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Old May 28th 06, 10:39 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
Dave.C Dave.C is offline
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,242
Default Dry winter good for beaches

Reported in yesterday's newspaper:
"The quality of Britain's beaches have been boosted by one of the driest
winters of the decade. The annual "Good Beach Guide", published by the
Marine Conservation Society (MCS), praised more than 500 of the 800 bathing
beaches in the UK for excellent water quality, compared with the previous
record of 453.
The driest weather in England and Wales since 1995 substantially reduced the
amount of storm pollution in the sea during weekly tests between May and
September last year, the society said.
The North-east was pinpointed as the region with the cleanest beaches, with
67% of all beaches recommended, an increase put down to drier weather and
infrastructure investment by water companies."
Not all bad news then.
I would expect this to be the case but I don't understand the correlation
between " a dry winter" and "tests between May and September". The bacterial
pollution caused by any storm overflows in winter would have been attenuated
by the following summer, I would have thought.

Dave

Dave