web analytics

Getting biblical

Image from http://www.freefoto.comLord, here comes the flood
We’ll say goodbye to flesh and blood
If again the seas are silent in any still alive
It’ll be those who gave their island to survive
Drink up, dreamers, you’re running dry

Peter Gabriel

It is broadly held that were it not for the weather we Brits would not have two words to say to each other. This is – of course – a vicious calumny, though it cannot be denied that the subject has – of late – provided much on which to confabulate.

Those resident in this green and pleasant land (what can yet be discerned of it through the murky drab by which great swathes of it are currently concealed) will be only too aware that the weather here throughout the past two months has been truly terrible. Ceaseless rainfall – giving parts of the UK their wettest January on record – and a constant conveyor of storm fronts from the Atlantic has resulted in catastrophic flooding, downed trees, damaged property and severed railway lines. Though the recent run of storms has abated somewhat this week there is no sign of an end to the apparently perpetual precipitation, which deluge has nowhere to go – landing as it is on already sodden ground.

Concurrent with this local cataclysm eastern Canada and the US have been experiencing freezing rain, wind and snow, whilst California – conversely – basks in record warm temperatures and suffers an ever-worsening drought.

Clearly – something is up. Equally clearly – to many of us at least – that something is ‘climate change’.

It would appear that the pattern of the jet stream that controls the weather in the northern hemisphere has started to alter – slowing down and beginning to meander in a previously unheralded manner. As a result weather patterns that would once have passed by expeditiously are now becoming bogged down for extended – and dangerous – periods…

…not that you would know any of this should you rely for your information on the say of  the ‘climate change deniers’!

These deniers come in two varieties. The first – and perhaps worst – breed are those who deny that there have been any climate changes at all. These disbelievers hold that there have always been extreme weather patterns – and point out that the recent disturbances are merely ‘once in a hundred year’ events. This view would hold more credence were it not for the fact that the same was said last year – and quite probably a year or so before that. In actual fact, the frequency of these ‘unprecedented’ events appears to be increasing.

The second brood of deniers are those that accept that the climate has changed, but deny that this is in any way a result of man’s activities. This would – by itself – mean little, were it not that these cynics further decree that since we did nothing to cause the change we need do nothing about it. More – that we should do nothing about it. This marvelously perverse view has its roots in the Weltanschauung that is common to all deniers… they are all at heart free-marketeers! As such their blinkered world-view extends no further than the short-term cost of anything and everything, and is informed by the belief that – given its head – the market will resolve all issues. This tenet is adhered to blindly in the face of all recent evidence to the contrary and might – quite literally – one day be the death of us all!

I need to lie down in a darkened room!

Stay dry – stay warm…

Tags: , , ,

4 comments

  1. Kate’s avatar

    So not, as the (suspended) member of Ukip believes, a result of gay marriage?

    1. admin’s avatar

      Apparently not… which is quite a relief! xxx

    2. Brian’s avatar

      Listening to the local SW London radio station online the travel news was taking twice as long to read as it would have normally. The list of road closures seemed to be endless – many of which were within just a few miles of where I lived (Staines, Chertsey, Shepperton, Walton, Weybridge and so on). In 20 years of having lived around the area I’d never experienced anything quite so extreme.

      We haven’t been in W. Yorkshire long enough to have any expectations of what might be considered ‘normal’ and thankfully we escaped anything too extreme. The river here has been running high for the past 6 weeks or so but it’s nothing to worry about and fair distance from us. We’ve had plenty of rain but hey, it’s Yorkshire and it seems we got a lot less than the South and I’m thankful for that.

      Cheers,
      Brian

    3. admin’s avatar

      Hi Brian

      You will be glad to hear that the ‘Jubilee River’ – which you doubtless remember – did the job it was designed to do and carried the flood waters away from Windsor and Maidenhead and dumped it all on Datchet, Staines and Chertsey!!!

      I had to visit another School down in Somerset today and as I drove up the road from the A303 through Somerton I could look down over that end of the Somerset Levels. It is still an impressive inland sea – today shining in the sun!

      Good to hear that you are both safe and dry.

      Cheers

      Andy

Comments are now closed.