Home › Forums › The Main Forum Area › General talk and discussion › Sleet and Snow it had to come
- This topic has 9 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 2 months ago by
hortiman.
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January 26, 2014 at 11:40 am #5463
vhgmcbuddy
MemberHigh winds with the mixture of sleet and snow are pounding me here in Yorkshire. Is it time to prepare our snow shifting equipment,for the third time in as many years ?
January 26, 2014 at 12:07 pm #5465hillsider
ParticipantWet and windy down here no sleet – yet! Just dark and miserable.
Ray.January 26, 2014 at 2:24 pm #5475joegrgraham
ParticipantI’d love some snow and frost. Wet and windy here (Glos/Wilts border). My garden is starting to resemble the Bayou, no ‘Gators yet but my chickens are doing very passable duck impressions!.
I’m itching to get the last of the Parsnips out, rotovate the bed and get the Garlic in, but I’m on heavy clay and it is sticking like something to a woollen blanket!.
Ah well, be a hosepipe ban soon!Joe
January 26, 2014 at 3:38 pm #5476charlie
KeymasterConditions are much the same here in Somerset, very, very wet and I am lucky not to be on the levels which will remain flooded for many weeks even if it stops raining. It is very rare for me to be able to get on the veg patch with the rotavator before March due to wet ground conditions. Checked the chickens this morning and surprised to find they have not grown webbed feet yet!
I was brought up near the Wilts/Glos border at Highworth.January 26, 2014 at 3:39 pm #5477charlie
KeymasterJanuary 26, 2014 at 4:09 pm #5483joegrgraham
ParticipantLooking at pictures of the flooded areas, it always fascinates me how miles of land can be under water, but all the old churches and farm-steads are on little islands. Just shows our ancestors weren’t so daft after all!.
In the case of the Somerset Levels, it is amusing watching the Environment Agency tying themselves up in knots trying to deny that their complete neglect of the rivers and drains over the last twenty years has had anything to do with the currant situation!.January 26, 2014 at 4:09 pm #5484vhgmcbuddy
Memberwow that’s some billions of gallons Charlie. we are therefore lucky here.wondering if the cost of a small dinghy or rowing boat has gone through the roof yet ?
January 26, 2014 at 4:40 pm #5487charlie
KeymasterApparently any place name on the levels that ends with ‘ney’ is an island eg Muchelney so residents should not be surprised when they get cut off. Muchelney is cut off and there is a now a completely submerged car on the road to the village, so that makes it about 4ft deep!!!
January 26, 2014 at 5:05 pm #5488vhgmcbuddy
MemberRain and hails here in Devon, turning milder again on Friday. So don’t get to excited about snow ploughing yet.
January 26, 2014 at 8:45 pm #5499hortiman
ParticipantI well remember in Sussex that when it was East Sussex River Board, they had two Priestman draglines that were in constant use all Year dredging out rivers and in some cases fairly small ones, to keep the water flowing. But when the Environment agency took over, that all stopped, which must contribute to todays problems, apart from the Environment Agency sanctioning planning consent on flood plain and other unsuitable sites.
‘ Progress they call it’ -
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