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Tales from the riverbank

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The floods supposedly peaked at around midnight UTC although the floods-rescue people are advising that there is still water working its way down from the hills and there may be occasional after-surges.

We've also been promised more rain. Oh good, I was getting worried that it wasn't wet enough over here yet.

I sat up to listen to the arrival of the surge on local radio, and inexplicably, given that they had been broadcasting 24hrs, they chose that moment to close down, handing over the channel to national Radio 5...

So I went to bed.

This morning there were a couple of new stories on the news (If you catch my drift...).

A couple of miles upstream from here 3 holiday-longboats had tied up for the night. They awoke to find themselves apparently in midstream. After shouting to each other for a bit they surmised that they were in fact still tied up to the bank, but the whole area was now flooded. Unable to see where the river actually was they remained where they were waiting for the waters to go down again.

They didn't.

When you're anchored to pegs driven into the ground you're usually safe enough, but when those pegs are underwater they tend to lose a little purchase, and one of the boats pulled free. The downstream boat managed to get a line aboard and reel her in, but now there were two boats pulling on the one mooring...

They did what anyone would have done under the circumstances and telephoned the local radio.

Within half an hour two local farmers and a reporter with two tractors and two canoes were on their way.

This story prompted another boatman to call in. He too was anchored in the middle of nowhere, but he had been attatched to a proper bollard. These don't give way quite so easily underwater, so as the waters rose the boat was pulled slowly over.

Fortunately, falling out of bed awoke the gentleman to his predicament and he loosed off the ropes and lassoed a nearby tree, pulled himself up, and anchored the boat to it.

Then he realised he was now on the towpath.

As he said, what he now needed to do was to keep an eye on the height of the water so that when it started to go down he could push himself out again before he became becalmed on the path.

It sounds like hours of endless fun, this messing about on the river thing.
Today's photos © Tony Stoyle, David McManamon, Sang Tan/AP, Kirsten Wright & Rebecca Lacey.

One bright, sunny Sunday evening, an idle fellow has some idle thoughts...Was that a mighty storm?

Comments

otherplans 24. July 2007, 20:07

Water. Can't live under it, can't live without it. I hope that everyone gets dried out and that this round of flooding hasn't caused permanent devastation for too many people.

Live over here, on a sandbar called Long Island, in NY, I do wonder why waterfront property is still thet most desirable - and expensive.

Deke 25. July 2007, 12:00

It is a strange conundrum. There's just been a restruant owner on TV, his property was right on the edge of the river, and presumably he's been doing good business because of this, but now he's been flooded and he's not happy about it.

While I have a certain sympathy for him and even moreso for his employees, I can't help wondering why, if you have a property that is that close to the river, don't you have flood defences?

Better to have them and not need them than to sit back on your wallet thinking it'll never happen.

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