jwilson
Well-Known Member
like your previous respondents, I did the whole business of decoding met forecasts onto a METMAP, and then drawing up a synoptic chart.
The MCA has a standard list of abbreviations
http://www.mcga.gov.uk/c4mca/mcga07-home...ther/navtex.htm
as used in NAVTEX.
If you use these, or perhaps your own truncated versions, then you will have no difficulty in taking down the Met forecast. The BBC is very strict on the speaking rate - though it may not always seem like that.
The use of the "solidus" (sloping line, or slash, / \) can be used for showing "increasing" or "decreasing" wind strengths, and made steeper or flatter to indicate e.g quickly or slowly.
It's not easy to start with, but if you down load the shipping forecast areas , and the form (or make up one on larger paper for more writing space), by the time you have done it twenty times, it becomes automatic.
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/weather/marine/shipping_forecast.html
+1 - I do exactly the same