Pembrokeshire Dangler

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Heavy snow in Liskeard, Cornwall on Friday 25th November, 2005 as a result of a potent Pembrokeshire Dangler
Heavy snow in Liskeard, Cornwall on Friday 25th November, 2005 as a result of a potent Pembrokeshire Dangler

Pembrokeshire Dangler is a meteorological term used to describe a convergence zone which forms a line of continuous showers aligned north-south across the Irish sea; often as snow occurring during late Autumn and Winter, since the environmental factors required for its formation such as warm sea temperatures and cold Arctic air aloft are usually only met at this time of year.

It is initiated as a northerly flow is forced between the Rhins of Galloway and the Antrim Plateau. This is then augmented by land breeze effects producing winds blowing from east of north off of England and Wales and from west of north off of Éire; these winds then converging down the length of the Irish Sea. As the convergence line spawns deep convective cells, they flow over progressively warmer waters creating further instability and prime conditions for prolonged convection across Pembrokeshire, Cornwall and west Devon.

The Pembrokeshire Dangler gave 20cms of snow across Bodmin Moor and across parts of northwest Devon, particularly around Barnstaple on the 25th November 2005, causing considerable travel chaos.

© Nigel Bolton (2005)