Spare a thought for Michael Fish this weekend. Thirty years ago the familiar face of the BBC’s weather broadcasts took up his usual position in front of the meteorological map of the UK and imparted a jovial bit of advice.

“Earlier on today, apparently”, Fish informed the nation on 15 October, 1987, “a woman rang the BBC and said she heard there was a hurricane on the way – well, if you're watching, don't worry, there isn’t!”

As far as it goes, Fish wasn’t wrong. A hurricane is the name for a cyclone that originates in the tropics. The storm that lashed Britain later that evening, while certainly flexing its muscles with hurricane-strength winds, was an extratropical cyclone. But that’s splitting hairs, perhaps, and those who were subjected to the storm – which claimed 22 lives – would not have been arguing the definition.

Fish’s forecast is logged in history. But he would argue that how we remember it is a bit wrong. The broadcaster, who started work at the Met Office in 1962 and retired in 2004, has always maintained that he was talking about a potential hurricane that was thought to be about to hit Florida. In the same broadcast, he has said, he warned Brits to “batten down the hatches, there’s some very windy weather on the way.”

But never let the facts get in the way of a television legend – Fish is resigned to the fact that that’s how he’ll always be remembered. His website features footage of his “infamous broadcast” and accepts that the incident will probably be “engraved on my tombstone”.

In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK Show all 17 1 /17 In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A fallen tree brought down by high winds from Storm Doris lies across a main road in Isleworth in London, Britain Reuters In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK Emergency personnel attend the scene in Cardinal Place, Victoria aftera man is thought to have been injured by a section of falling debris PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK Commuters waiting at King's Cross Station in London, as flights have been cancelled and commuters were warned they faced delays after Storm Doris reached nearly 90mph on its way to batter Britain. PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A bin blown onto the tracks at Waterloo station in London, as flights have been cancelled and commuters were warned they faced delays after Storm Doris reached nearly 90mph on its way to batter Britain PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A car damaged by a tree which left two men injured, on the A49 north of Church Stretton in Shropshire PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK The scene in Wolverhampton city center after a woman died when she was hit by a piece of roof the 'size of a coffee table' as Storm Doris has claimed its first victim PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A double decker bus blown onto its side by Storm Doris in Walton Highway near Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, as flights have been cancelled and commuters were warned they faced delays after Storm Doris reached nearly 90mph on its way to batter Britain PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A double decker bus blown onto its side by Storm Doris in Walton Highway near Wisbech, Cambridgeshire PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK Spikes protude from a colourful umbrella as a woman struggles against the elements on the seafront at Seaham, in County Durham, north east England EPA In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK ESB workers attend to power lines damaged by a fallen tree as allmost 46,000 Irish households woke up to no electricity after violent gusts battered large swathes of the country through the night PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A children's play area is crushed by fallen trees in Stoke-on Trent, as Storm Doris battered swathes of the country PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A plane comes in to land at Leeds Bradford Airport as flights have been cancelled and commuters were warned they faced delays after Storm Doris reached nearly 90mph on its way to batter Britain PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK People make their way across Westminster Bridge while gusts of winds sweep across the capital in London EPA In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK Queues outside Peterborough railway station after Storm Doris reached nearly 90mph on its way to batter Britain PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A tree which has fallen onto a van in St Anne's Road in Aigburth, Liverpool, as Storm Doris battered swathes of the country PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK A rainbow over the Nottingham Wheel in the Old Market Square, as Storm Doris reached nearly 90mph on its way to batter Britain PA wire In pictures: Storm Doris hits the UK Waves crash over the lighthouse in Newhaven, East Sussex PA

And an epitaph to a bygone age of weather forecasting it will remain, because three decades on from the Great Storm, the Met Office has rather stuck its neck out to say it is unlikely to be caught out on the hop in the same way again.

In any case, what exactly was the Great Storm? It began life as a “kink” in a cold front off the Bay of Biscay, marking the boundary between warm air from Africa and colder air originating in the Arctic region.

Where cold air and warm air meet like that there’s a drop in pressure as the warm air rises above the cold, creating clouds and rain. But the pressure dropped quicker and further than usual, for reasons not really fully understood, and it created a deep depression with driving winds that forced it towards the UK.

There might have been more warning of the storm but the media was focused on the industrial action crippling France. And while there had been warnings of gale-force winds in the Bay of Biscay, with little maritime traffic in the area there were fewer first-hand reports on what was brewing.

WInds of 100mph swept the English Channel (Getty)

By the time the storm was noticed by the Met Office it was predicted to follow the path of the English Channel, but its exceptionally low pressure made it unpredictable, and it suddenly veered north over Cornwall and Devon and towards the Midlands and southern England.

There were winds of up to 100mph, widespread disruption and damage to the tune of around £1bn. In the South-east, where the greatest damage occurred, gusts of 80mph were recorded for three to four consecutive hours. The highest gust recorded over the UK was 115mph at Shoreham on the Sussex coast at 3.10am.

According to Fish, “the Met Office was criticised for not forecasting the storm but did no worse than any other National Met Service. The storm was in fact well forecast earlier in the week but later computer forecasts tended to back off and changed the emphasis from wind to rain as it had been so wet up till then and many places were close to flooding.

“As it happened, the soggy ground contributed greatly to the disaster. The trees were still in leaf and could not hold on with their roots in the soggy soil, coupled with the fact that they were attacked from a side that they were not naturally braced for.”

A disaster and a tragedy, for sure. But what the Great Storm did was also blow in a sea change in the way we not only forecast weather and track storms, but also how warnings are given out.

The Met instituted improvements including the “observational coverage of the atmosphere over the ocean to the south and west of the UK... from ships, aircraft, buoys and satellites” and brushing up its computer systems.

Back in 1987, very little data was obtained from satellites, but now the majority of the 215 billion individual weather observations made every single day are provided by the satellite network, which contributes to around 65 per cent of the weather prediction model.

The extratropical cyclone which hit Britain in 1987 had not been since since 1703 (Getty)

As direct results of the Great Storm, the Met Office was determined not to be caught out by lack of information, especially from the Bay of Biscay, so it located a number of deep-ocean weather buoys all around the waters of the British Isles to provide hourly weather information.

“Supercomputing capability has also hugely advanced since 1987,” says the Met Office. “A typical smartphone of today has a least five times more computer power than our supercomputer of 1987 that could perform four million calculations per second. Today our latest supercomputer is able to perform 14,000 trillion calculations per second helping us to unlock new science and provide more detailed forecasts and warnings.”

This vastly increased computing capacity allows for forecasting models that hone coverage down to the mile – today’s four-day forecast is as accurate as the one-day forecast in 1987.

And there’s also the way we get our information. We don’t have to wait for the weather round-up after the news; we’re constantly connected. Met Office meteorologist and presenter Alex Deakin says: “In 1987 people received their forecasts either via newspapers or at fixed times on TV and radio. Now over 90 per cent of adults consult forecasts via social media, websites or mobile apps. A forecast is now available whenever you want and information about up and coming storms can be accessed in seconds.”

Which means we’re more prepared, as are the authorities. Says the Met: “The three-tier National Severe Weather Warning Service was in introduced following the investigation into the storm and now informs Government, civil contingency stakeholders, emergency responders and the public of the risks of severe weather.”

And in case you were wondering why the Great Storm of 1987 didn’t have a name, as storms do today, that’s a new development, being first introduced in 2015. “This pilot scheme has been well received by the public, raising awareness of severe weather and helping highlight the potential dangers and impacts of storms crossing the UK and Ireland. Names also make it easier to follow a storm’s progress via TV, radio, the internet or social media,” says the Met Office.

But was the Great Storm worthy of its apocalyptic name? Well, it is considered to have been the worst storm since the previous holder of the title in 1703, which felled 4,000 oak trees in the New Forest and brought down 2,000 chimney stacks in London.

London was badly hit and 22 people lost their lives around the country (Getty)

It’s considered a once in 200 years event, though Northern Scotland, being closer to the main Atlantic storm tracks, can expect to see winds as strong as those which battered the south-east in 1987 roughly every 30 to 40 years – so any time now.

“We can’t say we won’t see another storm like the one in 1987 but we are able to better forecast and warn of severe weather, helping to minimise the impacts by working with our partners and emergency responders, and the general public to prepare and take action all helping to protect life and property in the future,” maintains the Met Office.

Thirty years on, Michael Fish seems to have reconciled himself with the negative publicity he received over the forecast that never really was, but he’ll doubtless be the name on everyone’s lips this weekend.