Not cold but horribly windy - was rudely kicked out of my slow rise to consciousness and mobility(joints lock during the night) by the sound of the recycling bin going over. That has to be dealt with quickly to prevent the lighter contents being strewn down the road - unlike some others I can't leave it to "disappear". So hobble downstairs and hoick it upright and put the bungee on the lid(which I should have done last night but forgot), and move the empty general waste bin from its embrace with the car. There has been some rain but the wind has dried most of it up already and the sun will finish the job.
This will not be helpful for visitor attractions - some may have to close as a precaution and I suspect there will be damage to the likes of gazebos/marquees. Not ideal camping weather.
Which reminds me of a family camping holiday in the mid/late 60s when we'd managed to get right down to the Mediterranean coast(not the original plan but that's another story), and a campsite in the dunes right by the beach.During the night there was the most horrific storm; we 3 children slept through it in our tent(parents were in the campervan) and woke in the morning to a re-arranged landscape. Caravans in the dunes(fortunately all empty as it was outside main holiday season), had been tipped over and/or buried, and we could see all kinds of debris, including some remnants of tents, blowing around or part buried. As we were blinking in the sun and trying to make sense of what had happened there was a yell and the owner of the site appeared. He couldn't believe that we we still there and OK and became quite emotional, and insisted on going and getting some breakfast for us. When he came back he said it was a storm that was so bad it had made national news - shipping had been affected, roads blocked etc, and he hadn't seen the like for decades. There were only 2 or 3 other tents on site, further away from the beach, and they had had to retreat to their cars during the night. It was certainly a ringing endorsement for the rather unusual design of our tent - it had the frame on the outside and a stitched in ground sheet, so the wind hadn't been able to get under and lift the canvas off like the other tents and the frame had flexed but not buckled or broken. Good thing we hadn't needed to put the flysheet up(weather was dry so wet protection not needed) as that might have changed things...
Very sad to see the amount of oil blown onto the beach, which meant a walk there, as we had done the previous day, wasn't possible.
This will not be helpful for visitor attractions - some may have to close as a precaution and I suspect there will be damage to the likes of gazebos/marquees. Not ideal camping weather.
Which reminds me of a family camping holiday in the mid/late 60s when we'd managed to get right down to the Mediterranean coast(not the original plan but that's another story), and a campsite in the dunes right by the beach.During the night there was the most horrific storm; we 3 children slept through it in our tent(parents were in the campervan) and woke in the morning to a re-arranged landscape. Caravans in the dunes(fortunately all empty as it was outside main holiday season), had been tipped over and/or buried, and we could see all kinds of debris, including some remnants of tents, blowing around or part buried. As we were blinking in the sun and trying to make sense of what had happened there was a yell and the owner of the site appeared. He couldn't believe that we we still there and OK and became quite emotional, and insisted on going and getting some breakfast for us. When he came back he said it was a storm that was so bad it had made national news - shipping had been affected, roads blocked etc, and he hadn't seen the like for decades. There were only 2 or 3 other tents on site, further away from the beach, and they had had to retreat to their cars during the night. It was certainly a ringing endorsement for the rather unusual design of our tent - it had the frame on the outside and a stitched in ground sheet, so the wind hadn't been able to get under and lift the canvas off like the other tents and the frame had flexed but not buckled or broken. Good thing we hadn't needed to put the flysheet up(weather was dry so wet protection not needed) as that might have changed things...
Very sad to see the amount of oil blown onto the beach, which meant a walk there, as we had done the previous day, wasn't possible.
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