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Everything posted by Summer tyre
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One of the major hazards of lightning strikes are ground potential shifts; a lightning strike a few tens of metres away can cause a very large ground potential gradient, to the extent that the ground under your right foot can be hundreds of volts higher than that under your left. Apparently, that is a far larger cause of lightning-induced deaths and serious injuries than actually being struck directly. If you are caught outside in lightning, above all don't lie down - make sure you keep your legs together to minimises the distance between any points in contact with the ground. Entire fields of cows lying down have been killed by lightning strikes for this reason. Equally, this means that nearby electrical equipment can suddenly find a large voltage difference across it and the effect is that the lightning appears to have jumped invisibly to damage it. It hasn't, of course.
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That insignificant looking little low that followed Kathleen packed quite a punch. Look what happened to this beachside coffee shop in Falmouth from high tides! It's been unexpectedly windy overnight here too; I expect all the beachstones that had just been pushed off the promenade by the bulldozers will be back again. https://www.instagram.com/reel/C5g5vpOL-0Q/
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We have come just south of Bordeaux, France in the hope of some better weather for Easter. I have just watched the ECMWF predictions and the whole of Western Europe looks dire! This huge depression comes in across us all and then stalls over the UK essentially as a vast unwanted Easter egg of rain. So it's not going to be any drier where we are - the one good bit is that when the sun DOES shine it's a bit more powerful.
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Alexis, I guess you are talking about mopheads, not lacecaps. I'm not sure where Mum's is, but I think hydrangeas should be fine down here. They're incredibly resilient and difficult to kill. I trimmed ours in the front a couple of weeks ago. Officially you wait until late Spring, and that tends to mean early May down here. If you do cut them and there is risk of a late frost cover them with some horticultural fleece and they'll not get damaged.
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Agreed! Next door's garden is a pond again for about the third time in 6 weeks. Can't do anything in the garden. I actually managed to mow it on Friday, and planned its annual fertiliser for Monday, 4 days later. No, mizzle all day. Today - proper washout with flooding under our local bridge again. It was dry when we went out, and an hour and a half later it was 15cm deep.
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Here's a challenge for you. I will be going to Europe later this month for Easter, and while my original plan was to go to the tulip fields, looking at the long rangers for the Netherlands looks suspiciously like our current weather whenit gets to Easter, with the jet stream trapped to the south and damp drizzly weather on the cards. Do you agree? Should I head further south into southern France with a higher chance of sun?
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For the fellow Bexhill residents, take care on the beach. There are three storm outlets toward Cooden, one of which has been broken for years and is finally being replaced - with one that extends all of 15m further out. For those that don't know, storm drains are unfortunately not just for water - sewage often contaminates the waste water, and Bexhill beach and water is often unsafe. Yesterday the next drain along broke, and has scoured a vast trench in the beach - and yes, it's pouring sewage contaminated water.