Bad UK Weather - Rain And Win Batters Southern Britain On Sunday

PA  |  Posted: 29/04/2012 06:48 Updated: 29/04/2012 07:03   PA

South West England and Wales will be battered by gusts of up to 60mph on Sunday while the rest of the country is also expected to experience strong winds and further downpours.

Forecasters said trees could be brought down and already waterlogged areas could be flooded as up to 40mm of rain is predicted to fall in places.

And rain-lashed Britain shows no sign of drying up as the wet weather is set to continue into next week.

England and Wales have experienced the wettest week since December with forecasters seeing no sign of the rain letting up and supermarkets reporting soaring sales of wellies and umbrellas in the face of the deluge.

The Environment Agency has warned of the possibility of localised flooding across parts of the South West, South East and Midlands, East of England and Wales.

A spokeswoman said: "The Environment Agency is closely monitoring the forecast and rainfall particularly in Worcestershire, as the river levels are already higher than normal in the rivers Severn, Teme and Avon.

"Environment Agency officers are out monitoring river levels, checking defences and clearing any potential blockages, such as fallen branches and debris, to reduce the risk of flooding.

"Residents who live near rivers like the Severn should register for the Environment Agency's free flood warnings service and everyone can keep up to date by checking our website, calling our Floodline on 0845 988 1188 and looking out for updates on our Facebook and Twitter pages."

Tom Tobler, a forecaster with MeteoGroup, the weather division of the Press Association, said: "Gusts of 50 to 60mph are sweeping across South West England, central England and Wales, which will see the worst of the windy weather.

"The wind will then spread north-westwards throughout the day with other areas seeing gusts of up to 40mph.

"There is potential for it to cause some damage.

"The South East will experience heavy rain this morning, but it will then ease off, with the heaviest rain in the South West, central England and Wales. It will then spread northwards."

Tuesday will also see another band of heavy rain across Wales, the Midlands, the South East and East Anglia, but the rain will be more showery in the South West.

Many of the areas at risk of floods are currently in a state of drought, which is gripping the South East, East Anglia, the Midlands, the South West and south and east Yorkshire after two unusually dry winters in a row.

In its latest weekly drought briefing, the Environment Agency said all regions had now received above average rainfall for April, boosting river levels and providing relief for farmers, gardeners and wildlife in drought areas.

But groundwater levels remained low and the rain was not yet making a difference to the drought conditions, the agency warned.

And soil affected by prolonged dry weather is increasing the risk of flash floods as heavy rain quickly runs off hard, compacted ground.

Five flood warnings were in place today for the North East, with properties at risk from rising water levels in a number of rivers including the Ouse in York. Householders were urged to take action to protect their homes.

The latest downpours come at the end of a particularly wet week for England and Wales, in which 42mm (1.7in) of rain fell in the South East and 55mm (2.2in) in the South West, which has now had 166% of the average rainfall for April.

More than two dozen properties were flooded in St Helen Auckland, Co Durham, on Thursday, while there were localised floods in Devon and Cornwall earlier in the week.

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South West England and Wales will be battered by gusts of up to 60mph on Sunday while the rest of the country is also expected to experience strong winds and further downpours. Forecasters said tre...
South West England and Wales will be battered by gusts of up to 60mph on Sunday while the rest of the country is also expected to experience strong winds and further downpours. Forecasters said tre...
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08:22 on 30/04/2012
Whats all the fuss about the rain.Heavy rain and flooding is not a new thing. Just the weather people creating storm in a tea cup.
05:28 on 30/04/2012
THE MET OFFICE FORECAST SHOWS SUNSHINE IN THE SE & E AND HERE THERE THEY TALK ABOUT HEAVY RAIN IN THE MORNING. WHO'S RIGHT AND WHO'S WRONG??? WE ARE STILL WAITING FOR THE SNOW THE MET OFFICE FORECAST UP IN SCOTLAND...
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21:27 on 29/04/2012
At least it will be filing up and topping up a few reservoirs. Hopefully those farmers and people in the South East will get the benefit. Certainly more river water for the fish and wildlife where its needed as well.

I don't know why we're so surprised really. It's still early days yet. My grandmother who married in June in the mid 19th century told of her 'white' wedding. It snowed!
18:57 on 29/04/2012
Downpours? Here in the North of Scotland, we're enjoying our 2nd day of unbroken sunshine.
22:10 on 29/04/2012
Enjoy, I think you deserve it, lets hope it lasts then spreads to the south, and we will all be as one again, united. Think i`v had too much rain beating on my head!!
12:52 on 30/04/2012
Thanks for your kind comment. I'm not at all sure that I/we deserve sunshine; anyway, it had disappeared this morning - don't know whether it's heading for you!
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philryanrpr
17:52 on 29/04/2012
And only the Huffington Post could think that prolonged wet weather in England is newsworthy..... of course you could have the next big flood next week come summer youll have water companies saying we have to ration water because there is a shortage... Tossers.
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philryanrpr
17:50 on 29/04/2012
No, what is wrong with the country it is in the middle of a global recession -- a recession caused not by the 99 percent of you but the 1 percent of the rich who gambled, lost, and then were bailed out by your government because they were too big to fail. Are there lazy bums in your country who are allergic to work? Sure. But the majority of unemployed aren't. However you have got a government who chose entirely the wrong way to get yourself out of this recession. You should have spent money on infrastructure -- which is a disgrace by the way -- and used this as an opportunity to put the many out of work to work.... but no, you cut, cut cut your way into a double dip recession.
17:41 on 29/04/2012
where does all this rain go down the drain like the country :-(
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16:15 on 29/04/2012
Then other comments on its the goverment to blame ???? What !! ??? It you that gave the country to them for OMG OMG OMG sake.

Whine whine, and yet again on next election you will vote the next in that you cursed before and then be back in here again in a few years blaming them.

Stop blaming those around and accept the reality ... its your country, you put those in power you believe in, you whine for more more more and so does the man next to you, greed has brought you down and not the Polish, not the water supplier, not the weather ... and not the goverment who you all spend each moment wagging fingers at.

Greed ... enjoy while it ends.
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16:09 on 29/04/2012
If half the UK got out and worked instead of wandering the streets moaning with an OMG OMG OMG cloud above them, then problems would be far less.
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16:07 on 29/04/2012
Who cares what the outcome is, even if you were given the solution to one problem .. your country would see this as OK to scam another. At the moment while you whine you are being routed to pay for a new barrel.

And the comments below on over population ?? tuff luck, its your own rules so live with it till the bubble bursts.
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idontcare761
It seems I might care afterall..
15:13 on 29/04/2012
I honestly know enough to know that you Brits will probably not appreciate this comment , but it's no ill will intended.
Reading your comments , about your drought , government , each other , etc. , you sound (with the exception of a few words here and there) just like we Americans do when we are commenting.
I was smiling , and even laughing a few times , while I read them. Thank you :) I hope your rainy day turns to sunshine soon , if not , your green countryside is a beautiful side effect.
15:26 on 29/04/2012
appreciated,
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idontcare761
It seems I might care afterall..
00:31 on 30/04/2012
:)
13:47 on 29/04/2012
Amazing isn't it - no rain for a few months and there's a drought, the first significant rainfall for a while and now there's flooding - you just couldn't make it up. All the while this pathetic Environment Agency we have are telling us that the rainfall isn't significant enough to end the drought. In time there are always periods like this where rain doesn't fall for a while but nature has its way of correcting things and within time the reservoirs will be full/overflowing again. 1976 was the hottest summer on record, the reservoirs were empty but 1977 was one of the wettest summers ever and the reservoirs were full - so Environment Agency please shut up, let nature take its course and stop telling us how to use water wisely when you numpties are the reason for so much panic.
15:27 on 29/04/2012
We have had very low rain fall for many, many months. The reservoirs are low and the aquifers are in a very poor state. There are several reasons for this. Firstly, low rain fall over a considerable time leaves our reservoirs low; the aquifers take a very long time to re-fill; there are simply too may demands on the water supply.

Any one of these in isolation is a potential problem; but together it is a disaster.

As a matter of interest, what is your suggested solution? It would be very interesting, and possibly quite enlightening, to hear?
15:41 on 29/04/2012
go on hols where its hot, hot and more hot yet never a drought, eg all holiday destinations.
16:19 on 29/04/2012
Oh Sally, why do you make excuses for them, as though drought is some new and unprecedented phenomenon, and exponential population increase has not been happening for decades?!
Drought and increased demand simply aren't excuses because the service we pay vast amounts for should account for these factors.
Suggested solutions? Oh, I dunno, more reservoirs, more investment in and improvements to the existing infrastructure, more encouragement of and guidance for recycling and rainwater capture; outrageous stuff like that.
Droughts and increased demand will continue; if you think that means carte blanche for the water companies to provide an inadequate service, whilst further enriching themselves with hiked prices, then I recommend a change of outlook.
13:42 on 29/04/2012
I wouldn't let the water companies know you have barrels catching the rain water, they will start charging you. I am sure they think they own ALL water rights ( even the rain ) lol. Before anyone jumps to conclusions this is a JOKE !
cantabria
my default position is wrong
16:36 on 29/04/2012
Don't be too sure. They were talking about a futures market in water on tv not so long ago. Fresh air could be charged for as well.
06:17 on 30/04/2012
In Colorado it was illegal to collect rain, as relevant water law required that it fall to the ground and into water courses; you could buy, sell or own a water butt, but it was illegal to use it for collecting rainwater! In 2009 the state legislature passed a bill permitting landowners in rural areas without a municipal water supply to collect rain or snow runoff from their roof. Other western states - eg Utah, Washington - have similar laws.

In the mid-1990s Bolivia, under pressure from the World Bank, privatised the water supply to the third-largest city (Cochabamba). The purchasers - a consortium with significant US participation - apparently made private collection of rainwater illegal and raised water tariffs by up to 50%. In 2000 there was significant unrest, martial law was declared, at least 6 people killed and 170 injured.

In the UK water companies have suggested that landowners should be charged for collecting rainwater they then use for flushing toilets etc, as sewerage charges are assumed to be related to the quantity of water supplied and a metered supply could be lowered significantly but sewerage would still need to be treated. Hosepipe bans apparently also apply to using a hosepipe to water gardens from a rainwater collection tank, not just to using mains water directly (I assume the same would apply for a grey water collection tank). If you collect rainwater for non-domestic purposes - eg commercial agriculture - you need an abstraction licence from the Environment
photo
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clownzozo
Magician, Novelist and an Angry Old Git
13:40 on 29/04/2012
Perhaps they should ban the sale of bottled water as it takes two-pints of water to make the plastic bottle to hold one pint of water. Naive people buy bottled water of the same name, Naive, but reversed.
cantabria
my default position is wrong
16:38 on 29/04/2012
That's funny. My son only wants evian, so last week I bought Evian, Basics and Sainsbury's scottish and I did a blind taste test on him, he thought the evian was the basics and vice versa. No more evian for him - 70p a bottle difference.
05:02 on 30/04/2012
Did tou include tap water in the blind tasting?
Kraptonfactor
They're coming to take me away ha ha, hee hee, ho
08:44 on 30/04/2012
I use tap water in a filter jug. Water bought in bottles has been sitting on a supermarket shelf for goodness knows how long, I watched a tv documentary ages ago claiming that bottled water contained bacteria, and chemicals that had leached from the plastic bottles.