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Posted

Today on talk radio there was a debate on small birds and song birds the rspb comfirmed that tha small bird population has increased this year and their answer is that because this year we had our first mild winter the song bird population has increased they also said that the reason for the decline in our song birds was great britian had become much colder NO MENTION WHAT SO EVER ABOUT HAWKS whats your opinion.?

Posted

lol first thing we didn't have a mild winter where were they bali , we've become much cooler ????? global warming are they mad !!!! , as long as they get a soap box to spread there propaganda they will , and unfortunately they'll keep going unchallenged unless we had a pr man at the top championing the plight of our song birds , guess the only way to address it is to challenge there information and the people who give them the air time press coverage

Posted

The winter of 2010–2011 was a weather event which brought heavy snowfalls, record low temperatures, travel chaos and school disruption to Great Britain and Ireland.

 

The winter of 2010 in the United Kingdom saw the UK's earliest widespread winter snowfall since 1993 with snow falling as early as 24 November across Northumberland and North Yorkshire. A maximum snow depth of 30 inches (76 cm) was recorded on 1 December in the Peak District and Sheffield.[citation needed] In this event Scotland and Northern England were most severely affected. On 9 December temperatures recovered across much of the UK, causing a partial thaw.

 

Later, on Thursday 16 December a cold front reintroduced a cold, arctic airstream. This cold spell brought further snow and ice chaos back to the United Kingdom with Southern England, Wales and Northern Ireland bearing the brunt of the wintry conditions. This led to severe disruption to the road and rail network with several airports being closed including London Heathrow airport for a time. Several local temperature records were broken including a new record low for Northern Ireland of -18.7 °C recorded at Castlederg on the 23rd December 2010.

 

By the New Year a thaw had begun, and there have been very little extreme conditions since 2011 began - There was some snowfall in early January, and there was an anticyclonic spell at the end of the month that brought some cold, frosty days. February was above average in temperature and ended on a mild note, although the snow returned in much of Scotland during March.

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