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View Full Version : 'We're really struggling': British farmers pushed to brink by severe floods



Neo
03-01-2024, 03:23 PM
https://images.ctfassets.net/pjshm78m9jt4/4HgCnH52PSRjZlWpeLMUcI/0bbd415f57ba4cabd88826bda16e2980/010324_Farm_Feature_Hero_Peter_Gardiner.jpg?fm=jpg&fit=fill&w=400&h=225&q=80Peter Gardiner (pictured), whose farm is based in Norfolk, said '80%' of his grazing marshlands were underwater at the peak of the flooding.Credit: Peter GardinerBy James Gray (https://twitter.com/JGrayJourno), ITV News Multimedia Producer
"I know farmers (https://www.itv.com/news/topic/farming)in this area who are really struggling at this moment just because they do not know what to do," says Peter Gardiner, a Norfolk-based farmer.
"Eighty percent of my grazing marshes with cattle on went under water in probably a six or seven day period. Most of the arable land didn't flood, but was too wet to do anything with."
Mr Gardiner told ITV News some of his land has been flooded since last October, adding that, while farmers are used to dealing with wet weather, there has been "shocking" levels of rainfall over autumn and winter.

His story is one that thousands of farmers are currently describing across the UK, where acres upon acres of land, usually set aside for arable farming, have been submerged under water - in some places up to three metres deep.
https://www.itv.com/news/2024-03-01/british-farmers-say-shocking-levels-of-floods-are-pushing-them-to-the-brink#
==========================The Flooding in my shire is terrible, mile after mile of farmed land is underwater. Like the link said the land didn't dry out from the last bad rains.

Neo
03-01-2024, 03:26 PM
Tewkesbury to the north of my town has 2 rivers near that overflows
https://i.postimg.cc/V6KN75PD/IMG-9707.png (https://postimages.org/)

dinosaur
03-01-2024, 04:50 PM
Our rivers are also high. But they are receding right now. I spent the afternoon moving logs and sticks that were left in the yard as the water recedes. The weather people say that it is due to El Nino, that those years are the wettest. So far, their predictions for a milder than normal winter, and a wetter than normal winter, have been correct.

A couple homes that normally see flooding at this level are in bad shape, and just one houseboat has broken away and is floating (kinda sorta) down the Chipola River. Other than that, this year has not been too bad here.

Big Wheeler
03-01-2024, 06:33 PM
I travelled from Newcastle upon Tyne to Doncaster,about 100 miles,yesterday by rail.I can say that every field on both sides of the tracks was either sodden or part covered in standing water. I can predict with some confidence that Yorkshire Water will still impose a hosepipe ban if the sun shines for 2 days in my local area.

Physics Hunter
03-02-2024, 01:43 AM
Global wetting. Along with Southern Kali, and the Sierras.