Rain held off overnight, drains still flowing freely, neighbour's house no worsly flooded.
I hope it's eased for everyone else too.
Its crazy! You just don'y imaging places like Leeds and Manchester floodingThis is one of the major routes into leeds, just down the road from me, not my vid, I'm not stupid enough to go out in it![]()
A mains gas pipeline that runs accross the river Irwell in my town exploded this afternoon after being damaged by high water. Could smell gas over most of the town. Just how it can burst into flames without ignition beats me.
A mains gas pipeline that runs accross the river Irwell in my town exploded this afternoon after being damaged by high water. Could smell gas over most of the town. Just how it can burst into flames without ignition beats me.
I'd say that may have been the cause. I think that bridge was carrying gas and electricity mains to the neighbouring estate.Fracturing metal can easily produce a spark. That is all it takes. Maybe also electric cables on the bridge that ruptured and arced.
Indeed it wasA great community effort!
Indeed it was![]()

Sometimes these public servants need a kick up the arse to serve the public, I may not have been that polite had it been me TBH.With hindsight, perhaps I was a bit harsh on her.
Long may it lastOn a more positive note, we've had no rain since last night.![]()
Sometimes these public servants need a kick up the arse to serve the public, I may not have been that polite had it been me TBH.
I'd not seen that, but it doesn't surprise me in the slightestThere was an interesting thing I read that dredging has been all but stopped due to EU regulations requiring rivers to be left undisturbed.
Its a shame that the "powers that be" can't think logically Eh?If it has been the case that since 2000 rivers aren't being dredged and all these bad floods have all been worse since then it seems a probable cause to me.
I don't know all the facts this popped up on another forum and sounds sensible..There was an interesting thing I read that dredging has been all but stopped due to EU regulations requiring rivers to be left undisturbed. Some think this causes more flooding as then rivers burst their banks more easily as they fill up with gravel, sand and other crap. If it has been the case that since 2000 rivers aren't being dredged and all these bad floods have all been worse since then it seems a probable cause to me. One that can be tackled easily. Just dredge the rivers! If you get the same amount of rain and places don't flood then you have rather easily fixed it...if it is the cause then the EU can pay for all the repairs and refund our money that they've wasted on this nonsense.
Blue skies here this morning
With not going out at all yesterday, we didn't know about neighbours a few hundred yds away which is prone to flooding (much lower down than us) JUST about averting flooding to their homes.
Local farmers, builders merchants, local councillors, even the local Indian takeaway owners, were all out & working together. A great community effort!
Someone filmed part of the effort, after the worst was over though & didn't show just how bad it was, especially just how deep the water was (waist level) on the local pitches & how much was running over the road towards the houses @ a lower level.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiOu8t1c3Gw
Can't even imagine how that would feel, all that mess and upheaval. Sorry to hear all the trouble you are havingWell, my street in York has been on TV all day and people being evacuated by boat. I can't even get anywhere near my house as the whole area has been cordoned off. It's a good job I was away last night as everyone's cars are underwater. I have no idea what I'm going to.
Well, my street in York has been on TV all day and people being evacuated by boat. I can't even get anywhere near my house as the whole area has been cordoned off. It's a good job I was away last night as everyone's cars are underwater. I have no idea what I'm going to.
This^I don't know all the facts this popped up on another forum and sounds sensible..
"blame the farmers who are stopping the EA planting more trees in upland areas and creating flooding areas to slow down and contain water before it hits towns.
Dredging is a reactive measure, unfortunately the proactive measures are being stopped by hill farmers and others stopping rewilding in watershed areas.
And all flood defences do is move the problem down river (See Somerset levels as a good example of what upstream flood defences can do). Many of today's problems can also be attributed to river straightening, meaning water gets downstream even faster after a rain. Well that was a clever idea...
Much of the work being done today is to slow rain water down (reforesting upland areas, creating natural flooding pools, recreating meanders in rivers, allowing old overbank areas to flood again), all of which are designed to slow the flow of water after a major rain and reducing peak flow in the rivers. Spread the flow over a longer period (like it naturally would be) and rivers are less likely to overflow their banks, dredging is less needed (both because there is more capacity and because the sediment is deposited upstream in overbank areas) and man made flood defences are needed only in a few specific spots. Many flood defences on the other hand are designed to get the water downstream and away from the defended area as quickly as possible."
That as the population has grown so has the amount of buildings in towns and cities?This tells you all you need to know about flooding:
https://BANNED/sharpsharp/status/681188724907053057
That as the population has grown so has the amount of buildings in towns and cities?
Or are you hinting toward the issue of building on flood plains?
I'm really sorry to hear that ( no one took the images(especially when I slipped on wet slate slabs and launched into the can-can followed by an awkward hurdle-splits in about 6" of water.
Oh b****rWell, my street in York has been on TV all day and people being evacuated by boat. I can't even get anywhere near my house as the whole area has been cordoned off. It's a good job I was away last night as everyone's cars are underwater. I have no idea what I'm going to.
Arranged builder to look at next door's leaking extension tomorrow.
Builder has been next door for a look. He agreed the best approach is to try the quicker fix which can be completed before the next storm has been forecast to arrive. He's starting work on it ASAP tomorrow and I've offered my labour for free to help get it done quicker.
Unfortunately, if the quick fix doesn't work, and water is getting in under his back yard and not just the bottom of his extension wall, that's a big job. The old chap said that if that's the case then "knock the bloody thing down and I'll move".
I hope this works. It has to.
Oh God bless him, I hope to God it does work, it's not nice for anyone but even more so for the elderly!
Hats of to you for time and help, you've gone above and beyond for him and that really is lovely!