Page 5 of 6

Posted: Wed May 20, 2009 9:19 pm
by kthomp
not all of the uk gets snow, i dont :(

Posted: Wed May 20, 2009 10:16 pm
by Yorkie
kthomp wrote:not all of the uk gets snow, i dont :(
All too true I'm afraid. Hardly anywhere in England gets much snow (which is why things collapse when we see four inches (of snow!) in London). The days of skating on the Thames in Dickens day are long gone. Global warming :cry:

Posted: Wed May 20, 2009 10:32 pm
by kjackson83
Yorkie wrote:
kthomp wrote:not all of the uk gets snow, i dont :(
All too true I'm afraid. Hardly anywhere in England gets much snow (which is why things collapse when we see four inches (of snow!) in London). The days of skating on the Thames in Dickens day are long gone. Global warming :cry:
:D :lol: this past winter was pretty awful in Canada--airports across the whole country shut down, Toronto and Montreal buried in some number of metres of snow...and across the sea was London, hit by an appalling four inches (in places) of snow, totally shut down; and worst of all: those poor fellows in the House of Lords having to leave without an evening meal due to staff shortages!

Yes, we had a good :lol: over here in N. America ;)

Posted: Wed May 20, 2009 10:37 pm
by Yorkie
It's all relative :x I'd like to see you lot cope with a nasty drizzle! Not laughing now are you :D

Posted: Wed May 20, 2009 10:45 pm
by kjackson83
Yorkie wrote:It's all relative :x I'd like to see you lot cope with a nasty drizzle! Not laughing now are you :D
:D :P all in good fun :D :D

Posted: Wed May 20, 2009 10:49 pm
by Yorkie
kjackson83 wrote:
Yorkie wrote:It's all relative :x I'd like to see you lot cope with a nasty drizzle! Not laughing now are you :D
:D :P all in good fun :D :D
8) I know :wink:

Posted: Thu May 21, 2009 3:43 pm
by kjackson83
Yorkie wrote:
kjackson83 wrote:
Yorkie wrote:It's all relative :x I'd like to see you lot cope with a nasty drizzle! Not laughing now are you :D
:D :P all in good fun :D :D
8) I know :wink:
Houston's power grid is seriously so fragile, power poles have been snapped in a vigorous wind. Some of the city is also built beneath the water table, so we flood almost catastrophically during a mid-sized thunderstorm...think of the Gloucester floods in 2003 (I think?), but once a month or so... :shock:

And people walk about with their overcoats drawn tight and massive fleets of umbrellas deployed...in the middle of that nasty drizzle :shock: :!: :)

Posted: Thu May 21, 2009 4:25 pm
by kthomp
ohh sounds like the winter in my town lol

Posted: Fri May 22, 2009 7:36 pm
by Yorkie
kjackson83 wrote:
Yorkie wrote:
kjackson83 wrote:
:D :P all in good fun :D :D
8) I know :wink:
Houston's power grid is seriously so fragile, power poles have been snapped in a vigorous wind. Some of the city is also built beneath the water table, so we flood almost catastrophically during a mid-sized thunderstorm...think of the Gloucester floods in 2003 (I think?), but once a month or so... :shock:

And people walk about with their overcoats drawn tight and massive fleets of umbrellas deployed...in the middle of that nasty drizzle :shock: :!: :)
You can put a man on the moon but........

I didn't realise you got that much rain in Houston - I'm learning all the time :D

Posted: Wed May 27, 2009 4:59 am
by kjackson83
Yorkie wrote:
kjackson83 wrote:
Yorkie wrote:
8) I know :wink:
Houston's power grid is seriously so fragile, power poles have been snapped in a vigorous wind. Some of the city is also built beneath the water table, so we flood almost catastrophically during a mid-sized thunderstorm...think of the Gloucester floods in 2003 (I think?), but once a month or so... :shock:

And people walk about with their overcoats drawn tight and massive fleets of umbrellas deployed...in the middle of that nasty drizzle :shock: :!: :)
You can put a man on the moon but........

I didn't realise you got that much rain in Houston - I'm learning all the time :D
We probably don't get that much rain relative to a place like London, but when it rains, it literally pours--the weather around here is feast or famine, really...we had a HUMID, miserable summer last year, complained about the lack of rain...and then got railroaded (literally) by a hurricane larger than the British Isles. Be careful what you wish for... :D

Posted: Wed May 27, 2009 6:29 pm
by Yorkie
London isn't one of the wetter parts of the UK - but I know what you mean :D

A hurricane larger than the British Isles! :shock: ! That's a lot of wind. Must be all the beans you cowboys eat :twisted:

Posted: Wed May 27, 2009 8:29 pm
by tcliffy
Yes, well, we've been in the worst drought for 15 years and then BAM!!! it rained. It's stopped now unfortunately, but the wind is incredible. I think we're going to be in for a rough hurricane season this year.

Posted: Wed May 27, 2009 9:38 pm
by Yorkie
tcliffy wrote:Yes, well, we've been in the worst drought for 15 years and then BAM!!! it rained. It's stopped now unfortunately, but the wind is incredible. I think we're going to be in for a rough hurricane season this year.
My sister will be well happy then. She left the UK for the sunnier weather in Orlando :lol:

Posted: Thu May 28, 2009 2:22 am
by kjackson83
Yorkie wrote:London isn't one of the wetter parts of the UK - but I know what you mean :D

A hurricane larger than the British Isles! :shock: ! That's a lot of wind. Must be all the beans you cowboys eat :twisted:
:P no, it's some butterfly in Angola! LOL

Posted: Thu May 28, 2009 6:40 pm
by Yorkie
kjackson83 wrote:
Yorkie wrote:London isn't one of the wetter parts of the UK - but I know what you mean :D

A hurricane larger than the British Isles! :shock: ! That's a lot of wind. Must be all the beans you cowboys eat :twisted:
:P no, it's some butterfly in Angola! LOL
Interesting, but I've seen Blazing Saddles. I'm sticking with my bean theory :wink: