willedoo Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago Some nice soaking rain here the last couple of days, 60mm so far. A mate further north at Hervey Bay has had around 175mm. January was dry, only 17 mm for the month. Usually in January here you expect 6 to 10 inches but it varies a lot. One of the wettest Januarys was 2011 with 644mm, driest was 2001 with zero rain. Usually here if the first three months are dry (they should be our wettest), it will be followed up by a wet autumn and possibly into winter. 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago Don't talk to me about being wet! OK, we haven't had the floods that Aus got over the last few years, but crikey, we have had over 40 odd days of continuous rainy days (not always raining, but for a decent part of each day) and grey, grey, grey. Yesterday was a sunny day for most of it. I think everyone got sunstroke they were so unacclimatised to seeing any sun. And it only hit 6 degrees. Today; back to the rain.. 1
willedoo Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago I spent 3 months in the U.K. in 1985, mainly in London. I was there July, August and September and it was beautiful warm sunny weather. I left the first week of November and the last three or four days there had cooled down to the point of wearing a coat. But before that it was three months of T shirt weather. The locals called it an Indian summer and said it would happen only about every 20 years, so I've been there but never experienced the cold rainy weather they often get. 1 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago Those Indian summers are far more frequent these days. But even when the summers haven';t been the best, the days are long with sunset going past 10pm, and sunrise a little after 4am. Combined with a more relaxed approach to drinking (at least where I lived in London and where I live in the South West), made loverly long but relaxing summer days, often watching them attempt to play cricket. Happy days! 1
old man emu Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Good luck to you blokes who have had rain. It looks like my area is set for a drought this year. 1 1
onetrack Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago I spent 6 weeks living in the U.K. (based at Reading), and toured Scotland as well, from mid-August to the end of September 1988. The weather was remarkably pleasant all the time that I was there - days around 16°C to 18°C maximum, and minimums around 10°C to 12°C - and virtually no rain! It was nothing like I expected. 1
Jerry_Atrick Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 4 hours ago, old man emu said: Good luck to you blokes who have had rain. It looks like my area is set for a drought this year. It's incredible and you would not believe it, but we can have all this rain and still technically be in "drought". First, we have been, in relative terms, quite dry for around 18 months. Our underground resevoirs may not fill up (technically, may have enough leaks to lose a lot). For some reason, since I have been int he UK, there has been at least 3 hosepipe bans due to lack of water I can think of, and they were all after a decent spell of rain. Dare I say, privitasation at its best.
facthunter Posted 19 minutes ago Posted 19 minutes ago Prefer if you said Privatisation but such things being ESSENTIAL should be more subject to scrutiny as you usually have a Monopoly with No other choice. Nev
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