The Scotsman

Let’s hear it for the sailors’ friend as the shipping forecast turns 150

● Meteorolog­ists say lifeline service still has a place despite wide availabili­ty of informatio­n on mobile devices

- By MARTYN MCLAUGHLIN

It is the voice of calm in the storm which offers a reassuring amalgam of statistics and poetry with which to soothe seafarers and insomniac landlubber­s alike.

The Met Office yesterday marked the 150th anniversar­y of the shipping forecast, the maritime service which has become an unlikely national institutio­n.

Theforecas­ts, issued four times a day, began in 1867 as a way to alert mariners to tempestuou­s conditions at sea and ward off tragedy. They were introduced in response to the Royal Charter storm off the coast of north Wales eight years earlier, a disaster which claimed the lives of more than 800 people.

Over the years, the forecasts evolved to include more detailed informatio­n, advising of changing winds, weather conditions, and visibility. In doing so, it has become the longest running continuous forecast in the world.

Its reach and popularity has ensured that some of Britain’s outlying communitie­s – after which many of the 31 “weather areas” are named – have become familiar to millions.

One such place is Fair Isle, Britain’s most remote inhabited island, situated halfway between Orkney and the Shetland mainland.

For more than four decades, Dave Wheeler, the island’s resident meteorolog­ist, provided the observatio­ns used in the forecasts, and he dutifuly tuned in first thing in the morning, and last thing at night.

“The shipping forecast provides all the informatio­n quite succinctly, and the way it’s written makes it easy to absorb,” explained Mr Wheeler, who has been monitoring Fair Isle’s weather since 1972.

“In some respects it’s an artform. There are people who have visited all the shipping areas, and written poems and stories about them. It’s become integrated into the British way of life.”

Fair Isle’s meteorolog­ical station is now fully automated, and Mr Wheeler admits the march of technology means he is not as regular a listener as he once was.

“I can see a time – and it may even be now – that it becomes redundant because all the data and forecasts are available online and via mobile phones,” he added. “But that depends on where you are at sea, and your mobile’s range. For that reason, there are a lot of people who still listen the traditiona­l way via radio.”

Penny Trantor, a Met Office advisor, said the shipping forecast has helped cement the agency’s globally renowned reputation, pointing to its 93 per cent accuracy rate, a figure which rises to 97 per cent for inshore waters.

Peter Dawes, lifesaving services manager for the RNLI, believes that, even after 150 years, the forecasts will go on providing an essential service.

“It is an excellent source of informatio­n, and a vital tool in helping people make critical safety decisions at the coast and at sea,” he said.

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