
July 10th 08, 11:11 AM
posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2007
Posts: 342
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Springs + Rain + Southerly gales for the South Coast on Saturday= flooding?
Dawlish wrote:
On Jul 5, 8:42 pm, Dawlish wrote:
On Jul 5, 5:31 pm, Dawlish wrote:
On Jul 5, 5:08 pm, Graham Easterling
wrote:
On 5 Jul, 16:16, Dawlish wrote:
On Jul 5, 4:00 pm, "Jon O'Rourke" wrote:
"Dawlish" wrote in message
...
snip
I'm sure all the review's recommendations will be followed up in due course
and the recent establishment of the 24/7 "Wet Bench" in the Operations
Centre, prior the reports release, will further help. BBC report on this
from Junehttp://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7453522.stmhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/...
As before, keep the feedback/suggestions coming tohttp://www.metoffice.gov.uk/corporate/contact/contact.html
In the mean time you might find the warnings panel here helpfulhttp://www.metbrief.com/obs.html
Jon.
Probably the worst weather of the afternoon so far. Driving rain and a
force 6, gusting force 7/8 Southerly. Nothing severe, either in
rainfall, or in wind speeds, but high tide is still 4 hours away. The
key to the severity will be in the interaction of weather and sea
around high tide.
With luck my water butts will be full by the end of the afternoon.
Water collection going very well and the water collection vessels have
not been blown across the garden (yet). Now all I need is some warm
and dry weather to use the collected water!
Paul- Hide quoted text -
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Well, wind's not gale force in the Channel, or on exposed headlands
(say Culdrose - Force 6, or Portland Force 5) and the tide's not that
big, and the swell's not that large, peaked at 15' at Sevenstones (was
15'-18' when we went on that RIB Alan), so can't see why there should
be any problems, with the possible exception of trains getting
splashed at Dawlish.
Graham
Penzance- Hide quoted text -
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Like I say, I think we'll escape, but there could be problems as the
strongest winds transfer East, where they will become onshore.
Paul- Hide quoted text -
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Escaped here. The tide is high (sounds like a line from a song), but
the South-Westerly is flattening the waves and not adding to their
height. There's a good flow coming down Dawlish Water, but it's not
bankfull and the narrow exit is coping, allowing exit of the river
water between waves. There's some people watching the high tide (must
be tourists, locals wouldn't bother with this!) and a couple of
council workmen who will have been dispatched to shift the rubbish
bins and to unblock the river exit, under the road, should anything
get jammed. It was an appropriate response. One row of sandbags
outside my friends' flat, but they won't be needed tonight. That was
an appropriate response too! The tide will be falling soon. Dawlish
can breathe a sigh of relief! I haven't been to Newton Abbot. The
supermarket booze and treat shelves called too loud!
Paul- Hide quoted text -
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We didn't, in fact, escape completely. No flooding, but there was
damage to the sea wall. One day, in a monstrous storm which will hit
this railway, a big stretch will be completely washed away. One of the
most scenic railways in the country, but, perhaps, the most
vulnerable. Estimates of the cost of re-routing it under the Haldon
Hills are enormous.
http://www.thisissouthdevon.co.uk/di...entPK=21045208
Paul
Presumably the contractors would have to re-route the rly by the
A38/A380, to get from Exeter to Newton Abbott. Of course if it did
happen the rly line from Exeter to Teignmouth would be disused, what
network rail spent in building a new line, can be recouped in not
repairing the line from Dawlish warren to Teignmouth.
--
Joe Egginton
Wolverhampton
175m asl
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