Looking at the newsreel pictures it would seem quite a few of you have filled your water butts. We had a few showers but I have never seen the clouds so black, it looked like smoke.
Some areas have been badly affected. Chesterfield was in gridlock yesterday due to flooding.
It's not raining today but I'm waiting till next week to hopefully get on the plot again.
The site I use for the local weather forecast (western France had a little side bar yesterday evening reporting on extreme downpours and flooding in Sheffield with a video enttled "Minis are not amphibious" of some eejit in Sheffield driving one into a flooded road junction.
I hope those of you up in the flood zones are safe and dry and your lotties haven't been washed away either.
QuoteI hope those of you up in the flood zones are safe and dry
Can't say we are "Dry" as such but living at the top of the hill helps!
At least we are not flooded!
Sorry for those people at the bottom of the hill! :sign17: :sign19:
There's been so much rain here overnight that there were lakes in normally dry fields this morning. Odd, because neither our pond nor the lake in the village has yet to reach full levels after the long summer drought.
Can't imagine how awful it is for those being flooded or at risk of flooding and worrying about their failies, pets, posessions and homes.
heavy rain all day yesterday here in Barnsley but luckily no flooding except for the fields and rivers are very high feel, so sorry for the people that been flooded
On the news it looks devastating, but why the reporters have to stand in it I don't know. I don't care what the naysayers say, this is climate change and all the people moaning at the councils saying they should have give them sandbags etc should look at themselves for helping this to happen. 40 years ago I was on the sandbagging team as heavy rain and high tides could cause problems. The people would sit in their houses watching us struggle not many would come out and help protect their properties and then moan that we were too little, too late. We had extreme winds last week, the north gets 'biblical' rain this week, we have heavy rain coming again today. I am glad I live on the site of where the town windmill was sited high up on the hill.
They say it is not officially winter yet until the 1st Dec but we even had a frost here last night, very early for this part of the country. The next year will be a long hot and wet summer. I reckon when my grandchildren take on an allotment it will be paddy fields and a melon patch.
Quote from: ACE on November 08, 2019, 09:33:21
Looking at the newsreel pictures it would seem quite a few of you have filled your water butts.
My butt has been full for some time, thank you!
Today it's the soft South's turn. We're as high as you are likely to get in the upper Thames valley (after 2007 we checked the flood maps before we looked at houses!), but it's pretty d**n soggy here. I am wondering whether it's going to be a winter where the allotment floods. But you take that riskj taking one on on a water meadow.
Adrian
Our ditches have overflowed, the lawn is under water still. We had an automated red alert phone call from the environment agency on Friday night, that makes you consider your priorities somewhat! Fortunately the Derwent flood bank in our stretch was not breached, but you wonder what this winter will bring.
My youngest lives East of Sheffield, and couldn't get out of the village for flooding at the end of last week, but it has calmed down a bit. Parts of Derby were flooded and although house and lotties are on a hill half the plots have standing water on the downhill side. Had a meeting in the Trent valley cancelled on Monday as all the approach roads to the venue had been covered by rising water levels.