Sunday, 29 April 2012

Sunday 29th April – Seifton, Shropshire


It was under 3°C when we woke up and it had already been raining for hours. Henrietta was being buffeted by the wind and had been all night.
The farmer's wife who runs the campsite popped in to see us in the middle of the morning. With the rain pouring down and the wind howling, we quickly invited her in. She came to check that we were OK and to ask if we wanted anything from the shops as her husband was about to go out. We really appreciated the offer and the fact that she had come out in the atrocious weather. We had quite a long chat about the farm and milking her cows and were able to compliment her on her gorgeous lemon drizzle cake. She said that, for the first time ever, water was forcing its way through the wall into the house. The driving rain was exploiting a weakness in the wall and they found it dripping through a downstairs ceiling. They have drilled some holes in the ceiling to drain the water and hung a tarpaulin over the wall to protect it. That gives some indication of how bad the weather is!
The first break from the rain came at 16:00, although light showers continued into the evening. We reckon that we had at least 15 hours of continuous rain! The water was running in rivers from the field above us and down the camping field a few metres behind the van. The field had been recently planted with potatoes and some of these were appearing on the surface, soon to be transported by the river and deposited in the camping field.
A geography lesson was played out beside Henrietta. I remember lessons that explained how river deltas formed and here we saw it in practice. The main river poured down towards the middle of the van but then a well-placed trench diverted it south until it found a weak point along the fence line where it poured over into the camping field. However, some of the large volume of silt carried by the river was deposited in the trench and this eventually raised the ground level at that point and blocked its southerly route. Soon the river breached the fence line and poured into the camping field underneath Henrietta. Like magic (it should have been accompanied by the Thunderbirds theme!), the farmer appeared with a fork and cleared the trench so that the water reverted to its previous line behind Henrietta. Our hosts are rapidly turning into heroes!
Photos: Rivers of mud descend from the potato field.

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