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Babysitting at twelve o'clock Good afternoon I'm least alt's a man is feared to to have drowned in the Wakefield area a search has been ongoing to try to find a thirty two year old from Eastern Europe who went swimming in Horbury lagoon last night police fire and ambulance services are involved to lorry drivers have been charged over a crash on the M one in Milton Keynes which left eight people dead those killed were in a minibus which collided with two lorries and the more reports Thames Valley Police said they had today charged Reshad Missouri achoo thirty one with eight counts of causing death by dangerous driving of four counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving he's Additionally charged with eight counts of causing death by careless driving while over the proscribed alcohol limit David Wagstaff is fifty three he's on bail accused of twelve counts of causing death or injury by dangerous driving police said this morning that the four people injured in the crash was still in hospital in a serious condition police investigating an incident during which officers were confronted with a four foot sword outside Buckingham Palace on Friday night have arrested a second man a thirty year old has been detained in west London a twenty six year old man from Luton is still being questioned a man is due to appear in court after being charged with attempted murder following an incident in Leeds a forty year old man was stabbed outside a Sainsbury's on a road in Headingley in the early hours of yesterday morning twenty two year old Robin S. Psychologists of privilege news will go in front of Leeds magistrates to morrow a teenage boy from Bradford has now been missing for the past two days but police have told us there have been some sightings of Dylan Keenan who's thirteen he was last seen on a confirmed basis on Tara Sol road at half past seven on Friday morning police are looking into a fight in Keathley footage of which may be. Circulating via social media officers say there was an alleged incident on both streets on Wednesday teatime two men are believed to have been involved and it's thought that both sustained minor injuries plane spotters close to Leeds Bradford airport may be indulging in anti-social behavior being asked to have more respect since another nearby viewing area was cordoned off the enthusiasm of been using you didn't symmetry to keep an eye on the aircrafts but locals say they've been leaving letter Sunday Les is a local councillor he says the problem might not be so easy to sort out most of the solutions would have an impact on the disabled the frail the elderly and if you're to make use of the cemetery. Consider barriers at the entrance which is considered the posts that would stop vehicles coming in but then that would affect those who have legitimate business in the cemetery to sport has been quite the start to the day three of England's second test with the West Indies Dave Callahan's added here I'll say right lay it was remarkable two wickets into a ball for England leading wicket taker Jimmy Anderson he got rid of hope aided by Jonny Busters catch and then Joe Root figure than the next one as direct went to him too but then a good fight back we've also seen the Alyea put down a straightforward catch and the West Indies have recovered where black put on forty freeholder on thirty nine three ninety one for seven they lead by one hundred thirty three and on this first day it's a splendid Test match and for all four Premier League games today they include champions Chelsea at home to Everton West Brom start a half one when they host stoke the. West Yorkshire weather B.B.C. Radio this week continue to enjoy plenty of bright and sunny spells across West Yorkshire today perhaps not wall to wall blue sky all the time but certainly plenty of sunny spells enough for cost and like to ends with temperatures reaching around twenty two Celsius so feeling pleasant enough that dry overnight with a few clear spells overhead as well a couple of missed them. Dogpatch Is it possible another dry unsettled state to come tomorrow with a bright and sunny spells cloudy later on and highs of twenty three Celsius which is seventy two Fahrenheit. Hello welcome to the pole while the show from the B.B.C. Across Yorkshire Lincolnshire North Little is and of course online while I'm back from my Somali is a very big thank you to the lovely Kelly Donovan for sitting in on the weather show for the past three weeks well on the show today the World Cup The Open Wimbledon how are the pictures kept in tip top condition whatever the weather I'll be talking to a man from Bingley who prepares the turf a sports events from London to Rio the shipping forecast is one hundred fifty years old I'll be celebrating with Penny Tranter from the Met Office the first ever lead to climate commission is taking place next month and it could save seven point three billion pounds a year across the country I'll be finding out how the weather is always a challenge for photographers but in the hands of professionals like Charlotte Brett the results a stunning I'll be talking to her about the Galapagos price and my weather watcher of the Week this week has taken some great photos to be meeting Fiona from Tuttle's hall in Lincolnshire That's all coming up on the weather show this week and my look at the weather. The Hudson weather show from the feel. Well as well as the weather channel got some great music for you as always including Queen The Beatles and this from Annie Lennox this is walking on broken glass. I. Move. To. Split. The slow. To. Wow. Wow. And he looks on the pole and some of the show on the B.B.C. Coming out following the floods we've seen across the region in recent years the city of Leeds he's leading the way on how to tackle challenging climate it could save the economy billions of pounds while on the gold sun he's with me to tell me all about the brand new leads Climate Commission very shortly first of all we've been out about collecting your questions is this week's My name is Simon. Question being When do we expect warm weather Well the press this week has been obsessing about the prospects of an Indian so much next week well can we put that. It's a bad an Indian summer the definition Indian Summer is warm weather at the end of October so I don't know quite why they think there's going to be an Indian summer at the end of August as regards the settling down of the weather of course it's sent out to be after a lovely spring a very disappointing July in August and if you know listeners of this show will remember that I did point out that the climate books don't favor a nice summer following a nice April in particular Donna White why it is but whenever we have warm settled weather in spring particularly in the April in April the type of time invariably summer ends up quite wet but there is a sort of a silver lining to the cloud because sin variably September can turn out to be a decent month following what has been a poor summer so fingers crossed we may well see an improvement as we head into September I hope that helps Simon we'll have some more next week and if you've got a question you can tweet me heard some weather all out weather show B.B.C. Or you can of course message me on Instagram Paul the weatherman or you can email the show here's how fast email Weather dot show the B.C. Doco got you. While this is the Pollards another show on the B.B.C. The first ever Leeds Climate Commission is taking place next month and it could save seven point three billion pounds a year across the country what's more there were more employment apparently and cleaner cities but how is all this going to happen or professor and Goldstein He's chair of the Leeds Climate Commission and professor of environmental policy at the University of Leeds Welcome back and they thank you friend of the show a regular now now we've spoken to you about low carbon cities before and you attended the famous Paris Climate Commission in two thousand and fifteen Now you're launching the brand new leads Climate Commission just tell us how. That came about what it's all about what you had for well we're in a kind of weird phase in the U.K. At the moment with with breaks it with austerity and these things are really impacting on cities in Leeds you know they've been severe cuts in what the city council can do and so we thought you know it's struggling to lead on climate action in the way that perhaps it could have done a few years ago and that we as a city collectively need to step up and bring together you know the key organizations to take responsibility and lead on this agenda and we've done that in a way which is focused on the kind of economic benefits of climate action in the city whether that's to do with energy and carbon or whether it's to do with whether extreme weather events and flooding and that kind of thing so it's a new organization brings together all the key actors across the city to build our capability to lead on this really important agenda going back to the point that you said the Lead City Council have already had their cash cut as a result of Bragg's it just explain to me why that is was more austerity than breaks it but it's not helping in some ways you know over the last what nearly ten years now local authorities have had their budgets cut and cut and at the same time the costs of providing some of the things they have to provide like education social care of been going up so there's a kind of pincer movement and their budget to do discretionary things which are not legally obligatory as it were including climate change is going down and down and so you know not just leads by any means but all a plethora these are struggling to do things which I think the public still expect them to do and that could be you know managing parks or filling potholes or you know collecting waste or range of other things but it's certainly also includes climate change which is a huge concern for the city directly as we saw with the floods eighteen months ago but also in other ways which are perhaps a bit less visible like the scale of the energy bill for example the opportunities to tackle fuel poverty or to improve public health for you know a wide range of other things which you know are at risk of not being addressed in the way that they need to be now your research. The University of Leeds say seven saving seven point three billion pounds which is equivalent to turn into a nine pounds per household per year that space some attorneys you believe fifteen require Yeah I mean how do you propose that this will happen it's a lot of money over seven billion pounds it's a huge amount of money yeah and it's a huge wasted opportunity at the moment and our argument is it is twofold really that national government does need to step up and do a bit more you know so breaks it is crowding out a lot of other legislation that could be going through a lot of other policy initiatives which are not getting any airtime at the moment a parliamentary process time because you know the government so concerned with other things so you know national government could do a little bit unlock this enormous opportunity but at the local level we also need to be innovative we need to think in new ways and run our cities and towns in different ways and that involves not relying on local authorities or the city council to do everything by actually stepping up and taking responsibility ourselves so for leads that the Climate Commission has brought together thirty of the biggest organizations across the city from the public sector say the N.H.S. The two universities from the private sector many of our biggest businesses and from the third sector say lots of community groups and and charities and so on to say well we can do something about this we don't just have to sit here and you know be washed along by Breck's or austerity or all the other things which have left some of us you know pretty depressed actually we can step up we can be positive we can find new ways of unlocking these huge opportunities and some of these opportunities are just economic we're wasting tons and tons of money at the moment and if we think laterally if we innovate if we do different things we can unlock huge savings for the city create enormous numbers of jobs and you know whether you are whether or not you you're concerned about climate change these are things you ought to be thinking about for the city and for the country at large and what we're wasting money well. There's a lot of energy and efficiency across the city lots of profitable opportunities for low carbon technologies solar panels renewables of different sorts in our transport systems in our industry and in our buildings you know hospitals schools restaurants office blocks you know we're a long way behind where we could be and there's lots of profitable opportunities that are going on addressed at the moment and we need to kind of build our capacity and perhaps create new funds and new ways of investing to unlock these kind of benefits and all the research shows that there are enormous savings and job creations possible if we do that it's just we haven't quite managed to nail it yet and we think in these we could and home insulation still a big issue isn't it a lot of energy is wasted because of lack of insulation Absolutely and you know not just on the low carbon side but on the climate resilience side I think of the impacts of flooding I mean we've had a brief taste of that this morning. You know the amount of disruption that was caused the amount of loss workdays that's caused through extreme flooding events not to mention the social you know impacts and massively distressing impacts of people's homes being flooded you know we could be more resilient and we could avoid a lot of that in the future and all the science says there's a lot more of that coming in the future so we need to be more ready than we are so we've already seen extremes as you've mentioned we've called this on a Wednesday there's been flash flooding across parts of North and West Yorkshire what changes will we see if your ideas are adopted so we plan to convene a finance working group to decide how we can raise enormous amounts of money and not necessarily from big banks or you know distant investors but one of our ideas is to stimulate community investment so that people maybe instead of putting their money and building societies and getting you know two percent returns or whatever it would be could invest in a community found to invest in energy efficiency and that we could you know build our capability to channel enormous flows of investment into the city and then also to retain the benefits. Those investments so they don't leak out the local economy and go to some you know distant land instead they stay in the city and carry on generating you know jobs and employment and economic and social benefits at the same time as cutting carbon and you lodge in your findings it leads me to see him on the some to September what's happening and can any one of our listeners go along and listen in we have a launch nearly at capacity actually so we're nearly nearly full We have two hundred fifty people so coming right Judith Blake the leader of the council is opening the event we then have a lot Dave in his chair of the National Committee on Climate Change speaking and this is the first time when a city is try to kind of down scale a national plan down to the city scale plan and and kind of innovate in that way and then we have a range of other speakers talking about what we're going to be doing in the city beyond and then also be a Leeds climate forum so if people want to engage in that you know not just at the launch but after that they'll be roughly quarterly events and we want to hear from people we want to hear people's views and concerns feed them into the climate action planning in the city and make sure that we you know represent social concerns as well as you know the concerns of the biggest organizations in the city well under Goldson Good luck with that hope it goes well in the September thank you for joining us thank you Sandy Golson chair of the Leeds Climate Commission professor of environmental policy at Leeds University this is fall from one thousand nine hundred eighty two. Radio Leeds. High looks down the telescope one beautiful star evening with a legend that is Brian May Garris gates and here's how I felt when my very title George Michael congratulated me when I picked him to the number one spot station for your show and I'm looking forward to sharing all the squeeze you in my very own to our show on B.B.C. Radio Leeds scarabs gay. Because a Monday. B.B.C. Radio Les needs. The Hudson weather show from the field. Now the Met Office is celebrating one hundred fifty years of the Shipping Forecast. Three zero today Tuesday the twelfth of January there are warnings gales in tiny dog fish and German bite Humber Thames Dover white Portland Plymouth Biscay for Troy sole fast Irish Sea Shannon. Fair Isle Theros and southeast Iceland. Said to be the longest continuous forecast in the world and started life back in eight hundred sixty seven after a tragic maritime disaster I'm delighted to say Penny trying to you joining me now from the Met Office Live in Exeter down in Devon how you I'm very good Paul how are you are very well thank you now tell us just give us a bit of background on the shipping forecast how and why did it start OK So we have to go back to eight hundred fifty nine when we had a pretty violent storm in the Irish Sea and it we came known as a Royal Charter storm because the royal charter ship went down with the loss of over four hundred fifty lives which is the yeah exactly huge number of people not only that ship but one hundred thirty three ships in total went down with over eight hundred people losing their lives so you can imagine this was a huge catastrophic event so this forecast came into being around about the time that the Met Office was set up yes I mean you and I know we're in the television industry a long time and we get stick for getting the forecasts wrong now I mean the forecast must have been an absolute waste of space back in the one hundred sixty I don't think it was actually Paul I have to be honest because Robert Fitzroy who founded the Met Office and. Hundred fifty four actually persuaded the Board of Trade after that eight hundred fifty nine storm to start storm warnings to prevent similar tragedies so you know he must have been very persuasive and they must have been pretty successful because by eight hundred sixty seven we had gale warnings being issued on a regular basis which as you've just mentioned has continued ever since and that's how the shipping forecast that we have today actually involved but we didn't have this big powerful supercomputer we had. Very little communication how how did they do it how did they compile a weather forecast for shipping all those years ago well it's a really really good question poll and what they tended to do was to take observations from around the you know the United Kingdom the British Isles and they were also taking information from ships out at sea and from that very limited information and you know they started to you know this is where weather forecasting actually started for this country and were able to put out very limited information and warnings about possible gales and storms that were expected to come across us during this sort of the following day or even two days ahead but it was nothing like it is now because if I tell you about what we do know I know you're going to be so so interest you know it you know so for example you and I both go back to nine hundred eighty quite. You speak for yourself. And you know that the office for day forecast now is accurate as our one day forecast was back in one nine hundred eighty right so you know that's a fantastic evolution of weather forecasting so taking my office longstanding experience scientific expertise and as you say world leading super computer power you know people trust us to bring the most accurate forecasts whether it be for land or on Sea Org. In there and that allows everyone to be prepared but also to plan for the weather which we now do on a daily basis out to seven days ahead now just tell me it sounds like a duck question but who actually uses the shipping forecast these days the people that are listening to the shipping forecast can be anybody we know that some people love listening to the Shipping Forecast late at night as it can be also I can see it getting to sleep. But it has its use there but in all seriousness the people that are really using it are anybody that's out at sea in a vessel you know could be maritime and Coastguard Agency are an ally deep sea fishermen yachts people commercial shipping like oil tankers and also commanding officer of the new eight to mess Queen Elizabeth which we saw going into Portsmouth Harbor Just recently I mean is there any point in the forecast being on radio for because of course all the ships and stuff that we've all got Internet we've all got smart phones and stuff can you see a day when there's no point in broadcasting the shipping forecast on Radio four because we can access it on our devices Well the Mara time and Coast Guard agency decide who is responsible for broadcasting the shipping forecast where the Met Office is that we produce the shipping forecast on behalf of the maritime and Coastguard Agency so they make the decisions about where it's broadcast there is a number of different channels that are used to disseminate the shipping forecast but as I say it's the M.C.A. That has the final say on where the shipping brought forecast is broadcast Well I for one listen to the shipping forecast before I go to bed after a late shift and it gets me to sleep so all of the shipping forecast guys say you never used to get much sleep when you did it pay your fare it is a very long time ago. Well it was actually nine years ago yeah goodness me well you know well I miss you anyway thank you and I missed you too well look thanks for talking to us about the shipping forecast along may continue that's the Met Office is Penny trying to talking about the one hundred fifty years of the shipping forecast live from the Met Office in Exeter in Devon the hallowed turf of a cricket pitch the grass at the All England Tennis Club a golf ball rolling towards a pain how do all sports pitches in grounds survive the onslaught of changing weather. Says I'll be talking to Christine Spring very shortly first let's have some queen. You. Can see. You can. You answer. That. For you. All Want to some of sporty spin from Wimbledon to England's Test cricket success but how do these world class events navigate the natural world how do they always manage to boast pristine grass and perfect playing conditions Well I've got someone with me now who might be able to help me it's Christian spring from the sports Research Institute. In West Yorkshire How are you Christian I'm very well thank you I'm glad we've got some sunshine for once and something akin to a bit of summer weather well just. Cannot you know we've had nearly two inches of rain in our Brahmas these winds is very cold base and in the might be needing some grass there when it starts cutting off you know company mode standard stuff just tell us what big sporting events are you involved with so we get involved with research and consultancy on all kinds of sports to this. Both in the U.K. But also internationally some of our biggest tournament type events are Wimbledon Tennis Championships in the Open Championship We also visit a lot of golf clubs and around the EK helping to give advice on how to best manage that so just give us an example of one of your customers I know you've helped our my golf club mall Alex in in North Leeds what types of issues do these places have and how can you help so for example this year we've been involved in the Open Championship robot. And. The same kind of issues can cross over on to different venue but typically the kind of problems that people having people depend very much all for example the amount of usage that takes place on the playing surface how many rounds of golf how many games of football what in terms of football for example what parts of the field and the pitch is the where taken place of the play taking place we tend to lose more grass covering the goal mouth of the center circle much less on the wings and it's part of that a lot of the work that we do is focusing on on how to get the best possible grass growth and a lot of how to make a surface resilient to weather being one of the environmental conditions that we have to really work with and mitigate for now always strikes me when I look at Wimbledon for example this year. Always seems to have a complete cover of grass but you look back when McEnroe and Bulger playing twenty odd years ago by the end of the top. There was oddly any grass on the face asshole so is this the time to thing that you try and help Absolutely because ultimately all of these sports played on natural grass to surfaces so one of the missions is to try and maintain that as long as possible Wimbledon's a great example and so what's happened over the years is different types of grasses have been used we've been involved with field testing those varieties to make sure that optimum for Wimbledon in the Wimbledon championship but also sort of the maintenance and management has tweaked as well in terms of how how the grass is being used how it's maintained. The kind of maintenance products that are available so there's been an evolution not only in the grasses and types of grasses but also in how we go about maintaining these these beautiful to you know US soil specially spy trade one of my growing conditions then just tell us how in Poland temperature and sunlight things like that are to grow in grass critical critical so I mean there are two main environments the grass progresses in there is the above ground and so we're talking about temperature daylight hours all of those things are really critical for that meaning when the grass is growing and when it's not but also the soil environment is absolutely essential because that's where the plant gets a lot of its stability it's nutrients and it's water sources from so all of those things in combination really significantly affect grass growth and any changes in any one of those conditions is really important so it's all temperature is a classic example. In terms of when there's a grass stop growing in the springtime that's a really critical if you're managing a sports face so for golf for example golfers want to know when they can expect sort of the conditions to improve after the winter months and a lot of that is driven by to. By temperature ambient temperature and how that translates to affecting soil temperature because it's a critical set of numbers say six to eight degrees at which the grass then starts to sense that it's time to grow and starts to actually become active and we can get active growth recovering from any winter weather damage and hopefully building towards a successful summer playing season and what about Marlin gold for them enough played for years as one of the problems that is it's built on clay and it's really bad draining particularly in winter Absolutely and drainage is one of the key battles we forever facing in the sport I mean if you look back golf but in particular football if you look back to the one nine hundred sixty S. And seventy's at football games in the middle of winter quite often you find there's a lot of lot of mud and bad patches around. Part of the improvement over those decades since those days it is been in drainage improving the drainage of the sport this is one of things we are blessed with in the U.K. Certainly at the minute is. Rainfall and how we deal move that rainfall and excess water away from the playing surface into a drainage system sustainably is really important to grass and needs water so when it gets hot and dry we need to make sure we have enough of a suitable reserve but as is often the case we can quite often get quite heavy and prolonged of rain quite intense rainfall which then means the soil has to deal with a lot of water all at once I'm a key challenge in how we design build these playing surfaces is how we manage water how it's held but also how it sheds the excess What do you do regarding sort of the claim climate change changing climate and we're expecting you know rainfall potentially to get heavier in time do you build in that sense into your equation absolutely we have to take that into account for climate changes or is it important ongoing long terms. T.J. Driver for the industry because it really determines how we need to be thinking about resorts he said from the grasses point of view in terms of light water temperature. How much of these resources going to be available and when they're spread through the year are we likely to get wetter Summers or when the winters drier summers with a wet winter more seasonality less seasonality all of these things will determine perhaps the design and what you have to engineer in to that sport fish to create the optimum growing environment or the best compromise you can do for the grass plant so what water is a really important issue and how we especially in urban environments how that water is then moved away from that grass surface because the last amount to do is shed lots of water from out and then create a potential flooding risk because there's too much water hits in a drainage system too quickly so there are other sustainable and sort of why the land use issues that need to take into account as well climate change the big driver of those decision making processes Well Christian spring out fascinating to talk to you thanks very much shot sacristy in spring from the sports Research Institute in Bingley in West Yorkshire Oh my weather watcher coming up before the end of the show is Fiona from Tuttle's hole Tatas holes USA in Lincolnshire photos a very nice before that I'll be meeting a professional photographer who has taken part in the Galapagos competition she Shyla Brett who takes gorgeous pictures what's ever the weather first the Beatles from the Yellow Submarine album and it's all you need is love. And we. Well a saddle with Polish children has won a claim in an international competition celebrating the best photography from the Galapagos Islands Bret's one second place in the landscape category with a beautiful shot of the beach at morning I'm delighted to say Charlotte is joining me now how are you Charlotte I'm very good thank you how you say Well I'm very well in Congress. Person first of all tell us about your experiences on the Galapagos Oh well it was just it was fantastic I think you you know if anyone gets the opportunity to go that then just say that with my sons because that the landscape and the wildlife is just a somebody to. Well it's so unique and it's such a diverse part of the world and it was a real privilege to have the opportunity to go and to photograph and obviously I'm extremely pleased that my photo has done so well in the Galapagos conservation Trust's recent photo competition as well how did you just tell us how you got to go to the Galapagos Well actually it was it was my husband and my honeymoon we were looking for some somewhere that wasn't your average beach style of honey Maine and we just wanted to go somewhere that would just be a you know just so different in some way that we'd probably never have another opportunity to go to say and so that was why and we were there on a seven day cruise sailing around the various different islands. It was it was fabulous it was just it just for third you know all expectations that we had what was the weather like it was well it was something quite. Quite a spans across the islands and but all of the islands are quite unique because they have they've all evolved different stages so you'll have in some islands you'll have big volcanoes and you know this they'll be much flatter and so that obviously has an effect on the weather so some islands are much cloudy and one of the main islands that. Is the one that's got one of the main towns Santa craze that's actually has got the beach area and then it's got the highland area and in the Highlands you've got this almost like a constant drizzle just because they affect the landscape hard on the weather but on your way back down by the coast it will be beautiful sunshine so again it's so dramatic the weather over there and unpredictable and you just don't know what's you going to expect and I'm looking now after. In your Galapagos picture beautiful with the crabs on the rock that you're just looking close to home of your picture of people to me of a lot of stone pavement in the Yorkshire Dales you've taken her tour in the district just tell me about how you approach photographing them. So well as a landscape. The lights and the weather play such a key role in the ultimate photograph that you capture and it's all down to those natural elements and your reliance on the lights doing and again you can you can think of well it looks a bit cloudy out there I'm not sure it's going to be you know any good for a photograph but then once you're out there and all of a sudden the sun can just break through and the just Bay this you know this beautiful light that just costs over the landscape so it's really just just being prepared and being patience and just waiting for the right moments when you press the shutter and you can just capture you know what you set out what you hope to get when you know when you're there and apparently you've got a funny story about that picture you've taken of the limestone in the Yorkshire Dales Yes Well my mom is actually a keen photographers Well I'm a both on the line stone pavements together and I thought I think this particular location is is quite useful with the photographers with the lone tray that I have and the pavements all inference and so we've gone off to find this tray and I'd like a Tates where it was will flame we would trekking through the failed and there was a crowd of cows up there and all of a sudden we spotted what we thought was was a bull and so we kind of crept over to get the photograph of the tree and you know in the exact location keeping an eye over Rush so. We made it we made a very quick getaway as soon as we got off so we were we were off running back running back. Varian really well we're going to have to I mean for now because we're short time but if anybody wants to see your work how can they see it well I actually have a website yeah which can be found out still you. Saw Let's talk a. While brilliant I do recommend to all listeners take a look at that website because the pictures are absolutely stunning Congratulations Charlotte and thanks for joining us on the weather show for a bit amusing now this is a three degrees on when will I see you again. My That. . Well my weather watch of this week from Lincolnshire she's Fiona and she's joining me on the line now how do you feel OK about the name Paul I'm very well thank you jolly good I was the weather down that's a day it's a bit Graeme and. It drifts away it's a little low clouds Yes very like no good for taking photographs is a recipe. Now tell us tell us where you live and to show which is they coming. Off as a Cummings Bay yeah. So you see lots of lots of play. Taking off I didn't for a time frame have literally just taken off some hope and it's not going to know it's a lie OK just tell us what type of peaches you like to take and I've got your stuff upon the website now. The striking one for me is the beautiful sunrise you took on the eleventh of organist right yes I loved doing the sun rises with Lucky in Lincolnshire with the skies amazing summarises the sunset just stunning and do you do you venture far to get these pictures or do you mostly stay around about where you live they are pretty much taken on my doorstep OK when I take the dog on the morning I've always got my camera with me and is an amazing cloud formation not sure latest picture which was taken on the eighteenth of August I mean was out a thunderstorm work out really tell you his yeah it was. Yes it was quite amazing if you really really heavy cloud and do you normally sort of venture out to the Lincolnshire coast so many is not far as it where was your Near East place where Skegness somewhere like that aspect Mehsud be the closest to me right I don't go out there as much as i should they really because I know I could probably get some really good weather picture. And how do you go about doing this do you watch my forecast accurate forecast at half past six ignoring what Peter say's to me and think Oh and get a nice picture tomorrow because he says it's going to be nice they're going to be nice tomorrow. I'm going to get an early start tomorrow if it is going to be nice well as we're recording this on a Wednesday forecast is good tomorrow in Lincolnshire lots of blue sky. Debate right well I expect on the website in the morning a sunrise which I'm certain the sun rises at what time about six o'clock now it is about six o'clock am to be out there at six o'clock tomorrow morning men right well I will I will be watching your website I'll be checking up on you never know who might get when your pictures are now looking off you get your pictures and a whole hour about that so OK I look forward to that well Fiona thank you so much for joy. If you want to join Fiona on this weather watcher website. Well over one hundred thousand people on it the address is B.B.C. Dot co dot U.K. Forward slash weather watches Well that's it for this week if you'd like to listen again just search to Paul and some other show on the B.B.C. I Player and you can keep in touch with the show on Twitter at where the show B.B.C. And also follow me on Twitter I heard some weather and on Instagram lots of lovely pictures on Instagram poll the weatherman Well I'll be back at the same time next week with more weather charts including what the weather is like. There's some fascinating news about conditions on the red planet in the meantime I leave you with Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes from the soundtrack of Dirty Dancing and I've had the time of my life. Now then good afternoon for me David highlight of the one o'clock news it's time for this week's Yorkshire brass trips today to the Caribbean to Wales and to Los Angeles we have Chat music from The Who and for all Williams and film music from another Williams John Williams to you funny I'm Solo's an oldie and a modern one would also have as always news of up and coming concerts where you can get out and about to see a brass band life and you requests all concert details for a few to show please do get in touch on email David Dahle at B.B.C. Doc dot U.K. You can also follow us on Twitter us. On the digital radio now it's easy for us and. Your station for York Jack.

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