Articles Inside WeatherMeteo Connect
Science — not forecasts

Why does weather behave the way it does?

WeatherMeteo explores the physics, optics and fluid dynamics behind the clouds, fog, lightning and wind you encounter every day. No predictions. No drama. Just explanations.

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Things people usually ask

No. WeatherMeteo does not publish forecasts and does not aim to. You will not find a "will it rain on Saturday" answer here. The Met Office, BBC Weather and Yr are good tools for that. What we publish is the explanation for why weather behaves as it does — the physical mechanisms rather than the predictions.
Mid-level. We assume you remember some secondary-school physics — pressure, energy, wave behaviour — but not that you have a meteorology degree. When a concept genuinely requires maths to explain properly, we say so and link to the relevant equations, rather than replacing them with a metaphor that loses the actual mechanism.
Two editors based in Bristol. Clara Hendricks has a background in atmospheric physics and worked for five years at a research consultancy. Owen Bartlett is a science writer who spent several years covering environmental science for print. Their full bios are on the Inside WeatherMeteo page.
Slowly. We prioritise depth over volume. A typical explanation takes several weeks to research and draft properly. Most months produce one substantial article. If you want to know when something new appears, the email updates option on the first article page is the most reliable way to find out.