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Here comes the rain again



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Published Date: 30 January 2008
YOU are not alone if you feel it's been a particularly dreich start to 2008 – forecasters have confirmed that parts of Scotland have suffered twice as wet a January as usual.
As the country has squelched through the seemingly incessant rain, rivers have flooded, roads and rail lines have been blocked and football grounds left waterlogged.

The Met Office said 233.2mm (9.3in) of rain had fallen in Scotland in January up
to Sunday – one-and-a-half times the average, making it the ninth-wettest since records began in 1914.

However, some areas have fared even worse, with the normally drier eastern half of the Central Belt seeing the largest increase. Edinburgh and Midlothian experienced 234 per cent of their normal January rainfall of 93.8mm (3.8in), while West Lothian received 232 per cent of its average.

By contrast, the north of Scotland was only one-third wetter than usual in January.

A spokeswoman for the Met Office said: "There have been an awful lot of low-pressure systems from the Atlantic coming in over the country, one after another. Normally, we would expect some dry days in between, but that has not happened this month."

The effects have been widespread and all too vivid for many travellers.

Flooding and landslides have closed roads and rail routes, such as the line between Perth and Pitlochry, which reopened on Monday after three days. It was flooded after the Pitlochry dam on the River Tummel had to be opened because of a huge build-up of water.

Sporting fixtures which have been hit included several football matches last weekend, while last night's CIS Insurance Cup semi-final between Aberdeen and Dundee United was called off due to a waterlogged pitch at Tynecastle in Edinburgh. The threat of further rain prompted the match cancellation.

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) said there had already been 69 severe flood warnings this month, compared with just 13 a year ago.

There were nine such alerts in force at the weekend, including on the rivers Tay, Spey, Earn, Tummel, Isla and Teith.

However, there is no silver lining yet to the rain clouds and the outlook remains grim, according to forecasters.

Sepa said just one flood watch remained in force last night, for the upper Tay, but it warned of heavy rain tonight and tomorrow morning, "which may result in further flooding problems".

The rain is expected to be concentrated in the western half of Scotland today, and it will become increasingly windy."

The Met Office spokeswoman said: "It will remain unsettled, with much colder temperatures on Friday and Saturday and frequent snow showers in northern Scotland.

"We should expect more of the same until at least the middle of February."

No-one, it seems, has escaped the deluge but some have been hit harder than others. Here, we speak to some of those hoping for clearer skies.

THE RAIL ENGINEER

KEITH Miller looks at the sky with dread as he gets up every morning – because black clouds can mean only more trouble ahead for him.

Network Rail's "Mr Fixit" in Scotland finds himself up to his knees in water – or mud – every time the heavens open and rain blocks tracks by causing flooding or landslides.

The firm's civil engineering project manager said this had been the worst January for 20 years.

He said: "It has just been constant – water is getting into places it never has before and the ground is saturated."

Since New Year, Mr Miller and his teams of specialists have had to contend with three significant landslips and as many serious floods, which have shut lines in Glasgow, Dunbartonshire, Dumfries, Dunblane and near Pitlochry, some for up to five days.

He said: "They always seem to happen late at night, and I have been on the phone until 2:30am trying to pull strings and get people out of bed.

"It's usually all hands to the pumps, but liaising with everyone affected by an incident takes a huge amount of time.

"The control room keeps asking when we are going to get trains running again – and I have to tell them it probably won't be for several days."

THE YOUTH FOOTBALL COACH

A QUICK glance at the league table suggests the players and coaches of Loanhead Boys Club Under-17s have scant reason to grumble.

Eleven games into their season, the side sit proudly at the summit of the South East Region Youth Football League. But as any self-respecting manager will tell you, the key to success is form.

Unfortunately, the squalls of rain which have battered the east coast have rendered consistency an impossibility for the side and their rivals.

In fact, while Loanhead have played 11 games, the fixture lists in the league are in chaos due to weather disruption, with some sides having played little more than half that number.

Robert Elliot, Loanhead's U-17 coach, bemoans the weather conditions which have not allowed his Midlothian team to play a game since before Christmas.

"We play on a council park, and it's just been waterlogged constantly due to the rain," said Mr Elliot. "It's very frustrating for me and the boys. They want to play week in, week out, but the weather makes it difficult. We want to keep the momentum going, but it's not easy.

"I've got my fingers crossed things will pick up, but the weather forecast isn't looking good for the weekend."

THE GAME FISHERMAN

AS FAR as Graeme Stear is concerned, the wet weather is more than welcome to linger for the weeks and months ahead.

A regular angler at the Ballencrieff Fishery near Bathgate, West Lothian, he attributes his bountiful catch of rainbow trout and brown trout for January to the endless squalls of rain.

"It's a funny old game, fly-fishing," he admits. "Some people only like to fish in the fair weather, but I prefer going out in the wild rain. I'm getting my catches no problem."

The reason for his success, Mr Stear, 33, believes, is not just that fewer people are inclined to stand on the banks in miserable climes, but that the fish rise to the water's surface to feed on insects knocked down by the heavy rain into the reservoir. The temperature of the water, too, is cooler, encouraging fish out of deep pockets in the beds.

"The rain increases your catches. I've been casting off this afternoon and getting bites," he added.

"As long as the wind stays away, it's good. When those gusts get up, it's a recipe for disaster when you cast, you don't catch anything. So if it's calm and wet for a few weeks to come, I'll be a happy man.

"There's a café at the fishery, so I don't have to stay out in the rain all day."

THE ROAD PATROLMAN

WET weather leaves AA patrolman Bob Pentland unperturbed, such are the rewards of getting stranded drivers back on their way.

Edinburgh-based Mr Pentland said his job satisfaction derived from being able to rescue motorists from the worst that this month's weather has thrown at them.

This has involved everything from wading in to tow vehicles from floods to having to pull them out of the mud on verges after they have skidded off roads.

Mr Pentland said the main rain-related problem had been motorists driving through too-deep water, which had seized engines or damaged electrical systems.

Broken wipers have been another big issue during a "hectic" January.

The breakdown specialist, who has been with the AA for ten years, said: "I love it when someone is able to drive away. It's really good – you cannot beat it.

"Sometimes on a ten-hour shift the weather doesn't relent all day. You get wet first thing in the morning and that's you until night-time, but you are too busy for it to bother you that much.

"The rain is not a problem. I just think that summer time will come along and the rain will be warmer."

THE FARMER

MONSOON-LIKE downpours have been a new weather phenomenon Patrick Lambert has had to contend with this month on the farms he runs in north-east Fife.

The general manager of CG Greig Farms, who is based at Gateside, said January had been the wettest there for 15 years, with 10in of rain having fallen so far.

Mr Lambert said the first month of the year was usually the wettest, but the sheer intensity of the rainfall over the last few weeks had not been experienced before.

He said: "We are happier to get rain in January than at harvest time or at other times of the year, so it is not a disaster. However, the rain has been tropical, with a lot falling in short periods which is more typical of Africa or India.

"We are getting huge downpours over two or three hours.

"The problem is that the ground cannot take it and water runs off through gates and on to roads, taking some of the soil with it."

Mr Lambert said other impacts had been the increased cost of having to house animals in sheds for longer as the rain persisted.

But he added: "Farmers are pretty resilient – you expect the worst, so if you get a nice month it's a bonus."

THE RED CROSS WORKER

RISING floodwater last week ensured Ian Rideout and his band of volunteers and staff had little time to relax.

Mr Rideout, an operations director for the Red Cross, received a call-out to help a farmer and four colleagues trying to save five cattle trapped on high ground in the middle of a flooded field, close to the River Beauly.

So, with an 11-strong team, and the help of the local Coastguard, the Red Cross rushed to assist with two boats. The scene they found at Cannich, near Inverness, was grim – so rapidly had the water risen, the farmer had already lost a tractor.

"For these men, the livestock represents their livelihood and they had already put themselves in considerable danger," said Mr Rideout.

The Red Cross used long poles to calculate the depth of water and charted a route through which the cattle could swim around 100ft to safety.

"The current was very strong and it was touch and go for a while," Mr Rideout recalled. "The farmers were so pleased."

Before the day's end, Mr Rideout's team had to rescue 50 sheep in a similar fashion, before coming to the aid of a woman who had become trapped in her Jeep by the rising water levels.



The full article contains 1777 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 29 January 2008 10:54 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

,

30/01/2008 00:59:49
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 30/01/2008 07:20:36
The article doesn't seem to mention global warming (I may be wrong) but that didn't stop #1 above doing so. The weather has been wetter than usual, which is all the article was claiming. Some folk just look for arguments and invent a cause where none is provided.
3

Guga II,

Rockall 30/01/2008 07:58:13
#3 Dave.

"Nothing new under the sun, eh?"

Is that that big white ball we see in the sky now and again?
4

Guga II,

Rockall 30/01/2008 08:19:05
And me.
5

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 30/01/2008 08:51:52
Guga and Dave: today my curtains are drawn as the sun is dazzling. No doubt rain and snow and wind aren't far away, but the crops and animals are looking good and even some of our potholes are being patched!
6

Slioch,

Scottish Highlands 30/01/2008 08:58:57
#2 Rulesbutnotrulers

You are correct. The article makes no mention of either global warming or climate change.

#3 DfB

Phrases like "since records began" have been used in correctly written articles since ... since ... records began, and have no hidden implication, save a desire to be informative and accurate.
7

Evan Owen,

Snowdonia 30/01/2008 09:18:02
There is quita difference between when human records began and when the planet began its records by way of tree rings or rock and ice layers. We have all the evidence of the ups and down of the Earth including the 'Snowball' but all these articles do is use an engineer's paltry 20 years or 'since records began', whenever that was, funnily enough the Bible mentions floods and an Ark so why don't we start building our own?
8

fred bloggs,

Edinburgh 30/01/2008 09:18:56
The IPCC Assessments have predicted wetter winters for northern Europe. And guess what's happening.
9

GP,

30/01/2008 09:47:34
2# wrong as usual - but then what does usual actually mean? Personally I have not evidenced January having been any wetter than normal at all, January is usually wet.
10# the article states it is only the ninth wettest so your wrong as well.
10

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/01/2008 09:52:44
#11 In what was was #2 wrong? Global warming was neither mentioned nor hinted at in the article. The wet weather was explained as being the result of a series of low pressure systems arriving one after the other. You and #1 and #3 and the rest who want another fight about climate change are on the wrong page.
11

fred bloggs,

Edinburgh 30/01/2008 09:55:51
11. It's not my wrong.
12

moira,

Cairo 30/01/2008 09:56:02
I love Scotland, but one of the good things about being away from it is usually the weather. Well, here in Cairo, I am frozen, it has rained for weeks (there are meant to be four days a year)and when I look at tv footage of a former place of residence , China,.....
13

fred bloggs,

Edinburgh 30/01/2008 09:59:23
'Scotland will have warmer, wetter winters, less snowfall and increased flooding.

http://www.scotland.gov.uk/News/Releases/2002/04/1518

14

Bascule,

30/01/2008 10:11:36
Is it so boring, or is the pressure to fill column inches so great, that we have to be treated to this rubbish? Apparently so.

It's J-A-N-U-A-R-Y, and we live in S-C-O-T-L-A-N-D.

I go out with my dog every night and morning, and I've begun noticing that the length of time between the sun going down and coming up each morning is getting less - is this a sign of impending doom? Some nights the fields are very dark, and on others they are quite pale. On the dark ones there are few clouds, and on the bright ones there are lots of clouds coloured orange. And there are other nights when it's darki and light at the same time; there are no clouds, but a big white ball hangs in the sky.

I'm off to study the entrails of a sheep and read the Bible to see if the wise ones have answers. I certainly won't get any from Hootsmon journos.
15

Unimpressed one,

30/01/2008 10:12:04
#15, And hotter summers remember? Crap. The Playstation models are pure rubbish at predicting climate changes. All the modellers know it, but it's a living....
16

tessterror,

somewhere wet 30/01/2008 10:48:26
boring boring boring!!! people need to find something elsa to comment about, oh but i forgot the weather is our other national sport!!!!!!!
17

grannie,

East Kilbride Glasgow 30/01/2008 11:30:45
Like I needed help from the forcasters to know this. I'm sure I've shrunk 2 inches
18

Guthrie,

Edinburgh 30/01/2008 11:55:30
Evan Owen #9- W don't have evidence of all the ups and downs of the Earths weather and climate. If you can produce records showing monthly rainfall for the past million years it'll be a miracle. Since records began is standard usage, and to say anything different would confuse people.
19

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 30/01/2008 12:13:08
When I started typing this it was sunny...

Now the sun has gone in, the wind has got up and it has started raining.

Maybe later it will snow a bit...

Then driving home this evening I am prepared to be blinded by low sun...

Tonight, it will either start raining and wash all the salt off the roads or the wind, will drop, the sky will clear and it will be cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey...

Then again, maybe it won't...

Reports on the weather used to be confined to the weather forecast. Now it seems that they make headline news. Nothing is happening now that hasn't happened since as long as I can remember---and as long as my parents, grand parents, great-grandparents, great-great-grandparents etc etc can remember.
20

Douglas,

Bathgate 30/01/2008 15:43:33
#19 Grannie: Oh I know what you mean. Her indoors has taken to humming 'I can't get no satisfaction' :o(
21

Lanna,

SCalifDesert 30/01/2008 17:16:19
#16 Bascule,

"It's J-A-N-U-A-R-Y, and we live in S-C-O-T-L-A-N-D."

..haha, thanks for the laugh there :)

#4/#5 Guga and Dave,
I would send you some sunshine, but it's actually been raining/snowing lately; however, the wind tunnel that I live in will surely blow it all away ;)
22

Lanna,

30/01/2008 17:29:38
#25 Hi Dave,
I'm keepin good, ta!
hey, if this global warming keeps up, I'll be moving to your neck 'o the woods. Need a crofting neighbor?! ;) I'm already gonna be whingeing here in a few months 'cause of the soon to be oven temps! :)
23

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 30/01/2008 18:36:00
Oh, stop complaining! You Scots should be used to it by now - especially those living in northern Scotland and the Western Isles.

Stop being such sissies and get used to it because it ain't going to get better. When I lived in Durham and travelled to Scotland muchly, I was at first astounded by the bone-chilling cold and the pervasive and intrusive rain and sleet and snow and slush, etc., etc.

But I got used to it and found that more than a few "wee drams" were warming, loosened up the conversation in pubs, and was heart-healthy (I think).

12 Duncan in Edinburh

Nobody but you wants to fight about climate change. Why not have a few pre-prandial cocktails and CHILL OUT!
24

Lanna,

30/01/2008 18:42:02
#27 Tim,
my but you create such lovely rants! ;)
25

Van (not white) Diesel,

Amsterdam & Augsburg 30/01/2008 18:44:42
#27 Tim
Do you have a relative in Air Canada?
26

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 30/01/2008 19:02:48
29 Van Diesel

I don't speak to my relative or they don't speak to me - except for my sister.

I may have a relative working for Air Canada and will ask my sister as she lives west of Toronto and Pearson Airport is the largest and busiest in Canada.

I really do not know.
27

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/01/2008 19:49:40
#27 Did you read #1, #2 and #3? Nothing to do with me mate.
28

Duncan in Edinburgh,

30/01/2008 20:33:31
#31 Never mind getting over it, I was never anywhere near it in the first place! It's you and your Canadian pal who are having a go at me, ye great climate-change-doubting monkey.
29

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 30/01/2008 21:50:34
35 Dave from Barra

I agree with you TOTALLY!!!

What a prissy, pedantic, prancing, self-important b**ch he is.

 

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