Be grateful you're not in Kazakhstan?
(well, poor consolation, I know )
Re: It has been a wet April!
Posted: Sun Apr 14, 2024 10:15 am
by tango15
Where I live in the East of England we generally have much drier weather than other parts, but there have been few days this year so far when we haven't had any rainfall. The floodplain areas around the River Nene look like lakes, and other streams and rivers are swollen to an extent I haven't seen before.
We are not very good at managing the planet really. Many parts of Africa have not seen water for months, and crops have been destroyed. Now, if only the UN could do its day job and get the nations together, to see how all the excess water could be carried from one continent to another...
That made the news here, Woody. We tend not to think of that sort of storm happening in those areas, but a water industry colleague showed me a video of a similar event in Quatar where he had worked.
We've had plenty of rain here last month, and also in far north Queensland, where Granddaughter is currently kayaking in the resultant high flows.
Re: And it was in Jan '69....
Posted: Wed Apr 17, 2024 2:10 pm
by Rossian
....we returned from a few days down at Masirah to find Sharjah looking like an aircraft carrier, a runway surrounded by water. The Shackletons that had been left there looked a bit like those pewter tankards that were hand beaten. One of the techies was so overcome with his excitement to describe the storm that he got a tad carried away "There were golf balls as big as teacups, honest."
The accommodation area was knee deep for about two weeks but the PMC insisted that standards had to be kept up so we waded to dinner carrying our long trousers and our (highly polished) shoes and a towel. Wash feet in toilet sinks, dry feet, socks on . After dinner it was partially undress and wade back to our Twinehams??(were they called?) and by now the water was bloody freezing. There were several cases of near hypothermia from those who had refreshed themselves too much and fell in the muddy water on the way home. It's a miracle we survived Oi tell 'ee.
....we returned from a few days down at Masirah to find Sharjah looking like an aircraft carrier, a runway surrounded by water. The Shackletons that had been left there looked a bit like those pewter tankards that were hand beaten. One of the techies was so overcome with his excitement to describe the storm that he got a tad carried away "There were golf balls as big as teacups, honest."
The accommodation area was knee deep for about two weeks but the PMC insisted that standards had to be kept up so we waded to dinner carrying our long trousers and our (highly polished) shoes and a towel. Wash feet in toilet sinks, dry feet, socks on . After dinner it was partially undress and wade back to our Twinehams??(were they called?) and by now the water was bloody freezing. There were several cases of near hypothermia from those who had refreshed themselves too much and fell in the muddy water on the way home. It's a miracle we survived Oi tell 'ee.
The Ancient Mariner
Sharjah 1963
Re: It has been a wet April!
Posted: Sun Apr 21, 2024 7:22 pm
by 1DC
Those stones look as if they need a coat of paint Ricardian!
Those stones look as if they need a coat of paint Ricardian!
Not stones, very few of those kicking around. They are old ammunition boxes filled with sand or sand/cement, the SWOs pride & joy. But yes, they will need a coat of paint before the next AOCs. AOC MEAF was Johnny Johnson, notoriously "picky" on AOCs inspection.