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We never stop learning about the weather...

Ian Fergusson | 08:21 UK time, Friday, 9 October 2009

I spent yesterday at ´óÏó´«Ã½ Weather Centre in London,Ìýon a winter forecasting course. It's part of the continuing professional training we regularly undertake in partnership with the Met Office.

It's a 7am train departure from Bristol Parkway to Paddington. The early morning vistaÌýacross the vales and fields of Wiltshire, Oxfordshire and BerkshireÌýis beautiful: patches of radiation fog blanketing spots sheltered from the early sunshine.ÌýÌý

Arriving at ´óÏó´«Ã½ Television Centre in Wood LaneMy ultimate destination inÌýLondonÌýisÌýthe iconic ´óÏó´«Ã½ Television Centre.ÌýFor us visiting staff, it'sÌýinevitablyÌýa journey of discovery to try and find your way around this labyrinthine building: I feel like unravelling a ball of string, , to make sureÌýI find my wayÌýback! Crucially however, I recall exactlyÌýwhereÌýto collect an earlyÌýcup of tea...

On the 2nd floor is theÌý´óÏó´«Ã½ Weather Centre, where I grab a seatÌýas Duty ForecasterÌýLaura Tobin briefs the teamÌýon weather conditionsÌýexpected today across the British Isles - and indeed further afield. Weather Centre provides and so unsurprisingly,ÌýTyphoon MelorÌýis a topic of considerable interest as it .

After Laura's briefing, there's just enough time toÌýbrew another quick cuppa andÌýnatter - as I often do to himÌýfrom my desk inÌýBristol -Ìýwith broadcast meteorologistÌýJohn Hammond. We chat aboutÌýhis shiftsÌýon Radio 5 Live; he's forecasting for them all week. For me, presenting weather on the radioÌýis one of the most enjoyable aspects of my job.

But no presenting for to do today: it's time to learn!ÌýOver the past two years, our Met Office tutor, ±Ê±ð²Ô²Ô²âÌý°Õ°ù²¹²Ô³Ù±ð°ù, has become like a familiar school teacher for me: indeed when I was appointed as a weather presenter, she was my original course instructor at the Met Office HQ in Exeter.

I'm here on today's course with a number of ´óÏó´«Ã½ weather presenters from across the country.Ìý features regularly in the classroom instruction and discussion, but also theÌýnoteworthy severe windstorms of recent decades, not least the and the . We also look in detail at the and the manner by which we broadcast these on the ´óÏó´«Ã½. It's a critical element of our job and one we simply have to get right.ÌýÌý

Matt Taylor at the Duty Forecaster's desk, ´óÏó´«Ã½ Weather Centre

Broadcast Meteorologist Matt Taylor working at the Duty Forecaster Desk. He's busy adding key detail to the weather graphicsÌýsoon toÌýbe used on the ´óÏó´«Ã½'s network and regional lunchtime TV broadcasts.


During lunch break, I chat with Matt Taylor, who has taken-over the Duty Forecaster shift from Laura Tobin. Matt gives me some useful adviceÌýabout the , and accessing data from it. It's an important tool for me when providing weatherÌýforecasts for ´óÏó´«Ã½'s 606 Forum ahead of - and during - each Formula One Grand Prix.

By 5.15pm, it's farewell to colleagues in London and I'm on the oh-so-busy train back to Bristol.

Sunset over WiltshirePassing through the fields of Wiltshire alongside the M4, I'm sky-watching. As a cloud aficionado, I'm pondering the difficulties some people have in discriminating between patchy formations ofÌý and .Ìý ÌýI'm looking out the window here at someÌýpicturesque Ìýwith a fairly high cloud base, virtually the only clouds visible here above the setting sun.ÌýTwenty minutes later and I'm arrivingÌýin Bristol to virtual darkness.

And it feels distinctly chilly, too. A reminder that winter continues to draw ever-nearer, so not long before some of the knowledge gained on today's course willÌýbe put into use!

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