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Stormy near Keswick...
 

[Closed] Stormy near Keswick.....

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He'll turn up and blame the EA for spending less on flood barriers when they could have saved a few billion through efficiency savings. The EA will then politely point out he halved their budget....

Certain elements of the news are already trying to twist the conversation around to blaming the EA and the flood defences.

The problem with the news now is that basically all the drama is over, there's a limit to how much helicopter footage of flooded fields you can show so they've resorted now to interviewing the poor people trying to sort their houses, businesses and lives out and the hardworking MRT, emergency services etc - all of who have already been up for 36hrs and are probably not in the mood for dealing with asinine questions from idiots sticking a camera in their face and saying "the flood defences must be crap cos hey, your house is under 3ft of water..."


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:04 pm
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Some mental bloke stabbing someone in a tube station was the first item on. The fact that increasingly large chunks of Northern England was disappearing underwater at the same time was deemed secondary to that.

Sorry binners. A terrorist incident is much more newsworthy than a normal natural event that happens basically every year at some point. And is exactly the same each time it happens.

You can't spin that into a Southern centric news agenda rant.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:09 pm
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It wasn't a terrorist incident though, was it? It was mental illness incident. They happen all the time. Just one that happened in London, so was therefore terribly important. More important than the highest rainfall ever recorded in the north, and the monumental amount of damage it was doing

You can't spin that into a Southern centric news agenda rant.

Watch me.... ๐Ÿ˜€


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:12 pm
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A terrorist incident

Hmm, one nutter stabs someone (non fatally) is hardly a terrorist incident in my book......

Happens all the time in London, just this one shouted Syria amongst his deranged ramblings....


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:13 pm
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We have the same Nirth/South divide in Scotland ๐Ÿ˜
This is causing much debate here in Dumfries;
http://www.dumgal.gov.uk/index.aspx?articleid=12392
Given what's happened in Cumbria a rethink may be appropriate.... There is no simple solution, others are likely to suffer if this scheme goes ahead.
I'm not sure if it's our inept council that has been the cause of the delays in any scheme going ahead or not but Perth and Inverness managed to get their schemes implemented before Dumfries ๐Ÿ™„


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:16 pm
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Hope Brian at whinlatter bikes in Keswick is back on his feet soon. Everyone forgets the little shops


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:17 pm
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Needs better catchment management rather than building walls - just look at the fileds near threlkeld (now and attenuation scheme - but previoulsy) basically shifting all the water off the land as fas as possible, channelling a river in a town has the same effect, we need more trees, wetlands and sacrificial attenuation not more concrete.

(that said with foot of rain in 24hrs this incident was pretty unique and way outside what's modelled for even for re-wilding/sustainable flood schemes)


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:22 pm
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Hmm, one nutter stabs someone (non fatally) is hardly a terrorist incident in my book......

Someone? It was noteworthy, no matter how bitter and Northern you are.

Binners, have you ever considerd that London might actually BE more important than Manchester?


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:53 pm
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Someone? It was noteworthy, no matter how bitter and Northern you are.

It really wasn't. It was an exercise in hysterical, paranoid overreaction

Binners, have you ever considerd that London might actually BE more important than Manchester?

Not really the point, is it? Whats it got to do with Manchester? The question is: Is someone stabbing someone at a tube station more important than a massive amount of flooding over a huge area of the country? Tens of thousands without electricity, absolutely huge amounts of damage?With repercussions that will go on for years

Apparently so. So we all know where we stand, don't we? If we were ever in doubt. S'all I'm saying' dude!

Anyway.... whatevs....back on topic, it'll be interesting to see how Dave's going to spin this one when he makes his annual trip up north (there be dragons). Its only a few years back he was promising millions in flood defence investment, only to cancel a lot of that once it was out of the headlines.

And where are they going to land Air Force One?


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:55 pm
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oh dear a decent thread terns in to handbags at dawn. Give yourselves a shake


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 1:59 pm
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Just looking at the mountains of horrific pictures on the web this morning, looks like they'll have to rename Pooley Bridge to simply Pooley ๐Ÿ™ An absolute nightmare considering some sewerage will be mixed in with rain water washing into people's homes.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:02 pm
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Turning a thread about people haven't their houses wrecked into a north/south divide thing,bighitters lose touch with reality in their own little internet world shocker.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:03 pm
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Hmm, one nutter stabs someone (non fatally) is hardly a terrorist incident in my book......

Eh??1!1!1! Course it was, he was brown, or something.

Binners, have you ever considerd that London might actually BE more important than Manchester?

You're right Molgrips, us plebish plebs really should know our place. Swoons@TheSouth.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:03 pm
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As a London resident with quite a few friends in the Lakes and someone who plans on retiring there, if not earlier, given the extent of the damage to homes and businesses and the longer term impact on the local economy, this should be considered a national-scale crisis. But I suspect it'll drop out of the headlines soon enough and out of political consciousness...

Partly, the Lakes in my experience is full of friendly, resourceful and community-minded people and they'll pull together and deal with it without expecting massive amounts of outside help in a way which we probably wouldn't in London where we're massively dependent on government-provided infrastructure and commercial supply chains, I suspect people's response would be a lot less stoic!


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:07 pm
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It was noteworthy, no matter how bitter and Northern you are.

Yep, born and bred in that great Northern ghetto known as Cambridge. All those years down the Fenland coal mines and I'm still not bitter...

And I still don't think it's a terrorist incident, that's just 'political spin' gone mad.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:09 pm
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Friends have just moved to about 6 miles up the valley from Garnet Bridge, they didnt get flooded but cut off and found a Crayfish walking along the flooded road trying to find somewhere safe. If the local wildlife is struggling what people must be going through is unimaginable.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:10 pm
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Dave's on his way (swoon)

I'd give him a pair of wellies and invite him in to shovel some shit.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:10 pm
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I'd give him a pair of wellies

he already has several sets, Hunters for weekends in the Cotswolds and then some cheap Asda ones he sent his aide out to buy so he didn't look too posh the last time he inspected flooding....


Before a visit to the flooded Somerset Levels in 2014, Cameron fretted that his pair of green Hunter wellies (ยฃ95) would be seen as too posh, so he dispatched an aide to buy some bargain boots from Asda. These were Dunlops, the cheap choice of every flood-savvy politician from Ed Miliband to Nick Clegg. Later, however, Lynton Crosby, the Toriesโ€™ election guru, discovered that one reason voters gave for believing that the PM was too posh was โ€œseeing him on television during the floods wearing a shiny new pair of black wellingtonsโ€. This is odd, because Cameronโ€™s boots were green and not visibly shiny. But the anecdote shows the PMโ€™s political antenna is sound โ€“ Philip Hammond, the former defence secretary, was mocked for tackling the Somerset floods in expensive Hunters โ€“ but his execution flawed. Presumably now when Cameron wears a new piece of clothing, he has a lackey scuff it up for him.

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/shortcuts/2015/aug/31/david-cameron-10-seldon-book-biography-prime-minister


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:12 pm
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Fair enough. Apologies. Very crass and insensitive of me. I just mentioned it as it provoked an 'Oh FFS!!!" moment when I turned on the news on Saturday to see how Keswick was, and was met with it being led by a bloke being (non-fatally) stabbed at a tube station. Its just an interesting, yet entirely unsurprising, set of media priorities

We abandoned the national TV news at that point, and went to regional web feeds instead.

Thats my last word on it then. Apologies again


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:24 pm
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Ok so the comment about Manchester was a troll, I own up and apologise if it annoyed anyone properly.

However, in seriousness, I didn't say it was more 'important', I said it was more newsworthy. That means that people are more likely to be interestd in it, watch it, talk about it. News isn't based on what's important, it's based on what will stimulate people's interest. Otherwise we'd hear nothing else apart from atrocities, poverty and deprivation in far flung parts of the world.

I'd certain hope a whole lot more money is spent on the flood victims up North than the people wounded in the knife attack - and it will be - you can use that as a measure of importance if you like.

You're right Molgrips, us plebish plebs really should know our place. Swoons@TheSouth.

Somehwat lightheartedly - I'm not Southern, I'm Welsh, so if you want to have a downtrodden/oppressed/dismissed as irrelevant fight, then I fancy my chances ๐Ÿ™‚

Oh and, website headlines:

BBC: Flooding
Guardian: Flooding/ISIS
Independent: ISIS (flooding sub-headline)
Telegraph: Flooding

Do you really have a problem?


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:38 pm
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An absolute nightmare considering some sewerage will be mixed in with rain water washing into people's homes.

Floodwater is nasty stuff; it's picked up every bit of fertiliser and manure off the land, mixed it up with raw sewage sucked from drains and septic tanks, added in things like petrol and diesel where it's undermined station forecourts, carried along drowned animals and it then deposits the whole lot in a filthy brown ooze of rotting vegetation and polluted mud.

Basically anything that has sat in it and absorbed it - wooden furniture, soft furnishings needs to be disposed of as hazardous waste, anything else needs thoroughly disinfecting.

Maybe Dave can help shovel some of it out...


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:39 pm
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I'm not Southern, I'm Welsh

I hadn't realised. I'm so, so sorry.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:43 pm
 mt
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@binners. Apology accepted.

@footflaps. read my post properly put yourself in the place of those that really are suffering.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:51 pm
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I hadn't realised. I'm so, so sorry. ๐Ÿ™„


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 2:54 pm
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mt - Member

@footflaps. read my post properly

What post?! 2nd Login cock-up? ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 3:02 pm
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jp-t853 - Member
oh dear a decent thread terns in to handbags at dawn. Give yourselves a shake

Almost too subtle.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 3:15 pm
 grum
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Some people on my Facebook feed were really quite shocked to hear of substations flooded, 55,000 homes without power, refuge centres being set up, people stranded etc (in Lancaster), and to see the extent of road/bridge damage in the Lakes. Maybe they just haven't been paying enough attention to the news...


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 3:18 pm
 mt
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@bearnecessities

it got removed.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 3:35 pm
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Basically anything that has sat in it and absorbed it - wooden furniture, soft furnishings needs to be disposed of as hazardous waste, anything else needs thoroughly disinfecting.

Maybe Dave can help shovel some of it out..


Or get him to sit in it for a while and then we can dispose of him as hazardous waste.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 4:01 pm
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This thread is showing some of that left-wing hatred that the press are highlighting at the moment.

Pretty sure David Cameron's email address is easily available for you guys to send in some death threats.

Here's an official one :

https://email.number10.gov.uk/

or hand-written death threats can go here :

The Rt Hon David Cameron MP
Prime Minister
10 Downing Street
London
SW1A 2AA


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 4:39 pm
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This thread is showing some of that left-wing hatred that the press are highlighting at the moment.

And rightly so.

If you don't hate Cameron you are a failure as a human being.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 4:43 pm
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Oooooooooooo - hark at 'im

I don't think hatred of the shiny headed cockwoble is specifically the exclusive territory of the left.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 4:44 pm
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If you don't hate Cameron you are a failure as a human being.

๐Ÿ˜†


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 4:46 pm
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Sad to see the thread being turned political, but in the cold light of day rivers do tend to flood by increasing the height of the banks its moving the problem on somewhere down stream.
If you either are a believer or not in global warming with a wetter climate this is going to become more common event.
the existing homes will have to be flood proofed as much as possible, hard flooring concrete wall coverings etc but land is precious or this tiny island and building more homes on natural flood plains isn't going yo help.
immigration isnt helping matters, building firms can throw up new homes on said flood plains, walk away with the cash and leave it too EA, councils and insurers to sort out
Rant over

Or perhaps the house building firms may have to also invest in the local infrastructure in order to get planning bit more of a rant


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 4:56 pm
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A few minutes on the CW Herald pages shows the damages across the area ๐Ÿ™


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:17 pm
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in the cold light of day rivers do tend to flood by increasing the height of the banks its moving the problem on somewhere down stream.

Is that actually a problem here though? I'm struggling to think of the massive flood defense upstream of Pooley Bridge.

Is it not just that an utterly mind boggling, ludicrous, riduculous, crazy, record breaking about of rain fell on already wet ground?

immigration isnt helping matters

Whhhhaaaaaa...?


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:20 pm
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Not wanting to sound like I'm playing devil's advocate, but did these places flood 100 years ago?

I'm asking as I know someone in Kent whose grandparents lived in some town where three rivers meet, and which made the news when it flooded 5-6 years ago, with the media screaming that the government and EA should "do something" as these riverside properties had flooded.

Old Pat just looked at the telly and said that her grandparents had lived in one of the cottages on the report and every November had moved all their belongings upstairs and lived on the first floor till February because it "always flooded".

This would have been early 1900s so I'm curious whether older locals in Cumbria would know if flooding - not necessarily as sudden as this weekend's - was a known risk 3-4 generations ago, which has been forgotten about more recently?


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:29 pm
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No; not that I can remember.

Plus, Coniston lake used to freeze over; it doesn't anymore.

global warming for sure.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:35 pm
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Well, durrrr it's the [b]lake[/b] district! Much of the problem relates to agricultural land an upland catchment management with more area being better drained for pasture rather than wooded also 'bad' flood schemes of old have impounded rivers causing increase in flow rate and volume within the channel.

but yeah there were pretty catastrophic floods in Kendal in the 20's for example


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:36 pm
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Old Pat just looked at the telly and said that her grandparents had lived in one of the cottages on the report and every November had moved all their belongings upstairs and lived on the first floor till February because it "always flooded".

Good luck selling your house with that in the brochure....


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:42 pm
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Not wanting to sound like I'm playing devil's advocate, but did these places flood 100 years ago?

Yes. Carlisle had a famous flood in 1822 with water halfway up Rickergate which is... well... Almost exactly where is was on Saturday.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:42 pm
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Listening to 5 Live it sounds unfeasibly grim up there. No power, cold, dark and miserable.

An absolute nightmare! ๐Ÿ˜ฅ


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:45 pm
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AIUI highest river levels ever seen...

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:49 pm
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Listening to 5 Live it sounds unfeasibly grim up there. No power, cold, dark and miserable.

...and Egremont didn't even flood.


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:51 pm
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To be fair, that description matches anywhere north of Leeds for 6 months of the year....


 
Posted : 07/12/2015 5:53 pm
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