News1 min ago
Blame it on the weather man
35 Answers
So much for the sunny day, we're getting hailstones the size of peas here now. I don't get it, its really hot how can there be hailstones??
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hailstones form in strong thunder clouds, especially ones with intense updrafts (ooer missus), high liquid water content, and where a good portion of the cloud layer is below freezing.
Hail is most common in mid-latitudes during early summer where surface temperatures are warm enough to promote the instability associated with strong thunderstorms, but the upper atmosphere is still cool enough to support ice � at least until the hail gets too heavy and falls from the sky. The fact that, of all the places in all the world they are aiming themselves at Swaffham, must be telling you something.
Hail is most common in mid-latitudes during early summer where surface temperatures are warm enough to promote the instability associated with strong thunderstorms, but the upper atmosphere is still cool enough to support ice � at least until the hail gets too heavy and falls from the sky. The fact that, of all the places in all the world they are aiming themselves at Swaffham, must be telling you something.
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