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Rainy

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Posts posted by Rainy

  1. Rainy, "

    Exactly RP. It's amazing (indeed scary) how little our decision makers know about fracking and its consequences. I heard a local Lancashire MP mention the prospect of our county having in the future a landscape of "nodding donkeys'."

    Indeed, nodding donkeys are used to pump oil and have no relation to fracking for natural gas in shale. We should be so lucky to have a landscape of nodding donkeys.

    Suggest you go teach the MPs !!!

    It's hard work though, but eventually, when the penny drops about the realities of shale gas fracking, their enthusiasm for it wanes.

    Admittedly politicians have to know about all sorts -- but they do have aides who should be giving them proper advice.

    Another Lancashire MP, who I met last summer, has a constituency partly within the area licensed for exploration. He didn't know the name of the fracking company at work in Lancashire (since 2008 !) , nor anything about the earthquakes. His aide / researcher supposedly watching the shale gas issue, didn't know the difference between conventional and unconventional wells.

  2. So it's just coincidence that Gideon's family has interests in those wishing to frack the British countryside into one giant slag heap, then? Blimey, even the people within government haven't the faintest idea!

    And as for Monckton & Co; I presume that they're all financed out of ever-increasing energy costs? In other words, we're all paying for that, too!

    Exactly RP. It's amazing (indeed scary) how little our decision makers know about fracking and its consequences. I heard a local Lancashire MP mention the prospect of our county having in the future a landscape of "nodding donkeys'.

    It's only when people make an effort to investigate, that the real horror and indeed the leg pull of this industry hits them. And of course its serious impact on climate change seems to be nobody's business. .The industry is dangled as a cure for all our problems by various commentators -- comments slipped in here and there. Alas the Beeb has always to present "balance". which means irresponsible and uninformed people get air time.

  3. Sheep do rid the land of "weeds" and thus put a stress on species diversity. Fields turned to billiard tables.

    Talking of which, the pastures were showing a bit of greening until this current cold blast. All now gone khaki coloured which the old folks used to describe as "aste". Perhaps a corruption of east, since it's usually these cold east winds which cause the damage.

    Curlews and lapwings were calling around the meadows until this week. Saw one curlew very briefly yesterday.

    All gone away somewhere.

    Snowdrops have given up and had a mass shrivel and death in the last 2 days. Normally they wouldn't all go at once like this.

    .

  4. I remember reading a blog by Paul Hudson a few days ago where he mentioned 1969 as the last March that was colder than this one

    Yes, remembering March 1969 well. Baby born at home. Bitter cold. For several days white outs, deep snow and much drifting in east wind as recently. Snowplough cleared way for midwife and doc.

    Electric overhead cables weighed down with ice when the thaw started.

    Then sudden switch to sunshine and warmth in early April.

  5. It was worse up here mid March 1969. Drifting fine snow from the east for a few days, like now, but drifts much bigger. Council snowblower machines tried to keep up with drifting, working non stop up and down the lanes every day..

    I think Easter was very early April that year. By then it was lovely and warm and daffys well out.

    Pic attached was taken mid March 1969

    post-9606-0-98687800-1364053354_thumb.jp

  6. Raging E wind and drifting snow. But not really a big fall round here. No more than a couple of cms. So maybe it keeps coming from out of Yorkshire. Heard there has been a heavier fall towards Gisburn and Skipton and back roads tricky.

    Drifts here only about a foot deep. Many places swept clear by the wind.

    Temp 0.8C.

    Sky lighter grey. Can almost see where the sun should be.

  7. Not much snow lying. About 1cm. Very little falling for the last hour.

    Stone surfaces damp.

    But across the fields it's still drifting, coming all the way from Yorkshire.

    Current temp 0.7C.

    Thankfully any nuke emissions from Sellafield will get blown out to sea by this E wind. But if it is serious, I feel sorry for the I of Man and NI though.

    Meanwhile all the wind turbines are busy, I presume .....

  8. This is probably not the correct place to post this

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/mar/16/britain-farming-crisis-how-tough

    But do take notice everyone. Things are going wrong..

    Farms in large areas of the north and west of the UK, specially in the hills, have been mostly at a standstill since late "summer".. After the very wet and sunless autumn, this long sunless winter is adding to the misery. We need a rapid pick up as soon as possible with warmth, sun and evaporation.

    Are we nearing the oft warned change to "weather like Newfoundland".?

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