tornadoes normally occur. With his experience in forecasting, meteorology and storm chasing, it is looking to be a fascinating talk!

Tornado over a field in Kansas
A large storm outside Hereford, Texas

To find out more and register for the event, please visit the event page on the RMetS website via this link. More events will be planned before the end of the year which will be announced in due course and added to the Local Centre’s webpage (see link below).

Thank you to James and Bernadette for putting in the work to bring regular meetings back to this local Centre. We are looking forward to see what else the RMetS Anglian Centre has in store!

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Off to the EGU General Assembly!

News / The EGU General Assembly

Dan Smith, Research Meteorologist, taking part in EGU General Assembly

Later this April one of our Research Meteorologists, Dr Dan Smith, will be heading to Vienna, Austria, to take part in the European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly conference. The EGU is one of Europe’s leading organisations for Earth, planetary and space science research, and has over 19,000 members from across the continent. Publishing a wide range of journals and organising meetings, education sessions and outreach activities, they aim to advance fundamental research that addresses key socioenvironmental challenges.

Each year they hold a General Assembly, a large week-long conference which encourages members and non-members to take part in the different programme groups available. There are main disciplinary sessions which cover topics decided by each different scientific division, transdisciplinary lectures, debates, short courses as well as education and outreach workshops all on different days throughout the week. Two main subjects, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences are of interest to Dan who splits his time being a Research Meteorologist with WeatherQuest and being a Researcher at the University of East Anglia (UEA). Some of the sessions in these subjects include:

  • Numerical Weather Prediction, Data Assimilation and Ensemble Forecasting
  • From mesoscale Convection to Convective-Scale Predictions: Advances in Process Modelling, Observations, Data Assimilation and Machine Learning
  • Forecasting the Weather
  • Subseasonal-to-Seasonal Prediction, Processes and Applications
  • Modelling and Measuring Snow Processes Across Scales
  • Aviation Meteorology, Nowcasting and the use of UAS for Atmospheric Sciences
  • Precipitation: Measurement, Climatology, Remote Sensing and Modelling
  • Clouds, Aerosol, Radiation and Precipitation interactions
  • Oceanography at coastal scales: Modelling, Coupling, Observations and Applications
  • Observing and Modelling the Imprint of Meso- and Submesoscale Dynamics
  • Open Session on Coastal and Shelf Seas
  • Eddies, Waves and Instabilities: Observing, Modelling, and Parameterizing Oceanic Energy Transfers
  • Observing, forecasting, and projecting the Global Coastal Ocean (CoastPredict)

Aside from this, Dan is presenting a poster in the “Aerosol Emissions and Properties, Ice Nucleating Particles, Cloud Processes and Radiative Feedbacks: From Observations to Modelling” session, linking to his research at UEA. By having Dan on the ground heading to these sessions, it helps keep us up to date on the current science, gives us ideas on how we can improve all our services, and whether there are any areas of research we could investigate. We look forward to hearing what Dan will learn from this trip!

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UEA Meteorology Field Course

News / UEA Meteorology Field Course

UEA students head off to the Lake District!

WeatherQuest has always had very strong links to the University of East Anglia and the School of Environmental Sciences (Env). Not only are we located on campus, many of our past and present employees are Env graduates and some are current members of the faculty, a lecturer and researcher. One such faculty member is our very own Chris Bell (CCO), who leads a module in Applied Meteorology for second year students. As part of the module, every year in mid-Spring Chris and the enrolled students embark on a week-long field course to the Lake District, with the main focus being the micro- and macro-meteorology of the area and Cumbria respectively.

At the beginning of the week, the students record what the computer forecasts are for the synoptic situation over Cumbria for the week, taking note of any changes and the general weather for each day (max and min temps and wind speeds etc). They then erect a weather mast in a location carefully chosen for its interesting micro-meteorology (e.g. downwind of a hill). This mast has an array of meteorological equipment attached, including solarimeters, wind vanes, anemometers and thermometers, with their measurements all being logged and recorded.

Throughout the rest of the week the students complete different meteorological activities, ranging from manual weather data collection (using hygrometers and anemometers), cloud observation exercises, launching a weather balloon, drone flying and met office station or other site visits. This year, it is planned that the site visit will be a walking tour of Keswick with the Environment Agency, talking about flooding and its impacts in the area. As the lake district is one of the wettest areas in the UK, flooding is a major issue in the national park and those who live in it. At the end of each day, the students then take part in a weather briefing, whereby they look at the current synoptic situation, forecast models and any weather warnings to create a presentation that they present to the rest of the cohort.

At the end of the week, the students collate the synoptic data from the week along with their logged weather mast micro-meteorology data in preparation for their assessments following the trip. Then on the final evening before heading home the next day, they take a well needed trip to the local pub, rounding the whole week off.

When home, the students then spend time completing their assessment. The first part involves comparing how well the forecasts at the beginning of the week matched the synoptic change experienced. They can then use this information to help with the second part, exploring how the micro-meteorology changed throughout the same period. They do this by completing complex calculations from the weather mast measurements, finding variables such as turbulence, sensible and latent heat flux and net radiation. They then relate this micro-meteorology to the synoptic changes (e.g. a cold front pushed through the lake district, causing the temperatures to drop along with a reduction in solar radiation).

Not only is this trip incredibly fun and informative for the students, but it also does help prepare them for a job in the world of occupational meteorology, which is very beneficial. Chris is looking forward to this year’s trip, with his fingers crossed for some interesting weather to occur!

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Agriculture Day at Norwich Science Festival!

News / Agriculture Day at Norwich Science Festival!

Norwich Science Week – Food and Farming!

On Sunday 18th Feb, the Norwich Science Festival held its day for all things agriculture, aiming to show all those who visited “the journey food takes, from fields, to farms all the way to the end of our forks”! Agriculture is one of the main sectors we supply a service for, so it was a pleasure to be invited to take part on this day.

We got the chance to show off some of our favourite weather instruments, including the anemometer (the fastest wind speed created by a visitor blowing into the anemometer was 74 mph – the equivalent of a storm!), whirling hygrometers (what we use to measure humidity) and the rather topical rain gauges (over the weekend, some parts of Norfolk saw more than 30mm of rain, leading to local flooding).

On top of this we had a display weather balloon (which in operation can reach heights of ~25 km –with the balloon reaching the size of a small car), three example radiosondes that would be attached to the balloon (normally measuring humidity and temperature, also containing a GPS for wind speed and direction) and a video of a balloon release. This generated a lot of conversation about how we use the data from weather balloon radiosondes, the five stations across the British Isles that release them and the worldwide balloon network.

This then allowed us to go into greater detail about how forecasts work, by measuring the current weather data, then inputting this to weather patterns and computer models to help determine what the weather will be, an hour, a day or even a week into the future.

Finally, we showed a couple of maps relating to our agricultural research, including the locations of vineyards across the UK, sparking conversation on how climate change will cause the suitable grape-growing areas to shift, causing more British vineyards to pop up in the future!

Overall, we at WeatherQuest had a fantastic time talking to all the visitors, letting them know a bit about forecasting and the role we play in the agricultural field (pun intended), so thank you for coming along and saying hi if you did! We also thank the Norwich Science Festival for inviting us and hope to return next year for more!

Race for Life – Pretty Muddy Norwich

News / Race for Life – Pretty Muddy Norwich

Race for Life – Pretty Muddy Norwich

On Saturday, 13th May, some of our employees completed the Pretty Muddy Race for Life fun run, helping to raise much-needed money for Cancer Research UK.

Our team, The WeatherQuest Stormchasers, did exceptionally well, battling mud-filled obstacles, bouncing on space hoppers, and getting sprayed with water cannons filled with mud, all over a distance of 5km. 

Chief Information Officer Ian Gooch said, “I couldn’t be prouder of our team! We all did amazingly well!

Our team raised over £1000, which contributed to a total for the Norwich event of a whopping £108,000 directly for Cancer Research UK. 

Thank you again, everyone, for your support and donations. It was a fun but very emotional day as it’s a charity close to many people’s hearts.”

Our donation page is still open if you wish to support our team and Cancer Research UK.

Ian https://lnkd.in/ev7wFv8W

Adam https://lnkd.in/eGp26Xni

Nicola https://lnkd.in/eR5QM7cD

Bonnie https://lnkd.in/eVjdxNBe

Forecast Calls for Mud!

News / Forecast Calls for Mud!

Forecast Calls for Mud!

Some of our WeatherQuest employees have entered this year’s Norwich Pretty Muddy 5k fun run under the team name of WeatherQuest Storm Chasers.
The run will be held at the Norfolk showground on Saturday, 13th May 2023.

Race for Life Pretty Muddy is a brilliant 5k muddy obstacle course with a scramble over the A-frame and a crawl through the mud pit.
As well as a great fun day, the event raises valuable funds for life-saving cancer research.
If you wish to support our team, please see the link for each member.

Ian
https://lnkd.in/ev7wFv8W
Adam
https://lnkd.in/eGp26Xni
Nicola
https://lnkd.in/eR5QM7cD
Bonnie
https://lnkd.in/eVjdxNBe

Each member’s donations will all contribute towards the WeatherQuest Storm Chasers total.

Thank you for your support 🙂