The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Weather the storm

Michael Alexander speaks to Fife amateur weather enthusiast Graham Smith about his hobby and his dislike of Australian heat!

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W ith his instantly recognisab­le Australian twang, the first question people usually ask Fifebased amateur weather enthusiast Graham Smith is: “Why did you come to Scotland and leave Australia with all that lovely weather?”

But ironically, for the Glasgow-born 44-year-old whose family moved Down Under when he was a baby, it was the intensity of the Australian heat that prompted him and his wife to move back to and settle in Scotland in 2004.

“The move to Scotland all came about because neither my wife or I were a big fan of the hot Australian summers,” explained Graham, who now lives in Lochgelly.

“My first interest in the weather started as a child in Darwin, where you get the most fantastic thundersto­rms.

“In Adelaide, where we lived before we left, the temperatur­es would regularly get up to 40 degrees and above in the summer.

“But neither of us were a fan of that. We found that ironically winter was our favourite time of year. Having been born in Scotland, I had the option of moving back here because I had my British passport.

“It was one of those things that started as a bit of a joke. It started as a kind of throwaway idea – ‘why don’t we go to Scotland? We don’t really like the hot weather here!’

“The idea gained more traction and became reality!”

Today, Graham works as a cyber security engineer with an internatio­nal financial services company in Edinburgh.

But the father-of-two remains as interested in the weather than ever after establishi­ng his Fifeweathe­r website and Twitter account.

Through a weather station attached to his house, he monitors rainfall, wind speed and temperatur­e in Fife while analysing the informatio­n to see how it compares with the national weather forecasts.

He also has seven weathercam­s set up across Fife. He regularly shares his data online and has built up quite a following.

“It started in 2006, the year my son was born,” said Graham.

“I mentioned that early fascinatio­n I had as a kid with storms. When we moved back to Scotland, it seemed like the weather here played a lot more integral part of people’s lives.

“That led to me thinking I’d really like to put up a weather station – to see how fast these gusts of wind actually are compared to what had been forecast? How cold is it really getting? How wet has it really been?

“You hear these stats from the Met

Office and other organisati­ons. But it’s always a generalisa­tion and I really wanted to know what we were actually experienci­ng.”

Graham said that in climatolog­ical terms, the 14 years he’s run his weather station isn’t a massive amount of time to detect detailed scientific trends.

But interactin­g with folk on Twitter, and of course watching from afar the impact of bush fires in his former Australian home, he’s in no doubt that the climate is changing.

He said: “The whole notion of the four seasons now feels like a loose guideline as opposed to being actually able to plan around those. The patterns just don’t behave in ways that in the past people would have expected.”

It seemed like the weather here played a lot more integral part of people’s lives

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