Personal diary of John Barnabas (aka Barney) Leith
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Category — Weather

In the bleak midwinter…

Snow scene on Rosecroft Lane

Yes, it’s the first serious snow of the winter of 2006-07. It started snowing at some point in the early hours of this morning and has dumped around 3 inches on us. As I write (11:36) it is still snowing. We can’t get up the lane, so we’re here, stuck, until the weather changes.

After the dog had been out for her morning inspection of the estate, she came in covered in snow.

Jake's car under snow
Snow piled up on Jake’s little car.

It’s nothing by North American or Scandinavian standards, but it’s our very own!

Snow on Rosecroft Lane

Lots of snow in those clouds

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February 8, 2007   No Comments

First snow - last snow?

Bamboo in the snpw

So, it came in the night - at last we have some winter weather! But the snow won’t last. It’s enough to create the obligatory travel chaos, but this is not a serious cold period.

A programme on BBC TV the other night examined what life and the weather may well be like in 2020, 2050 and 2080 if current global warming trends continue. Just to give you a sense of where we’re going, there’s a farmer in the south of England who’s planting olive trees and who has already cropped some mature black olives.

Sea levels will rise, storms and the resultant storm surges in the sea around the coast will get bigger; more and more land will be inundated. I worry for my grandchildren.

It’s too late to stop the changes that will hit us by 2020, but we can, if we work together in a systematic and united way, stop things becoming worse by 2050 and 2080. It puts me in mind of Baha’u'llah’s writings that compare the world to a human body. The whole body can flourish only if the parts flourish; and the parts can flourish only if the whole flourishes.

Snow on the neighbour's roof

Later
As I thought, the obligatory travel chaos happened. As the Evening Standard headlined it:

BEATEN BY AN INCH OF SNOW

Rail and Tube bosses were slammed today over the London travel chaos caused by an inch of snow.

Here’s what was reported in the Daily Telegraph.

By the way, why do the media always use the word “slammed” when they mean criticized? Doors are slammed. An attacker might slam someone in the face. But somehow to criticize someone is always to “slam” them in media speak. I guess “slam” is shorter and sounds stronger. But it does draw rather bizarre pictures in my mind.

As it happened, my journey into London was relatively trouble free, if we ignore the closed ticket office, the queue for the one automatic ticket machine, which refused to read my credit card. Oh, and the four-coach train for a load that really needed eight coaches. So, many of us had to stand all the way to London.

No, it’s not a big deal, it’s only 30 minutes, but I was catching the first off-peak train of the morning. Lots of people catch the first off-peak train of the morning. It’s always crowded. But the train operators (First Capital Connect) seem unable to produce a train of the right length for the job. Mind you, we’re better off than the Bath to Bristol commuters who have to travel on trains run by another First Group company, First Great Western. But that’s another story, and not for now.

Anyway, got to London OK, not too late. But then there are delays, serious and minor, on every single Underground line. So the trip to my first meeting this morning took three hops rather than two and a delay waiting for a District Line train at Embankment.

Most of the delays were caused by multiple signal failures and points failures. You may wonder why an underground system is affected by snow. You may well wonder. And I’m going to tell you. (It’s at this point that my kids would groan and say that dad is going to give one of his lectures. But I’m not, I promise.) It’s for the obvious reason that much of the system away from central London runs on the surface.

So you would think that the powers that be would protect points and signals from failure because of bad weather. You would think that, wouldn’t you?

Tailender
Here are some readers’ pictures of the snow from the BBC website.

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January 24, 2007   No Comments

Battered by wind

Front gate blown off its hinges

This may not look particularly dramatic, but this gate is about 8ft long and is heavy. It was ripped from its hinges this morning by the storm of wind that has battered us all morning.

Where the front gate should be

This is where the gate was until sometime in the middle of the morning. The force of the wind swung the gate through 180 degrees and then heaved it from its hinges. The hinges, which were heavy-duty, were pulled right out of the batten of wood on the brick gate-post.

It’s been a bit scary. Gusts of 90mph have been recorded. Roads have been closed. The trains are being limited to 50 mph and some trains have been cancelled. I decided not to go into London this morning and Erica did not stir out of doors to go and fetch young Jake from down the road. Far too risky.

There’s something in the house that shrieks like a soul in pain when the wind blows hard. It’s been shrieking all morning.

There’s a piece about the storms on the BBC news website. And some rather dramatic pictures of the effects of the weather.

Later
I’ve just seen on the railway company’s website that the line I use is closed because of trees on the line and power outages. I am so glad I decided not to go into London.

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January 18, 2007   6 Comments

First frost - and it’s December!

First frost of the season, Rosecroft Lane

The first serious frost of the winter this morning, and it’s getting on for mid-December. We’d normally expect first frost in November, perhaps even in October.

Frost on the top of our gate
Frost on top of our front gate.

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December 10, 2006   No Comments

London tornado damage

Well, the damage caused by yesterday’s London tornado has been severe enough to required the demolition of several of the houses, as you can read in this BBC story. You can also read some of the personal stories on the BBC news website.

Of course the severity of this weather is not great, compared with what happens in other parts of the world, but it must be awful for those families whose homes have been damaged or destroyed.

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December 8, 2006   No Comments

Tornado hits London

The UK is the top twister country in Europe. Some London streets got hit around 11 o’clock this morning, as this BBC story recounts. You can see pictures here and here.

As the tornado hit these north London streets, I was on a District Line underground train, heading westwards out of Hammersmith. I could see black clouds to the north west (the underground actually runs overground once it leaves Earls Court, heading west). And then suddenly they dumped tons and tons of water onto the streets, the railway, everywhere. I thought I heard a crack of thunder.

By the time I got to Richmond, the weather had cleared and the sun was shining.

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December 7, 2006   2 Comments