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Heard this morning that this summer in Britain is now officially the wettest on record, breaking the previous record from 1789. Well, a whopping 13mm more than way back then. Weather data has been kept here on Mud Island for 240 years, and our first summer had to be the wettest of them all! Not that it has bugged us or made us miserable. An early autumn might do that though! No doubt it will be conclusively so, as there is still life in those clouds! I cut the grass yesterday – takes a whopping 20 minutes to mow our expansive English Estate – and was astonished at how fast the grass had grown in the week we were away. Oh dear, resistance is futile – are we being assimilated into the quintessential British habit – finding the weather of central importance! The Union Flag umbrella graphic comes from: http://www.triple-c.com/Images/thumb_uj_umb101.jpg
Photo credit: eWallpaperIt has rained most of the night, and still pouring this morning – but Rose and I were discussing how much we actually still like rainy days. UK people are weather-obsessed, and for the most part get gloomy and unhappy when it rains like it is this week. I guess that growing up in Africa, where the rain often comes as a relief – from heat, for farmers, etc. So we have not yet reached the place where we get all upset with the wet weather. Not yet anyway.
This pretty, wintery scene is yesterday, in the sub-tropical Drakensburg, in South Africa. Snow fell in many places in South Africa yesterday, it seems, including Gauteng, which last saw snow in 1981. For the past five years, when we lived in Johannesburg, I anticipated snow in Joeys, but it did not come. We leave, it comes! It was our daughter Michelle’s first chance to get up close and personal with the white stuff, as for grandsons Rhys and Matthew who just thought is was too cold!
Front page of The Star newspaper in Joburg, today
She deserves a medal! I remember 24 June 1978
like it was yesterday, and recalling some of the many events, changes, challenges, and joys that these years have brought is just amazing. After church today, we drove towards Eastbourne, and had decided to just stop somewhere that caught our eye, and so when we had looped through Eastbourne and heading back on the coastal road, we came across a sign to Beachy Head.
Unfortunately it was raining too hard for us to take a walk around, but seeing that there are a number of walking routes, I think we shall be back before the end of summer. For more interesting information about Beachy Head, have a look at this website. Nearby, are the Seven Sisters cliffs, and another walking trail, that we would like to try sometime. This photo came from Bradford Genealogy (thanks). Seagulls on the beach Railing on the pier Beach buildings

Thursday this week was the day that a tornado hit a part of London, and ripped into a street of houses, causing much damage. Around the same time, we were walking on the Worthing seafront, near the Sea Lane Cafe, when a gust of wind literally knocked Rose and our neice Emma, off their feet. My brother Rogan snapped this picture of them in hysterics when they realised what had just happened.







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