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  #1   Report Post  
Old July 9th 10, 06:40 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2006
Posts: 6,158
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun

Everyone was a buzz at work today in Dulwich people fanning themselves email
warnings galore about how to survive deadly heat waves even in Sainsbury's
the till girl remarked to the customer in front
"it aint half 'ot out"

to which the customer murmered well it is'nt that bad.

The media is advising us how to stay cool, blimey I haven't seen it this bad
since that film with Edward Judd 'The Day the earth Caught Fire"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MYGonuA4_o This is as bad if not worse
than the great 'swine flu over the cuckoos nest' of 2009.

The mad met goricals
http://www.dh.gov.uk/en/MediaCentre/...ases/DH_117306 take this all
very seriously linking us to the NHS
http://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/Summerhea...mberalert.aspx who
asurre us that they take it equally seriously and are doing everthing in
their power to hype up the situation. They also offer some crucial life
saving advise

a.. Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.
a.. If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination
too.
a.. Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out
during extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic
drinks you'll need.
a.. Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.
a.. Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep
cool.



Hmmm some sound life saving advise there, I think you'd all agree.

Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.

Now this is very important because at any time the situation could
deteriorate things like the wind suddenly changing direction and a hidious
facial expression will form becoming a fixed personal feature. AKA Garvey's
Palsey
There is also a chance that sudenly the temperature may drop ten degrees and
once again it will be safe to venture down to Tescos again and being the
first to hear this news will save you having to queue.

If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination too.

So if were were planning to travel to Malaga and the temp there is lower
than yours here then don't bother going, especially if you can get a total
refund

Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out during
extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic drinks
you'll need.

This one is very important; for example if you plan to cross the river
thames ensure that there are still bridges in place and they haven't melted.

If you plan to walk across the lounge ensure there are cold drinks on the
other side, also warn or tell someone that you plan to do this. If halfway
across you feel you can't make it, then stop say three hail gores and start
again.

If you do plan to risk life and have a BBQ please avoid alcolic drinks as
hot sausages under the influence of drink can be dangerous in the wrong
hands.


Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.

Now this one puzzles me as who is going to volunteer and risk their lifes to
get this water so you can have it at hand? Well someone has to do it ; can I
suggest the wife if you have one. Myself I lost my fisrt wife in the great
heatwave of 2007, half way across the axeminster and puff........she was
gone turns out she ran of with the milkman.



Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep cool.

Well the coolest room in my house is the lounge as I've just decorated it Al
La Homes & Gardens, it looks great I'd love to sit in there.

So there we are fantastic simple advice that could save lifes.

The NHS/UKMO saving lives today from imaginary problems that didn't exist
yesterday



  #2   Report Post  
Old July 9th 10, 08:59 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Mar 2008
Posts: 10,601
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun

On Jul 9, 6:40*pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
Everyone was a buzz at work today in Dulwich people fanning themselves email
warnings galore about how to survive deadly heat waves even in Sainsbury's
the till girl remarked to the customer in front
"it aint half 'ot out"

to which the customer murmered well it is'nt that bad.

The media is advising us how to stay cool, blimey I haven't seen it this bad
since that film with Edward Judd 'The Day the earth Caught Fire"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MYGonuA4_o* This is as bad *if not worse
than the great 'swine *flu over the cuckoos nest' of 2009.

The mad met goricalshttp://www.dh.gov.uk/en/MediaCentre/Pressreleases/DH_117306take this all
very seriously linking us to the NHShttp://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/Summerhealth/Pages/Heatwaveamberalert.aspxwho
asurre us that they take it equally seriously and are doing everthing in
their power to hype up the situation. They also offer some *crucial life
saving advise

a.. Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.
a.. If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination
too.
a.. Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out
during extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic
drinks you'll need.
a.. Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.
a.. Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep
cool.

Hmmm some sound life saving advise there, I think you'd all agree.

Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.

Now this is very important because at any time the situation could
deteriorate things like the wind suddenly changing direction and a hidious
facial expression will form becoming a fixed personal feature. AKA Garvey's
Palsey
There is also a chance that sudenly the temperature may drop ten degrees and
once again it will be safe to venture down to Tescos again and being the
first to hear this news will save you having to queue.

If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination too.

So if were were planning to travel to Malaga and the temp there is lower
than yours here *then don't bother going, especially *if you can get a total
refund

Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out during
extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic drinks
you'll need.

This one is very important; for example if you plan to cross the river
thames ensure that there are still bridges in place and they haven't melted.

If you plan to walk across the lounge ensure there are cold drinks on the
other side, also warn or tell someone that you plan to do this. If halfway
across you feel you can't make it, then stop say three hail gores and start
again.

If you do plan to risk life and have a BBQ please avoid alcolic drinks as
hot sausages under the influence of drink can be dangerous in the wrong
hands.

Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.

Now this one puzzles me as who is going to volunteer and risk their lifes to
get this water so you can have it at hand? Well someone has to do it ; can I
suggest the wife if you have one. Myself I lost my fisrt wife in the great
heatwave of 2007, half way across the axeminster and puff........she was
gone turns out she ran of with the milkman.

Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep cool.

Well the coolest room in my house is the lounge as I've just decorated it Al
La Homes *& Gardens, it looks great I'd love to sit in there.

So there we are fantastic simple advice that could save lifes.

The NHS/UKMO saving lives today from imaginary problems that didn't exist
yesterday


I'm just fed up with this selfish rubbish from this one.

About 15,000 extra people *died* in France alone during the canicule
of 2003. You are *far* too selfish to realise that people with
existing health problems in the SE will have them exacerbated tonight
and some will be at risk of *dying* as a result. Yes Jenkins, actually
dying as a result. The increased awareness and better training, of the
emergency services and others, might just, save some of them, but I
can assure you that, had it been cooler tonight, there would be some
older, very young and very ill people that would be alive tomorrow.
Because of the heat, some in the SE will *die* tonight, who wouldn't
have done, had it been cooler; however, some will survive because of
the timely advice from the MetO and the support from the NHS, social
service and neighbours.

You, however, are hopefully not yet old enough, or vulnerable enough,
to suffer.....*yet*. Others can make their judgements on what they may
wish for you in heatwaves in, say, 20 years time, should you be lucky
enough to survive that long.

The problems existed "yesterday", it's just that people died quietly
and no-one collected the stats.
  #3   Report Post  
Old July 9th 10, 09:33 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jun 2009
Posts: 241
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun

On 9 July, 21:59, Dawlish wrote:
On Jul 9, 6:40*pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:





Everyone was a buzz at work today in Dulwich people fanning themselves email
warnings galore about how to survive deadly heat waves even in Sainsbury's
the till girl remarked to the customer in front
"it aint half 'ot out"


to which the customer murmered well it is'nt that bad.


The media is advising us how to stay cool, blimey I haven't seen it this bad
since that film with Edward Judd 'The Day the earth Caught Fire"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MYGonuA4_o*This is as bad *if not worse
than the great 'swine *flu over the cuckoos nest' of 2009.


The mad met goricalshttp://www.dh.gov.uk/en/MediaCentre/Pressreleases/DH_117306takethis all
very seriously linking us to the NHShttp://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/Summerhealth/Pages/Heatwaveamberalert.aspxwho
asurre us that they take it equally seriously and are doing everthing in
their power to hype up the situation. They also offer some *crucial life
saving advise


a.. Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.
a.. If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination
too.
a.. Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out
during extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic
drinks you'll need.
a.. Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.
a.. Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep
cool.


Hmmm some sound life saving advise there, I think you'd all agree.


Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.


Now this is very important because at any time the situation could
deteriorate things like the wind suddenly changing direction and a hidious
facial expression will form becoming a fixed personal feature. AKA Garvey's
Palsey
There is also a chance that sudenly the temperature may drop ten degrees and
once again it will be safe to venture down to Tescos again and being the
first to hear this news will save you having to queue.


If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination too.


So if were were planning to travel to Malaga and the temp there is lower
than yours here *then don't bother going, especially *if you can get a total
refund


Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out during
extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic drinks
you'll need.


This one is very important; for example if you plan to cross the river
thames ensure that there are still bridges in place and they haven't melted.


If you plan to walk across the lounge ensure there are cold drinks on the
other side, also warn or tell someone that you plan to do this. If halfway
across you feel you can't make it, then stop say three hail gores and start
again.


If you do plan to risk life and have a BBQ please avoid alcolic drinks as
hot sausages under the influence of drink can be dangerous in the wrong
hands.


Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.


Now this one puzzles me as who is going to volunteer and risk their lifes to
get this water so you can have it at hand? Well someone has to do it ; can I
suggest the wife if you have one. Myself I lost my fisrt wife in the great
heatwave of 2007, half way across the axeminster and puff........she was
gone turns out she ran of with the milkman.


Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep cool.


Well the coolest room in my house is the lounge as I've just decorated it Al
La Homes *& Gardens, it looks great I'd love to sit in there.


So there we are fantastic simple advice that could save lifes.


The NHS/UKMO saving lives today from imaginary problems that didn't exist
yesterday


I'm just fed up with this selfish rubbish from this one.

About 15,000 extra people *died* in France alone during the canicule
of 2003. You are *far* too selfish to realise that people with
existing health problems in the SE will have them exacerbated tonight
and some will be at risk of *dying* as a result. Yes Jenkins, actually
dying as a result. The increased awareness and better training, of the
emergency services and others, might just, save some of them, but I
can assure you that, had it been cooler tonight, there would be some
older, very young and very ill people that would be alive tomorrow.
Because of the heat, some in the SE will *die* tonight, who wouldn't
have done, had it been cooler; however, some will survive because of
the timely advice from the MetO and the support from the NHS, social
service and neighbours.

You, however, are hopefully not yet old enough, or vulnerable enough,
to suffer.....*yet*. Others can make their judgements on what they may
wish for you in heatwaves in, say, 20 years time, should you be lucky
enough to survive that long.

The problems existed "yesterday", it's just that people died quietly
and no-one collected the stats.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Dawlish, are you some sort of queen of melodrama? Certainly seems
that way. People die in their millions daily, from one thing or
another - most by means of natural procecesses, but many at the hands
of or because of the actions of other humans. Whatever you may
personally feel, neither weather or climate are one of those criteria
for the causes of death over which humanity has any direct control.
Never have been, never will be.

CK

  #4   Report Post  
Old July 9th 10, 10:16 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2006
Posts: 6,158
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun


"Natsman" wrote in message
...
On 9 July, 21:59, Dawlish wrote:
On Jul 9, 6:40 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:





Everyone was a buzz at work today in Dulwich people fanning themselves
email
warnings galore about how to survive deadly heat waves even in
Sainsbury's
the till girl remarked to the customer in front
"it aint half 'ot out"


to which the customer murmered well it is'nt that bad.


The media is advising us how to stay cool, blimey I haven't seen it this
bad
since that film with Edward Judd 'The Day the earth Caught
Fire"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MYGonuA4_o This is as bad if not
worse
than the great 'swine flu over the cuckoos nest' of 2009.


The mad met
goricalshttp://www.dh.gov.uk/en/MediaCentre/Pressreleases/DH_117306takethis
all
very seriously linking us to the
NHShttp://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/Summerhealth/Pages/Heatwaveamberalert.aspxwho
asurre us that they take it equally seriously and are doing everthing in
their power to hype up the situation. They also offer some crucial life
saving advise


a.. Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.
a.. If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination
too.
a.. Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out
during extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and
non-alcoholic
drinks you'll need.
a.. Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever
possible.
a.. Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep
cool.


Hmmm some sound life saving advise there, I think you'd all agree.


Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.


Now this is very important because at any time the situation could
deteriorate things like the wind suddenly changing direction and a
hidious
facial expression will form becoming a fixed personal feature. AKA
Garvey's
Palsey
There is also a chance that sudenly the temperature may drop ten degrees
and
once again it will be safe to venture down to Tescos again and being the
first to hear this news will save you having to queue.


If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination
too.


So if were were planning to travel to Malaga and the temp there is lower
than yours here then don't bother going, especially if you can get a
total
refund


Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out
during
extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic
drinks
you'll need.


This one is very important; for example if you plan to cross the river
thames ensure that there are still bridges in place and they haven't
melted.


If you plan to walk across the lounge ensure there are cold drinks on
the
other side, also warn or tell someone that you plan to do this. If
halfway
across you feel you can't make it, then stop say three hail gores and
start
again.


If you do plan to risk life and have a BBQ please avoid alcolic drinks
as
hot sausages under the influence of drink can be dangerous in the wrong
hands.


Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.


Now this one puzzles me as who is going to volunteer and risk their
lifes to
get this water so you can have it at hand? Well someone has to do it ;
can I
suggest the wife if you have one. Myself I lost my fisrt wife in the
great
heatwave of 2007, half way across the axeminster and puff........she was
gone turns out she ran of with the milkman.


Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep
cool.


Well the coolest room in my house is the lounge as I've just decorated
it Al
La Homes & Gardens, it looks great I'd love to sit in there.


So there we are fantastic simple advice that could save lifes.


The NHS/UKMO saving lives today from imaginary problems that didn't
exist
yesterday


I'm just fed up with this selfish rubbish from this one.

About 15,000 extra people *died* in France alone during the canicule
of 2003. You are *far* too selfish to realise that people with
existing health problems in the SE will have them exacerbated tonight
and some will be at risk of *dying* as a result. Yes Jenkins, actually
dying as a result. The increased awareness and better training, of the
emergency services and others, might just, save some of them, but I
can assure you that, had it been cooler tonight, there would be some
older, very young and very ill people that would be alive tomorrow.
Because of the heat, some in the SE will *die* tonight, who wouldn't
have done, had it been cooler; however, some will survive because of
the timely advice from the MetO and the support from the NHS, social
service and neighbours.

You, however, are hopefully not yet old enough, or vulnerable enough,
to suffer.....*yet*. Others can make their judgements on what they may
wish for you in heatwaves in, say, 20 years time, should you be lucky
enough to survive that long.

The problems existed "yesterday", it's just that people died quietly
and no-one collected the stats.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Dawlish, are you some sort of queen of melodrama? Certainly seems
that way. People die in their millions daily, from one thing or
another - most by means of natural procecesses, but many at the hands
of or because of the actions of other humans. Whatever you may
personally feel, neither weather or climate are one of those criteria
for the causes of death over which humanity has any direct control.
Never have been, never will be.

CK


I'm annoyed for two reasons
1) I should have used advice not advise, I was in a hurry and trusted spell
check

2) I'm ****ed of with this h&s crap that the agw gung ho metO churn out.

As I said I saw three emails today spurtuing on about surving a heat wave.
Here as I type in the SE London its warm and humid nothig I've not
experienced before and the staistics mondoay will prove that. But UKMO and
the NHS make me absolutely sick.

Personally I've had a health condition that the NHS aren't the slightest bit
interested in as I don't tick the right boxes, patients die on ward like the
poor young cancer victim lad who was allowed to die on a ward at St Georges
in Tooting as he died literally of dehydration and the ignorance by the
nursing staff of his drug regime despite the mother pleading with them to
listen
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...beg-water.html

Infection rate fatalities have been nearly two thousand per year since 2000
and yet the met office with the NHS talk absolute ****e about so called
heatwaves.

Moving on today as I said at work we had heatwave emails about safety for a
section of the community that the person sending those emails high up within
the care profession is trying to foster out to strangers to save money. The
whole system is now run on lies and fabrication like swine flu. I'm
stopping there as I feel a blood vessel is going to burst.


  #5   Report Post  
Old July 9th 10, 10:27 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Dec 2006
Posts: 6,158
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun


"Dawlish" wrote in message
...
On Jul 9, 6:40 pm, "Lawrence Jenkins" wrote:
Everyone was a buzz at work today in Dulwich people fanning themselves
email
warnings galore about how to survive deadly heat waves even in Sainsbury's
the till girl remarked to the customer in front
"it aint half 'ot out"

to which the customer murmered well it is'nt that bad.

The media is advising us how to stay cool, blimey I haven't seen it this
bad
since that film with Edward Judd 'The Day the earth Caught
Fire"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MYGonuA4_o This is as bad if not
worse
than the great 'swine flu over the cuckoos nest' of 2009.

The mad met
goricalshttp://www.dh.gov.uk/en/MediaCentre/Pressreleases/DH_117306take
this all
very seriously linking us to the
NHShttp://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/Summerhealth/Pages/Heatwaveamberalert.aspxwho
asurre us that they take it equally seriously and are doing everthing in
their power to hype up the situation. They also offer some crucial life
saving advise

a.. Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.
a.. If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination
too.
a.. Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out
during extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic
drinks you'll need.
a.. Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.
a.. Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep
cool.

Hmmm some sound life saving advise there, I think you'd all agree.

Stay tuned to the weather forecast on the TV or radio.

Now this is very important because at any time the situation could
deteriorate things like the wind suddenly changing direction and a hidious
facial expression will form becoming a fixed personal feature. AKA
Garvey's
Palsey
There is also a chance that sudenly the temperature may drop ten degrees
and
once again it will be safe to venture down to Tescos again and being the
first to hear this news will save you having to queue.

If you're planning to travel, check the forecast at your destination too.

So if were were planning to travel to Malaga and the temp there is lower
than yours here then don't bother going, especially if you can get a total
refund

Plan ahead: stock up with supplies so that you don't need to go out during
extreme heat and think about what medicines, food and non-alcoholic drinks
you'll need.

This one is very important; for example if you plan to cross the river
thames ensure that there are still bridges in place and they haven't
melted.

If you plan to walk across the lounge ensure there are cold drinks on the
other side, also warn or tell someone that you plan to do this. If halfway
across you feel you can't make it, then stop say three hail gores and
start
again.

If you do plan to risk life and have a BBQ please avoid alcolic drinks as
hot sausages under the influence of drink can be dangerous in the wrong
hands.

Keep plenty of water to hand and stay in the shade whenever possible.

Now this one puzzles me as who is going to volunteer and risk their lifes
to
get this water so you can have it at hand? Well someone has to do it ; can
I
suggest the wife if you have one. Myself I lost my fisrt wife in the great
heatwave of 2007, half way across the axeminster and puff........she was
gone turns out she ran of with the milkman.

Identify the coolest room in the house, so you can go there to keep cool.

Well the coolest room in my house is the lounge as I've just decorated it
Al
La Homes & Gardens, it looks great I'd love to sit in there.

So there we are fantastic simple advice that could save lifes.

The NHS/UKMO saving lives today from imaginary problems that didn't exist
yesterday


I'm just fed up with this selfish rubbish from this one.

About 15,000 extra people *died* in France alone during the canicule
of 2003. You are *far* too selfish to realise that people with
existing health problems in the SE will have them exacerbated tonight
and some will be at risk of *dying* as a result. Yes Jenkins, actually
dying as a result. The increased awareness and better training, of the
emergency services and others, might just, save some of them, but I
can assure you that, had it been cooler tonight, there would be some
older, very young and very ill people that would be alive tomorrow.
Because of the heat, some in the SE will *die* tonight, who wouldn't
have done, had it been cooler; however, some will survive because of
the timely advice from the MetO and the support from the NHS, social
service and neighbours.

You, however, are hopefully not yet old enough, or vulnerable enough,
to suffer.....*yet*. Others can make their judgements on what they may
wish for you in heatwaves in, say, 20 years time, should you be lucky
enough to survive that long.

The problems existed "yesterday", it's just that people died quietly
and no-one collected the stats.

Paul just shut up, you are an idiot I deal with so called vulnerable people
that are at so called risk from the ravings of ukmo .

It started with UKMO made its way around the councils especially the left
ones who just love this sort tripe.

IT IS A VERY LOCALISED HOT SPELL THATS BEEN MORE HYPED THAN YOU SELF
PROMOTION OF YOUR INTELLIGENCE.

As I've said if life and health were at risk then ukmo should shut up and
forecast as they used to and NHS should deal with a real issues like the
standard and infection rates in there shambles they call hospitals.

Everything now is stage managed spin to divert idiots like you Dawlish away
from the real issues.

A friend of mine was recently visiting Lewisham hospital when he saw on the
walls tripe like this.

THE NHS WILL PROMISE TO TREAT ALL ITS CUSTOMERS WITH THE UTMOST RESPECT

My friend reflected: are they saying then that they never used to treat
their customers with the utmost respect?

Drivel, rubbish. diversions jsut like the hype on this hot spell oops heat
wave.




  #6   Report Post  
Old July 10th 10, 01:44 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jan 2005
Posts: 4,152
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun

On Jul 9, 9:33*pm, Natsman wrote:

*Whatever you may
personally *feel, neither weather or climate are one of those criteria
for the causes of death over which humanity has any direct control.
Never have been, never will be.

CK-


- Show quoted text -


Try going out in a blizzard (if you get them there) dressed in
shorts and T-shirt. You'll be dead in hour or two. Or - "Wrap Up
Well" as my Mum used to say all those years ago. Cheat the Grim
Reaper by exercising Direct Control. Go on, millions do it, all the
time, quite instinctively.

Tudor Hughes, Warlingham, Surrey

  #7   Report Post  
Old July 11th 10, 07:37 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Jun 2010
Posts: 1,184
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun

On 09/07/2010 20:59, Dawlish wrote:
Because of the heat, some in the SE will *die* tonight, who wouldn't
have done, had it been cooler;


snip

Here you go:

http://tinyurl.com/356qwk6
  #8   Report Post  
Old July 11th 10, 08:50 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Oct 2009
Posts: 14
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun


"Adam Lea" a écrit dans le message de news:
...
On 09/07/2010 20:59, Dawlish wrote:
Because of the heat, some in the SE will *die* tonight, who wouldn't
have done, had it been cooler;


snip

Here you go:

http://tinyurl.com/356qwk6

I can't believe the Brits are only just cottoning on to this; the problems
in France in 2003 and during subsequent hot summers caused a great deal of
heart searching, especially as there were tales (new urban myths?) of
couples plus children scooting off to to 'la Mer' (the Med) or the 'Océan'
(Atalntic coast) for their sacrosanct fortnight, leaving an aged parent to
fend for him or herself, and coming back to a corpse - problem exacerbated
by the French insistence on having their holidays in precisely defined
chunks.
As an aside, I would like to swap half a day of 17° misty West Cumbrian
coast weather (anywhere between Parton and Drigg would do) for what we've
got here in SW France where it is still mid-30s, very heavy and showing no
sign of improving any day soon

Liz Owen


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Old July 11th 10, 10:14 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
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Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun

On Jul 11, 7:37*pm, Adam Lea wrote:
On 09/07/2010 20:59, Dawlish wrote:

Because of the heat, some in the SE will *die* tonight, who wouldn't
have done, had it been cooler;


snip

Here you go:

http://tinyurl.com/356qwk6


I know. It's just sad when someone just can't see that and tries to
perpetuate their agenda-ridden health and safety polemic when some
people won't have survived the night. Such selfishness and lack of
concern for others is just inexcusable.
  #10   Report Post  
Old July 12th 10, 06:55 AM posted to uk.sci.weather
Col Col is offline
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Posts: 4,367
Default OnllyAGWmetmen and weathernuts go on about the midday sun

Dawlish wrote:
On Jul 11, 7:37 pm, Adam Lea wrote:
On 09/07/2010 20:59, Dawlish wrote:

Because of the heat, some in the SE will *die* tonight, who wouldn't
have done, had it been cooler;


snip

Here you go:

http://tinyurl.com/356qwk6


I know. It's just sad when someone just can't see that and tries to
perpetuate their agenda-ridden health and safety polemic when some
people won't have survived the night. Such selfishness and lack of
concern for others is just inexcusable.


It's just a pity the warnings have to sound so melodramatic in order
to get that important message across.
--
Col

Bolton, Lancashire
160m asl




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