The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Recording the forecast while the kids bicker isn’t ideal and as for school work? Chaos

- By Tracey Bryce trbryce@sundaypost.com

Lockdown, if nothing else, has turned us into a nation of weather-watchers as we desperatel­y scan the horizon for a break in the clouds and a chance of some fresh air.

But, as we have started taking the weather forecasts as gospel, there has been an increasing suspicion that some have been a little less accurate than we would have hoped as rain batters down from what was meant to be a blue sky.

But trying to keep track of the Scottish skies during lockdown presented a huge challenge – even for the profession­als.

BBC Scotland weather presenter Judith Ralston said: “Weather models need a clear picture of what is going on in the world before moving on to produce forecasts and use all the available actual data from observatio­ns, radar and satellite pictures.

“But they also use wind and temperatur­e data supplied by aircraft. And clearly with many planes grounded during lockdown, we were missing some useful data.”

Judith was on radio rather than the small screen for the first few months of pandemic life but like most of us she was snowed under, juggling working from home with the added responsibi­lity of schooling nine-year-old twins Max and Georgia.

“Our overall experience of lockdown was pretty trying,” the 52-year-old admits. “It was a busy few months with my husband Fraser and I both working, and working shifts.

“He was doing night shifts and I was getting up at 3.30am for a morning shift. I did the forecasts for radio and it has to be said trying to record when the kids were bickering in the next room wasn’t ideal. “Adding home learning into the equation was just chaos. We tried our best, but I found the whole thing pretty stressful.

“We’d be trying to go through school work with the kids and they would just be sitting with their heads in their hands. I felt like I wasn’t able to give my kids enough.”

With Fraser working in meteorolog­y, the Glasgow couple resorted to what they know best – geography. “Rather than battle with numbers and spelling, we worked best teaching the kids about the world,” she said.

“We would sit with a map and look at all the different countries and learn the capitals.

“I even resorted to baking to encourage the kids to learn measuremen­ts, but I’m hopeless in the kitchen so even that didn’t work out very well! We did a lot of circle time, mostly for me because I found it so frustratin­g trying to teach. I just didn’t have the patience.

“By the end of term, we were down to an hour or two a day if we were lucky. It was just too hard.”

With the kids back at school

Judith Ralston on air, right, and husband Fraser with son Alex, 18, and twins Max and Georgia, above

and eldest son Alex, who turned 18 during lockdown, off to university in Edinburgh, Judith is relishing her time back at the BBC’S Glasgow studios – and back on screen.

“People previously thought working from home was a bit of a skive, but now they’re realising it’s not,” she said. “You need to be focused but at home there are too many distractio­ns.

“I find I have to be ‘on it’ and that’s much harder when you’re not in the office. And it’s much better to be back to the routine and back with my audience. “Having come into the TV business a lot older than most, I have found it very welcoming. I’ve been really surprised. I thought I would have been out of the door by now! But I feel like I have gelled with the viewers and that’s a huge part of the job. “I don’t know if it’s me growing with them or them growing with me, but we have a great relationsh­ip. “I think it’s because I’m just like them. They realise I’m just normal, just the same as them.

“It shows maybe someone my age still has something to offer.” And she does. Lockdown also signalled a new venture for Judith, who joined forces with Fraser to write a children’s book. What’s The Weather, about clouds, climate and global warming, is due out early next year.

“I got a call from one of the big education publishers asking if I wanted to take on the project,” said Judith. “I thought it was a joke initially, one of my pals taking the mickey. But when I realised it was a genuine offer, I couldn’t say no.

“A book for kids would be right up my street. It started off just me doing it, but I am slow and pedantic like a cart horse.

“I kept coming back to Fraser with help on the meteorolog­y side and in the end he helped so much that I went back to the publisher and asked if we could make it a joint effort because I couldn’t take all the credit. It was chaotic, but fun. Who knows, maybe we’ll do a sequel.”

And Judith will be gracing our screens more this week, with an appearance on The Great Food Guys with old pal Dougie Vipond. “I’ve known Dougie since we were kids. We studied together at RSAMD in the ’80s. He recently said he used to copy me in class,” she explained. “It’s so funny when we see each other now because when I think back to our days as students, we never for a minute thought we would end up where we are.” The mum of three, who was once a size 22, says a healthy diet, fitness and chilling with the kids helped her mental health during the pandemic. “One thing about lockdown is the way I have been able to chat to the kids more and bond with them,” she

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