Rain in England - anyone here affected?

evil tendencies

Cake or Death?
Just what the title says - is anyone here affected by the rains in the north of England? One news story I read (think it was Beeb) said that rai like that only came once every 1,000 years or somesuch.

If you are affected, is there anything we here could do to help you out?
 

SJB

New member
Worst rain for 1000 years? How on earth would they know? Have they been reading King Harold's diary where he included accurate meteorological data?
 

Beelzebrush

Active member
I assume that it means theoretically every 1000 years according to what's known :eyeroll!: (possibly from historical records - who knows?). It's certainly been the worse on record for some parts of the UK.

I'm not affected personally but the areas that are, have been pretty bad :(
 

darklord

New member
Im near Durham and its not that bad to be honest - nowhere near the worst Ive seen - must be other parts of the north. Of coursee if its someone in london saying north they could mean watford!
 

nels0nmac

Member
The worst affected area is Cumbria. In the lake district they had over 300mm of rain - yup thats ONE FOOT of rain in 24 hours!!!! Thats a serious deluge. Even managed to cause enough flooding to tear down a couple of bridges; unfortunately a policeman was caught on one of them as he was directing traffic away to safety. He was killed. Damn shame that.
Fortunatly apart from that the worst seems to have been damage to property caused by the floods. On a lighter note there was an interview on the TV with an old lady who was evacuated out of her house by the fire service, she was reallly put out at having to leave her house and was definitely not best pleased; although the firemen seemed to find it quite funny.
 

tidoco2222

Active member
I spent Wednesday and Thursday of this week driving through some of the affected areas, Wales bore the inital brunt of the storm on Tuesday/ wednesday. My job is based in Machynlleth and that was pretty bad as I was leaving funnily enough to drive up to Scotland (Falkirk) to attend a course. On the way home the rain was extremely heavy and the winds were very strong indeed I think that Dumfries was one of the worst areas affected that far up and then the Lake District as already mentioned.
We were listening to the weather reports constantly on the way back home Thursday and it wasn't a nice picture that was being described.
 
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Devilry

New member
Dammit, time to get technical :)

I'm a planning consultant by profession so let me just clear these figures up for people.

Flood Risk is split into several categories, most of which are irrelevent, but the important ones here are;

1 in 100
1 in 200
1 in 1000

These are basically flood levels set by the Environment Agency and based on a huge computer model of flood events, taking into account rising sea levels from climate change and all that jazz. When you apply for planning permission in a flood area you need to demonstrate that you can sufficiently mitigate against these levels. (you only have to mitigate against the ones that are considered relevent, so if you live in the middle of Birmingham you wont have to show the same mitigation as if you live on the beach. 1 in 1000 is only ever normally applied in the nations largest flood plains, Bristol etc.)

Think of them as risk rather than timescale. i.e 'there is a 1/100 chance of these levels being reached in any given year', rather than 'this will happen on the dot once every 100 years'

1 in 1000 is basically a freak event. It's used normally to test flood defences (i.e those defences are fine for 1 in 100 and 1 in 200, but what happens when we have a freak 1 in 1000 event and the water comes over the top of the defences).

Simply put, the 1 in 1000 referred to is an Environement Agency prediction model based on risk rather than a record of how many times these levels have been seen.

Right, I'll bugger off and stop being boring now.
 
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freakinacage

Well-known member
hmmm interesting (not boring at all)

i am in cardiff and not affected at all. neither has anywhere inthe valleys where i work, yet

however, if you would like to help, send me that greater demon. that would help a lot
 
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In Chigh P.I.

New member
Im in south west Scotland, we usually get a lot of rain here but this last week has been particularly bad. It started around wednesday, and rained non stop for 48 hours, took a little break for a few hours on friday but now its back :umbrella:

the local playing fields next to the river now seem to have merged with the atlantic ocean :sidefrown:
 
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