Great weather up in The Lakes. Warm in the sun, but a brisk SE breeze cooled things on top of Gummer's How. Just waiting to see how much sdverse weather Babet brings us tomorrow...
Stormy Weather II
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Well, as I post from here, neighbouring the Lakes, and inland from the wide open mouth of Morecambe Bay at one end of the dale complex and Pennine peaks to north and east, I can tell you is Babet, a ravaging, hard-gusting north-easterly, and damned cold. Rain is forecast.
Yes, we did have sun earlier and it was OK, but then..............
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostRather pleasant today. With rather a brisk easterly wind I was expecting it to be chilly, but in fact with the sun out it was OK. I had to go into the city for an appointment and was able to eat my picnic lunch outside, and the bus trip in was warm enough to warrant shedding my jacket for the duration of the journey. Early evening the payback started - even stronger wind and heavy rain - but it looks as if it should clear during the night.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
No wonder it's taken so lng to clear tonight if it's taken that long to reach you! Luckily I got some shopping done after lunch, just as the first spots were falling; we then had four or so hours of moderate to heavy rain, tunring to drizzle this evening as winds veered southerly and increased to fresh, and temperatures risen to 15+ C, which would be warm even by mid summer values. This problem of slow moving high rainfall-bearing frontal systems is to be with us up to and including the weekend, as low pressure centres form along the frontal systems delaying progression, owing to a blocking high across E Europe, forming what looks like a flabby triple yolked fried egg right across the UK - hence the rare red warning for exceptional rainfall across SE Scotland. But at least it's going to be very mild!!!
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Wild out there this morning. Just been outside and it's not cold but the wind is howling, and the rain is driving. We are forecast to be in the heart of Babet this evening. Forecast to get a bucketload of rain over the next twenty-four hours. Hopefully the lecky will hold out, but outages are to be expected. Just have to sit tight and hope it passes quick.
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostWild out there this morning. Just been outside and it's not cold but the wind is howling, and the rain is driving. We are forecast to be in the heart of Babet this evening. Forecast to get a bucketload of rain over the next twenty-four hours. Hopefully the lecky will hold out, but outages are to be expected. Just have to sit tight and hope it passes quick.
Loads of rain here last night. But very mild and fortunately dry for my walk this morning. More rain and possible thunder expected later.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
Best wishes, JC.
Loads of rain here last night. But very mild and fortunately dry for my walk this morning. More rain and possible thunder expected later.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
Best wishes, JC.
Loads of rain here last night. But very mild and fortunately dry for my walk this morning. More rain and possible thunder expected later.
So it was a bit of a nuisance having waited for 15 minutes at a local bus stop with my friend, who had to return to Camberwell, when a passer-by pointed out the notice covering the bus stop stating that it was closed. The same applied to the next two stops down line, and we eventually had to run to catch the No 3 he needed, half a mile down the road. I think Ricky was just relieved, but one would have thought the last bus driver could have pasted temporary notices giving explanations and directions to round the corner, where several No 3s re-routed down Gipsy Hill passed me on my ascent to the Upper Norwood triangle. All down to road works, presumably, of which there are a lot happening at the moment around these parts.
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
Thanks, Joseph. Electricity went out this afternoon, but then came on a couple of hours later. I found some batteries that fitted the radio to retain a bit contact with the outside world. A couple of hundred houses in Brechin, about half-an-hour north-east of here, are being evacuated. Red warning announced starting at 6pm in place till tomorrow lunchtime...pretty wild day out there. The leaves are abandoning the trees at a fair rate of knots.
My dad, who lives in Michigan, had to buy a generator because of the power going out for a number of days in the summer because of storms, if I remember correctly...
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The rain arrived suddenly last night with such force that I thought at first it was hail clattering on the front door(uPVC always makes it sound worse) but otherwise it's not been too bad just here. The wind is dropping a bit although the rain is currently increasing.
Hoping that family up in Dundee area are OK - the area got flooding problems only a few days ago, poor souls.
The rain did indeed get heavier and has been relentless. I've now not only got the customary stream across my backyard from the neighbour's roofs, but the volume has been such that the garden is now flooding. Under less challenging conditions the ground can relatively quickly absorb the deluge, but it can't cope with this. I have got thoroughly wet taking photos to show him and request(forcibly now - hints and neutral comments over several years haven't registered) that he address the issue by reconnecting the downpipe to the drainage system instead of assuming that a 350 litre waterbutt will somehow do the job of draining his back roof(and part of his neighbour's) and the kitchen roof. I can get a builder in to make a kerb to prevent the water getting to the area directly outside the back door but the water will still run down the side of the adjoining patio onto the garden. I can't fill in that gap (which I deepened shortly after getting the house to try and prevent standing water rotting more of the fenceposts) as his chain link fence goes below the level of the concrete pad on his side which would mean water getting into the gap and under both hard surfaces - not g. On the plus side the neighbour on the other side has sorted out the overflow from his IBC tank so that that doesn't drain into my yard as well, otherwise there would be several inches out there by now.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostThe rain arrived suddenly last night with such force that I thought at first it was hail clattering on the front door(uPVC always makes it sound worse) but otherwise it's not been too bad just here. The wind is dropping a bit although the rain is currently increasing.
Hoping that family up in Dundee area are OK - the area got flooding problems only a few days ago, poor souls.
The rain did indeed get heavier and has been relentless. I've now not only got the customary stream across my backyard from the neighbour's roofs, but the volume has been such that the garden is now flooding. Under less challenging conditions the ground can relatively quickly absorb the deluge, but it can't cope with this. I have got thoroughly wet taking photos to show him and request(forcibly now - hints and neutral comments over several years haven't registered) that he address the issue by reconnecting the downpipe to the drainage system instead of assuming that a 350 litre waterbutt will somehow do the job of draining his back roof(and part of his neighbour's) and the kitchen roof. I can get a builder in to make a kerb to prevent the water getting to the area directly outside the back door but the water will still run down the side of the adjoining patio onto the garden. I can't fill in that gap (which I deepened shortly after getting the house to try and prevent standing water rotting more of the fenceposts) as his chain link fence goes below the level of the concrete pad on his side which would mean water getting into the gap and under both hard surfaces - not g. On the plus side the neighbour on the other side has sorted out the overflow from his IBC tank so that that doesn't drain into my yard as well, otherwise there would be several inches out there by now.
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Just had my shortest rucksacking holiday ever: bus out to Parkway station, then bus back home again. Storm Babet strikes the rail network, apparently.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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