The
friend who sent this to me takes it of evidence for an ice age - LOL
Spain
clocks up chilliest May since 1985
This
May has been the coldest in Spain since 1985, as the country braces
for what some meteorologists are saying could be the chilliest summer
in 200 years.
1
June, 2013
Spain’s
temperatures dropped by 1.2 degrees compared to the average 15.9 for
this time of year.
“Whereas
in the south of the country temperatures have been normal, in the
north of Spain it’s been three degrees colder this month,”
meteorologist Alejandro Lomas told national daily ABC.
Even
the Pyrenees are still covered in snow, making it possible for ski
resorts to remain open later than ever.
Lomas
told ABC this was due to the fact that March’s heavy snowfalls had
not yet thawed as a result of the drop in temperatures in the
mountain range along the French-Spanish border.
Spain’s
State Meteorological Agency AEMET has given little importance to
France’s Meteo predictions that this would be the coldest summer in
Western Europe in 200 years.
“Our
web doesn’t show anomalies for the summer, although it’s only a
model,” said Lomas, spokesperson for AEMET.
“Spanish
summers are unlikely to be cold.”
Lomas
forecasts that this weekend’s weather will bring showers to the
north of Spain but that overall temperatures will rise slightly.
Keep
your umbrellas handy for next week as the meteorologist has predicted
there will be stormy weather despite temperatures going up across the
mainland.
In
related news, local daily El Correo de Galicia has announced that the
city of Santiago de Compostela, famous for being the end point of the
Christian pilgrimage known as El Camino de Santiago, is the second
rainiest city in Europe (1,900 litres per square metre) after
Norway’s Bergen.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.