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The expression "flash flood"
Yesterday's disaster reminds us what a flash flood really is.
To use the expression to describe 12 inches of water under the local railway bridge after a heavy shower is as daft -- even dafter, I reckon -- than the ubiquitous mini-tornado. Philip Eden |
The expression "flash flood"
"Philip Eden" philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom wrote in message ... Yesterday's disaster reminds us what a flash flood really is. To use the expression to describe 12 inches of water under the local railway bridge after a heavy shower is as daft -- even dafter, I reckon -- than the ubiquitous mini-tornado. Philip Eden Like most real flash floods it was extremely localised, a narrow band along that part of the north Cornwall coast. Much of Cornwall was quite sunny mid afternoon. I just hope there was someone recording rainfall in the right spot. On 13th November 2002, the day of the St Ives flood, the storm moved north from Penzance to St Ives. I recorded 84.5mm, there was 61.7mm 2 miles NW of me, 83.0mm at Hayle, 76mm at St Ives. I think the area behind Boscastle must have received significantly more than this. It is on the west side of Bodmin Moor, and therefore prone to heavy falls of rain, but nothing remotely like this has happened before. -- Graham Penzance Weather www.easterling.freeserve.co.uk/weather.html |
The expression "flash flood"
I was in something very similar to Boscastle and Lynmouth in the upper Rhone
area of the Alps in 1974 and was able to recently write about this awe inspiring experience for primary aged children as part of the Literacy Hour for the National Curriculum. My message to them was never underestimate the power of the elements. The cacophony of noise produced by cars, parts of buildings, trees etc being swept along by a maelstrom of mud coloured water is something I will never forget. I am soon going back to visit the area 30 years on after being evacuated from it to see how it has recovered. In fact I shall be staying at a place that was devastated by another even worse flood of catastrophic proportions on the 24th September 1993. You can imagine the flow when the hills of Cornwall are replaced by 3500 metre high mountains and 200 mm of rain overnight on top of glacier and snow melt. I am though not going to be situated on the valley floor! Ian Currie- Coulsdon www.frostedearth.com "Philip Eden" philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom wrote in message ... Yesterday's disaster reminds us what a flash flood really is. To use the expression to describe 12 inches of water under the local railway bridge after a heavy shower is as daft -- even dafter, I reckon -- than the ubiquitous mini-tornado. Philip Eden |
The expression "flash flood"
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