Blog Posts in "weather"

The Oncoming Storm

Graham Binns posted a photo:

The Oncoming Storm

Three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 80

A bad weather front sweeping over the sea front at Cleaveleys, Lancashire.

This would've worked better if I'd stood more in the centre of the promenade so that the building didn't take up as much of the image. I have no idea what the building is, by the way. It was just there.

The Gathering Storm

Posted at 20:30:37 on Tue, February 26th 2008 by graham
in: d40x heysham heyshamhead ocean photography rocks sea three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008 weather

Graham Binns posted a photo:

The Gathering Storm

Three hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 56

Not really happy with this; the sky at the left side of the image is blown and the rocks are too dark. It would've worked better had I had a 77mm grad ND filter handy, but I didn't.

Taken looking roughly Isle-of-Man-wards at Heysham head.

The long and winding road

Graham Binns posted a photo:

The long and winding road

Three-hundred and sixty-odd days of 2008, day 16

Actually it's pretty short as roads go, and is in fact the driveway leading up to our house, which is on an old farm site.

This was first time the rain let up today, so I went out with the 18-55mm lens (oh for a wider angle!) and an ND grad filter and snapped this.

Cropped (I really would like a wide angle lens so that I could get the feeling that I wanted; this was as close as I could manage) and colourised in the Gimp, but otherwise untouched.

Herbstlich

Posted at 21:37:39 on Mon, September 17th 2007 by graham
in: america autumn england home lancaster thoughts weather

It occurs to me that, in not following our Northern American brethren in adopting the word 'Fall' to name the third season of the year, and so instead sticking with the more poetic 'Autumn,' we've done ourselves out of a perfectly good verb. So although today in Lancaster Fall has most definitely fallen (Spring springs, after all) I can't get away with saying that Autumn has Autumned. It just doesn't work.

In fact, Autumn's arrival is pretty sudden, even for slightly-exposed, quite-near-the-Irish-sea, gets-all-the-weather-from-the-coast - and Cumbria - Lancaster. This morning the thermometer in the car, which I don't really trust at the best of times but which for the sake of this post we'll consider to be the most accurate thermometer in the immediate vicinity, possibly the only one in the vicinity, told me that it was 6.5°C. That's not just autumnal. That's positively Wintery.

It's a shame, too, because now that autumn has arrived on our doorstep I'm going to have to think more carefully about what I do around the house. Where before I could wander around any of the rooms in my bare feet, now I'll have to at least consider wearing socks all the time. Given my propensity for losing socks, that means that I'll have to buy more socks just to break even. The office will become the only haven of warmth in the house, kept that way by my PC, the stupendously hot-making lamp, whose bulb I was going to replace with an energy saving one, though I might reconsider it given the turn the temperatures have taken, and the water heater that sits in a cupboard in the corner of the room.

I'll find myself preparing Winter, with its condensation between the window panes and its frosty fingers creeping through every crack and niche. The world will get dark and it'll be even harder to drag myself to the gym in the mornings because it won't even be light by the time we're done working out. I'll find myself wishing, once again, that we had an open fire - or indeed a fire at all, come to that - so that we could snuggle close to it and each other in the evenings and listen to the wind howling outside. The phone line will go down at least once in the next six months, due to cold and ice and rain and driving wind, and BT will once again demonstrate their utter ineptitude whilst repairing it.

All that said, though, for a moment, just a moment, I loved stepping outside this morning. The air was cold, but not freezing, just crisp enough for you to feel it at the back of your nose and the corners of your mouth. There's an earthy smell to the air; the smell of leaves preparing to drop, of grass and hay being cut for the last time, of cows who will soon enough be confined to wintering sheds and who are taking this opportunity to avail themselves of all the biological freedoms that being outside allows them.

In a few weeks it'll get colder still, and there'll be a snap and crackle to the morning air. By mid-October you'll be able to smell bonfire night coming, the air full of smoke and gunpowder and cordite and mulled wine. Writing this has just reminded me that I won't be here for bonfire night, a fact that makes me oddly sad. There's always a good firework display at the castle on the Saturday nearest to November 5th and I'll miss it this year because I'll be in Cambridge, MA, doing work things and for reasons which matter more to them than me our American neighbours don't let off fireworks in Fall, more fool them.

Autumn is here. It has fallen, it has autumned, it is starting to arrive. I'm going to enjoy it.         

Quite possibly damp

Posted at 07:23:48 on Sat, July 21st 2007 by graham
in: lancaster london travel weather

There's a lot of this going on today, so there's a possibility that I may not make it home this afternoon. Virgin trains and the National Rail web service both tell me that trains to Lancaster are running but "subject to delays due to diversions and speed restrictions." I'll quite happily sit on a train for eight hours if it means that I'll get home before the end of Saturday; my only request is that, unlike on the train down to London, the air conditioning work in my carriage, please?

It's times like this (specifically when I'm trying to get anywhere and am not sure I can, I'm ashamed to say) that I am given to be thankful for this series of tubes (it's not a truck). Quite apart from the fact that its existence keeps me in work year after year it also means that I can sit here, safe an secure in my hotel room, and find out whether or not it's worth my bother going out to Euston this morning, which as far as I'm concerned must rank pretty highly on the scale of useful things the interweb can do for me.

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About

Graham Binns is a writer, photographer, musician and software developer from Lancaster, England, with far too much hair, a penchant for odd t-shirts and a magnificent hat. He has been making things up for as long as he can remember and has been making code work for long enough to make a living from it.

He has written one novel, which is in the process of composting, and is working remembering how to write before embarking on a second. In the meantime, he photographs things, since it's easier not to have to make the world up in his head all of the time.

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