[WR] Persistent thick drizzle Coventry and environs
In message , TudorHgh
writes
It's the sort of drizzle that (totally unscientific) wets you more
than a tropical downpour, as my mother would say. Must be due to
number of droplets per cubic metre, which always seems to at its
greatest in these situations.
If you go out in a drizzle, the droplets are so small and light they are
stopped by the slightest thing, so they stay totally on the outside of your
clothing, sometimes it seems barely touching it. Equally, your hair is no
wetter than if you'd sprayed it as the barber might do. Yet if you go out in
heavy rain the large drops bash straight through your clothing and hair,
soaking you in no time. So why does this nonsensical bit of folklore about
drizzle being wetter than heavy rain still persist? It's something I was
brought up with and still hear, but simple observation totally contradicts it.
It's just complete ********!
Tudor Hughes
It all depends on which part of the country you are in. I agree that
drizzle in SE England is usually not very wetting. On the other hand,
the sort of drizzle that's common in places such as Fort William is
absolutely drenching.
Norman.
(delete "thisbit" twice to e-mail)
--
Norman Lynagh Weather Consultancy
Chalfont St Giles
England
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