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July 30, 2009, "As millions of Britons holiday at home after that promise of a 'barbecue summer', how did the Met Office get it so wrong?" UK Daily Mail, by Daily Mail Reporter
"The campers paddling between flooded tents didn't need to be told. Neither did the families huddling for shelter beside deserted beaches.
But yesterday the weathermen officially admitted that their prediction of a 'barbecue summer'
- had been hopelessly wrong.
(Photo caption: "A boating holiday in the Lakes: Seven-year-old Max Preston, from Merseyside, paddles his kayak around the tents on a campsite near Keswick.")
As the Met Office rather sheepishly announced that it had 'revised' its seasonal forecast, the tourism industry was asking how
- the experts got things so badly wrong.
It was in April that the Met Office proclaimed the chances were 'odds-on for a barbecue summer'. Rather like Michael Fish in October 1987, after he mockingly dismissed claims that a hurricane was on its way, the aptly-renamed 'Wet Office' was forced to confess its shortcomings yesterday.
'Seasonal forecasting is still a new science,' it said in defence. 'It's something we are still building on.'
Philip Eden, vice president of the Royal Meteorological Society, accused the Met Office of indulging in 'spin'.
He said: 'The problem is that we don't actually know very much about the outside influences which affect the weather during a period of, say, a month or three months ahead. The big problem with this forecast was the spin that was put on it by the Met Office's press office - the "barbecue summer" bit.'
At the time the chief meteorologist, Ewen McCallum, said there was a 50 per cent chance of above- average temperatures and a 30 per cent chance of average temperatures. The chances of the summer being a washout were around 30 per cent, he declared.
But after a short-lived heatwave in June, July saw almost a month's worth of rain falling in the first two weeks alone.
Yesterday, Stornoway in the Outer Hebrides was hit by a tornado while in Cumbria 100 children were evacuated from their inundated campsite.
This of course is far from the first time that the Met Office has come under fire for its inaccurate predictions. In both 2007 and 2008 it said the summers would be warm and dry.
And in May this year, many outdoor events were cancelled in resorts such as Bournemouth on the strength of a gloomy forecast. As it turned out, Dorset basked in day-long sunshine and balmy temperatures of 22c (72F) -
- with no visitors there to enjoy it.
Philip Nightingale, 47, a design engineer from Thornton Cleveleys, near Blackpool, was caravanning with his wife Karen and two daughters.
He said: 'At 6.30am we had a knock on the door saying, "I think you'd better get out". I looked out and got a shock. The water was surrounding us - it was like a lake.
So we had to pack all our stuff up. I'm walking around in my bare feet because my shoes are wet.'
A spokesman for the Met Office insisted it was not embarrassed and would not be apologising.
'In April we said there was a 65 per cent chance of temperatures above average and rainfall below average but that does leave a 35 per cent chance that the opposite would be true,' she said.
'June was particularly nice. We had temperatures in the 30s for a couple of days. Wimbledon had two weeks of virtually uninterrupted play and Glastonbury had some good weather.
'July has not been as nice as people wanted and unfortunately it has been fairly wet.'
Michael Fish, now retired, defended his former colleagues, saying holidaymakers 'took more notice of this forecast than they have in the past. But you have to just take pot luck'.
A spokesman for Abta, the travel association, said that although foreign bookings are down by 10 per cent on last year, the number of Britons booking last-minute trips increased in July.
'Tour operators are reporting that people are ringing wanting to escape to the sun immediately,' he said. 'Britons are looking for destinations where hot weather is guaranteed.'"
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