On Tue, 26 Jan 2016 12:05:51 -0000
"Eskimo Will" wrote:
"Len Wood" wrote in message
...
On Tuesday, 26 January 2016 11:19:30 UTC,
"Eskimo Will" wrote in message news:...
"Eskimo Will" wrote in message news:...
10:45
Howling wind, moderate lashing rain, water already flowing off
the moor
down the hill, mild at 8.5C, nothing more to say really. Just
glad I invested in some new green walking wellies before the
winter!
11:00
Postbridge now gusting 42 knots with heavy rain at 8 mm/h and
8C. This is
going to be a wet one!
Sorry for repeated posts but just noticed something after emptying
a litter
bin outside. The water on the patio outside my side door is
actually rising
and has reached the top of the small step into the house. I have
never seen
this before. OK the SW wind is driving the rain onto that side of
the house,
but the ground underneath (slabs are on sand) must be well
saturated, also
noticed the bottom of the house walls are very wet (outside that
is). I'm not that worried as it will drain off downhill after
reaching a few inches
but it concerns me that our general area is now getting very wet.
In 12 years I have never seen water flowing where it has been
these past few weeks. I think what has happened is that the
persistence of "rain days" is
taking its toll now both summer and winter and the water table has
probably
risen. We really need 4 weeks of dry weather to return to
something more like normality. Ha ha not going to get that in the
near future. Glad I don't
live near a river, that would be a proper worry.
Same here Will.
When I walk down the road from my place (at 83 m asl) to the beach,
there are streams across and down the road in places I have not
seen before. I have been here 33 years. New springs have sprung.
Water table must have risen.
The thing is, we have had high Nov, Dec, Jan rain totals like this
before.
Nov, Dec 2012 ,Jan 2013 641.5 mm
Nov, Dec 2013, Jan 2014 466.5 mm
Nov, Dec 2015, Jan 2016 431.5 mm to yesterday 25th
So it appears to be a cumulative effect over longer periods with
shorter dry spells. More rain days as you say.
The law of averages does not seem to be working at the moment.
Summats up.
Thanks Len that is most interesting. Concurs with what I saw driving
back across the south Hams last month where the fields were awash
with water cascading onto roads. Also every well trod path now on
Dartmoor is a mud bath, that didn't happen when I first moved here.
I'm also getting a few more damp issues inside the house. The walls
are lime plastered which is meant to draw moisture out of the house,
but with persistent high humidity outside day after day after day,
moisture is retained. My only solution is to now keep the house
warmer than I like or need, fortunately heating oil is now 65%
cheaper than a couple of years ago and my logs cost nothing apart
from my time chopping them!
Will
If you could chop the logs indoors, the heat your body generated
during the physical effort would help heat the house. Bonus!
--
Graham P Davis, Bracknell, Berks. [Retd meteorologist/programmer]
http://www.scarlet-jade.com/
I wear the cheese. It does not wear me.
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