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Puddy Galore

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Posts posted by Puddy Galore

  1. I love autumn also as long as it is dry, crisp, misty and cold.  Don't like a wet and windy autumn when the leaves are soggy and wet sticking to everything making everywhere slippy.  It us a horrid job cleaning the garden of wet dirty leaves.  I think it was autumn 2009 around these parts that, as far as I can recall,  was a beautiful autumn.  I have 5 sycamore trees at the top of my garden and I was almost knee deep at one point at the top of my garden that year with beautiful crisp leaves.  In the evening I could hear the badgers and other wildlife crunching through the leaves.

     

    • Like 4
  2. 8 minutes ago, Essan said:

    And on a seperate note, it also remains extremely dry - just 12mm this month and a little over 200mm for the year

    yes, this is the main issue for me, its been so awfully dry this summer and, unless I'm mistaken, comes on the back of a fairly dry winter as well.  I'm beginning to feel around these parts we will dry to a crisp and wither away.  So many trees locally are looking tired and some look ready to throw the towel in and we are only half way through July.  There seems to be a frequently present pesky wind that seems to add to the drying effect.  I have a wood leading onto open farmland at the back of me and all this dryness does worry me somewhat.  The wind has dropped a little since first thing this morning and now we are in full sun again so yet another drying day coming up.  Whilst I am conscious and respectful of what folk in parts of Cornwall have endured during the last 24-hours, I really am hoping for some decent rainfall here sooner rather than later.

    • Like 1
  3. 2 hours ago, weirpig said:

    First rumble here of the year whoop whoop 

     

    4 minutes ago, Walsall Wood Snow said:

    Same here at about the same time. Starting hoping for a moment, a proper thunderstorm might develop, but it weren't to be.

    Gutted, in the same area and I appear to have missed it!!  Best of it being I was actually outside in the summerhouse/cat pen with the door open!  Think I must be going deaf...

  4. 1 hour ago, Dami said:

    You wouldn't believe the horrific pictures I saw on social regarding a runner with her legs all burnt. Quite shocking.

    I never used to burn until i went away, forgot to put cream on my shoulders and for the first time went very red and sore.

    Even in this last heat with cream i got a light colouring.

    The funny thing is the looks i get wearing my hat. In 32c heat they are the idiots, not me.  

    Know what you mean regarding looks people give you.  Heatwave summer 2016 and I needed to walk from work to the tram station in West Brom in the mid afternoon sun.  Decided to use a pretty bamboo parasol I had to shade me from the sun and some plonker looked at me curiously and pointed out it wasn't raining :wallbash:  

  5. 26 minutes ago, mushymanrob said:

    try "  Firstly intense heat such as we have experienced over the last few days causes some real issues for people who suffer from a range of medical conditions, in particular those making breathing difficult, so spare a thought for them struggling to breathe in such intense heat"

    now you might not have meant to sound like you were guilt tripping heat lovers, but thats how it reads...

    Grow up....

    • Like 3
  6. 1 hour ago, mushymanrob said:

    does the discomfort of others due to the heat apply to those who like cold and snow too?... i just notice heat-haters are bringing this up time and time again, as if we are supposed to be guilty for wanting and liking heat? but it cuts both ways, extreme cold causes problems too.. i bet you heat haters arent so vocal then...

    Can't see anywhere where I'm trying to make anyone feel quilty about anything to be honest.....

  7. 5 minutes ago, stainesbloke said:

    I'm just so glad that all the poor, heat stressed darlings will be able to get a good night's sleep now. Honestly, from all the heart-wrenching and pitiful posts on here lately, one could be forgiven for thinking we were suddenly in Kuwait. Luckily, we didn't have the 54C they had this week, that would have been just unthinkable. I wonder if any Kuwaiti's got any sleep? Not to worry, a good 10 days of cool, howling winds, cloud and damp to come. The fact that any outdoor activities will likely be ruined in high summer is nothing, sleep is so very important, especially when people who moan about the heat won't fork out for air conditioning and leave the rest of us to enjoy SUMMER!

    Genuinely glad you got to enjoy the recent hot weather stainesbloke but being so sarcastic about those who genuinely don't enjoy the heat as much as you is not particularly friendly from where I sit.  Firstly intense heat such as we have experienced over the last few days causes some real issues for people who suffer from a range of medical conditions, in particular those making breathing difficult, so spare a thought for them struggling to breathe in such intense heat and secondly Kuwait, unless I'm mistaken, is a country well geared up for heat so is able to cope. 

    • Like 5
  8. 10 minutes ago, Nick L said:

    So much less disgusting this morning. No more heatwaves please!

    I agree, the past few days have been unbearable.  I'm also worried it has really knocked my 17-year old cat for six all this heat and it hasn't done me many favours either having to work in an office with no opening windows (other than 2" with a struggle!!) and no air conditioning.  Happy for pleasant summer weather but not the oppressive heat of the last few days.

  9. 14 hours ago, More Snow said:

    it was by far the best snow ive ever seen... i was living in Penn Wolverhampton in 2010 and can remember the way the snow fell during that spell... very soft but very deep and very cold right up to boxing day...end of November 2010 was a good fall aswell... Feb 2012 was poor and thats when i decided to move the family up here to increase my chances of seeing more snow... if we dont get a good spell this winter we are off to Scotland lol... Wanlockhead is the highest village in Scotland so have got my eye on that place...lol

    I live in Penn, Wolverhampton, on the edge of the seven cornfields and the large farm adjacent to Penn Common.  I can vouch for that sentiment for 2010, it was wonderful!!  Looking out over the woods and fields from the top of my garden looked just like scenes from the chronicles of Narnia!!   Bring it on again I say!

    • Like 2
  10. Hoping for a cold winter.   Not only because I do like cold, snowy and frosty weather rather than the mild windy wet mush of the last 3-winters but also because I do feel a cold frosty winter may kill off some of these garden pests.  I seem beseiged by slugs and snails and have an awful problem with vine weevil this year - will need to name the house Slug Hall or Weevil Manor soon :D Heres hoping to a cold one.

    • Like 1
  11. If it gets too chllly in the mornings will put the heating on for a short blast to make having a shower more comfortable,  not been cold enough just yet to do that though.  Not been using the central heating at night now at all for 3-years other than the odd night when lighting the burner wasn't feasible.  Had a log burner fitted September 2013 and I have found It does heat the bungalow enough to avoid using the heating - be interesting to see if it kept the place warm enough if we had weather as cold as 2010..   

  12. Me, I'll have a moan about it :smile: For me the summer (certainly around these parts) has been....shall I say.... inconsistent.  Its either been too cold, too hot, too wet or too windy for me.   The latter has really hacked me off....had to prop my beans up last night, take the hanging baskets down off the front before they blew away.  Thought the baskets around the back had some shelter....nope....came home from work tonight only to find one of the fucshia baskets destroyed, all broken bits on the floor.....the wind must have weakened the stems - lovely double pink flowers.  The consistent wind has also dried the garden up so much and now.......it's too dry!! :cray: Nice reasonable temps with regular rainfall every so often to water the garden.....and without that pesky wind would have been nice :D

    • Like 2
  13. 52 minutes ago, seaside 60 said:

    That is some serious heat.
    To be fair they are used to it being at the top end of the forties.

    But can you imagine what 53c must feel like.

    :blink2: nope, begin to feel drained and lethargic when it gets about 21-22c so don't know how on earth those temps would make me feel....:bad: I guess!  

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