Winds gusting to 40+ mph are not good news. I fear my climbing beans and some very tall toms are going to be casualties. Regardless of such obvious damage the way the wind is sucking the long awaited moisture out of plants and the soil is bad news as well. Yesterday afternoon when I got back from work the toms were all droopy leaves from the tumbledrier wind, the first time they have shown such obvious signs of water stress. They are looking better after a night to recover, but I think I may have to get the hose on their bed as the chance of rain is minimal as always.
Stormy Weather II
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostWinds gusting to 40+ mph are not good news. I fear my climbing beans and some very tall toms are going to be casualties. Regardless of such obvious damage the way the wind is sucking the long awaited moisture out of plants and the soil is bad news as well. Yesterday afternoon when I got back from work the toms were all droopy leaves from the tumbledrier wind, the first time they have shown such obvious signs of water stress. They are looking better after a night to recover, but I think I may have to get the hose on their bed as the chance of rain is minimal as always.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Picnic on the meadow in front of the house or even eating in the back garden abandoned as FAR too windy: friends coming to lunch so we'll just have to spread ourselves around the table indoors to keep our social distance that way. I can see from the window that one of our local book groups has been brave enough to have their weekly meeting outdoors by the lake: they're all jolly well wrapped up though.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostStorms which formed over W London a couple of hours ago are spreading out in clusters and heading your way, Joseph, so you might well be in line for one, or two. Reports from the Putney/Twickenham area are of torrential rain and hailstones the size of large marbles; the clouds were certainly impressive and loud bumps of frequent thunder audible from here. It will be interesting to see if the large clusters over N France take the same route later this evening, and just manage to miss us, or maybe they'll lose power crossing the Channel, as often happens with surface-based storms. These really need local generation to sustain. Temperature now 28 C after maxing at 34 C before the thunder kicked off - almost bearable!
Storm timelapse of the cell that would become the marginally severe tyephunderstorm over Twickenham & Richmond, London, UK on 12 August 2020. Note the strong...
Today has been very windy here, though not as bad as I had been expecting. One of the neighbours was commenting just now on the unusualness of high winds accompanying such high temperatures - up to nearly 24 C here in London, which, it's true, would not have been known in the UK on a polar-maritime airstream, a couple of decades ago.
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The wind is taking longer to moderate than forecast yesterday, and the rain clouds look set to miss here again, being to N and S. Lot of damage to foliage and seeds/fruit, and things getting very dried out as well as shredded - not helpful at this time of year when it's not in most plants' best interest to put out new foliage.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostThe wind is taking longer to moderate than forecast yesterday, and the rain clouds look set to miss here again, being to N and S. Lot of damage to foliage and seeds/fruit, and things getting very dried out as well as shredded - not helpful at this time of year when it's not in most plants' best interest to put out new foliage.
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Definitely early signs of autumn in the coming week, with more strong winds from a southward-steering low and lots of rain for the north on Tuesday into Wednesday, and N/S high pressure blocking to the west coming in on Friday, swinging winds into a more northerly type, which we haven't seen since spring.
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