Warning: "largest storm since 1987" set to batter Britain

Status
Not open for further replies.
This is going to be awesome hearing all the loud thunder. Or does this have negative consequences like flooding?

If it's anything like '87, think floods and worse, like houses / cars demolished by fallen trees that have stood for over 100 years etc.

In fact I think most deaths in 87 was due to the tree issue.
 
Oh dear. I'm planning on making a train journey tomorrow right through the red area.

Good thing our trains are so sturdy when it comes to weather.

Only other big storm I remember was the one on the day the last Harry Potter book came out that ended with half of the south west under water and is having no running water for a week and no drinkable water for a week after that. Not to mention there was a power substation only a few hours and several sandbags away from flooding which could have lead to most of Gloucestershire being evacuated. Hoping nothing that annoying happens this time.
 
Another thing that I remember, a few deaths from chimney pots / roof tiles falling on peoples heads.

Seriously.
 
In The Netherlands everything goes to shit as soon as one leaf hits the train tracks. Not even talking about what happens when a snow flake hits the tracks.

He was being sarcastic, that happens here too.

We even had the wonderful excuse from the rail industry during one winter that it wasn't leaves on the line causing delays, it was the wrong type of leaves on the line causing delays :P
 
In The Netherlands everything goes to shit as soon as one leaf hits the train tracks. Not even talking about what happens when a snow flake hits the tracks.
Yeah I was being sarcastic ours are awful too. Between snow, ice, leaves, heat deforming the tracks and floods there's always some reason they aren't running.
 
He was being sarcastic, that happens here too.

We even had the wonderful excuse from the rail industry during one winter that it wasn't leaves on the line causing delays, it was the wrong type of leaves on the line causing delays :P

Yeah I was being sarcastic ours are awful too. Between snow, ice, leaves, heat deforming the tracks and floods there's always some reason they aren't running.

I see, didn't catch the sarcasm :(

And hey, when the weather isn't doing anything they decide to do some construction work. It's always something with these trains. And then I watch Rail Away and I see Swiss trains plowing trough inches of snow.
 
And I thought it was a good thing moving south from Manchester!

I live in West Dorset now (which is on the south coast) about 15 minutes drive from the sea. So we'll be in the way of this thing. Thankfully our street in the village is on a hill and he main road (which becomes a river when it rains hard) is lower than the houses. So not really a chance of flooding our house.

But the lowest part of our village does flood. As do some of the roads out of the village. So it may be we'll be landlocked - but even if we are it will be just for a day. I think the only likely bad thing that might happen is we lose power for a while.

The only preparation I'm making is to partly dismantle our childrens' trampoline from the garden and wedge it down the side of the house. I don't want to have to go retrieve it from the windscreen of someone's Mercedes. Also trying to convince my wife that she doesn't need to go to work at 6pm tomorrow evening.
 
why don't you guys have doppler radar? between that and no AC, you guys are weird!

We have doppler radar, but the map posted above is a forecast, now unless you have some super-wacky radar that is psychic I'm not sure what you're getting at? :P
 
And that's not the big storm, that's the preamble.

I know, the rain that hit the Midlands tonight was about 3mm/hr, the dark red bit that's coming tomorrow morning is going to be 20mm/hr plus, and like you say, that isn't even the big one, that's the precursor.

The part likely to hit Monday is gonna be nuts, it's not "travel to London" weather coming, it's "Don't even drop your kids off at school" weather.

Or it could do a Michael Fish, and miss ;)
 
They're warning us for the storm too here in the Netherlands. Well, bring it on I say. I can safely stay inside all day, it's vacation for me.
 
They're warning us for the storm too here in the Netherlands. Well, bring it on I say. I can safely stay inside all day, it's vacation for me.

I love the picture AD is using.

eCkxY90.jpg


Storm is coming.
 
That sounds scary.

Wanna be thunder buddies?

Single glazed windows here.

It's irritating. It sounds as if there's a hole in the roof, but it's just the ventilation gaps. It's also uncomfortable, it almost deafens my damn tv at times.

I couldn't manage doing single glazed these days. It must be terrible getting a lot of external noise..

RIP windows.

Sounds like the storm is going to rip your roof off.

It fucking best not. I just moved in six months ago, a ripped off roof won't go down well with the HA.


The worst of the storm is tomorrow night and Monday early hours.

The preamble sounds intense, let alone the actual storm.
 
Oh man, more memories, I wasn't a home owner in '87 (I'd only just left school :P)

I am now, and remember that the damage was such that the insurers didn't pay out, they claimed "Force Majeure" (aka Act of God) and therefore didn't honor Building Insurance claims, fuck I hope my roof handles this or I'm bankrupt lol :P
 
I grew up in Dover. The 87 storm left us with no electricity for 3 days, and I got over a week off school as the school lost most of its roof.

Live near Gatwick now, thinking I might not make it into work Monday am.
 
Midlands reporting in, 5 minutes ago I sneezed, currently drinking a cup of tea and tomorrow morning I plan on having bacon. I will endeavour to keep you all informed on the latest 'never anything close to it's hype' event.
 
Lovely picture indeed, must be fun to see yourself onlne like that.
a 100 km/h headwind really blows, but a 100 km/h tailwind on a bike should be very interesting.

100km/h tailwind and you wouldn't get me close to a bike (neither Bicycle or Motorbike)

The tailwind/headwind isn't the problem, the shift to a 100km/h cross wind that takes you under a trucks wheels however...

Yeah, no.
 
OP says 80-90mph? Is that suppose to be kph? Is it normal for Britain to still use imperial measurements for wind? I'm from the States so I have no idea.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom