Beneath the burning skies
Aug. 14th, 2022 04:21 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Like much of southeastern England, we've been experiencing a heatwave for the entire week, and a drought for the entire summer — apart from a brief shower of about ten minutes, two weeks ago (which immediately evaporated), it hasn't rained here since May, and the grass is dead and dry. I find it genuinely terrifying, particularly since there appears to be little official action to mitigate the effects. In Australia, I would expect to see routine water restrictions, and a total fire ban, but of course there has been nothing of the sort. (I double checked just now and saw nothing but the big local water compnanies putting out press releases saying they would not impose water restrictions and a government announcement basically saying it was water companies' responsibility to impose such things. I find the latter completely irrational and horrifying — this is surely the responsibility of governments rather than private industry!)
And of course, with no bans in place, I've seen people merrily using sprinklers to water their gardens, hosing down hard surfaces or washing cars with a hose. There still also seems to be a dangerous emphasis in some parts of the press of treating all this as just some lovely warm summer weather, with photos of people swimming at the beach or basking in the sun at picnics. Meanwhile, I feel as if there should be an official campaign teaching people how to protect their houses and gardens against bushfires — all I see when I look at those expanses of dry grass is a handy collection of tinder and kindling. I feel anxious every time I smell smoke, and have to figure out whether someone is having a barbecue, or whether it's something more sinister.
This weekend, I've done my best to avoid the heat and move as little as possible. I had to go to the market, but I managed to be back at home by 9am, and other than that I just made morning trips to the bakery down the road to get an iced coffee. I've spent the rest of the time at home, strategically opening and closing windows and curtains depending on the position of the sun, doing very slow, gentle yoga, reading undemanding books, and watching undemanding TV (of which more in later posts). If I'd planned things better I would have avoided cooking altogether, but I'm not the biggest fan of cold food like salad, so cooking had to happen.
I just wish it would rain. Proper, stormy, deluging rain, for hours and days at a time. It doesn't often rain here in the summer, but two months and counting without rain is unnerving and oppressive. The heat goes on.
And of course, with no bans in place, I've seen people merrily using sprinklers to water their gardens, hosing down hard surfaces or washing cars with a hose. There still also seems to be a dangerous emphasis in some parts of the press of treating all this as just some lovely warm summer weather, with photos of people swimming at the beach or basking in the sun at picnics. Meanwhile, I feel as if there should be an official campaign teaching people how to protect their houses and gardens against bushfires — all I see when I look at those expanses of dry grass is a handy collection of tinder and kindling. I feel anxious every time I smell smoke, and have to figure out whether someone is having a barbecue, or whether it's something more sinister.
This weekend, I've done my best to avoid the heat and move as little as possible. I had to go to the market, but I managed to be back at home by 9am, and other than that I just made morning trips to the bakery down the road to get an iced coffee. I've spent the rest of the time at home, strategically opening and closing windows and curtains depending on the position of the sun, doing very slow, gentle yoga, reading undemanding books, and watching undemanding TV (of which more in later posts). If I'd planned things better I would have avoided cooking altogether, but I'm not the biggest fan of cold food like salad, so cooking had to happen.
I just wish it would rain. Proper, stormy, deluging rain, for hours and days at a time. It doesn't often rain here in the summer, but two months and counting without rain is unnerving and oppressive. The heat goes on.
no subject
Date: 2022-08-14 04:02 pm (UTC)Please continue to say cool and safe.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-14 04:19 pm (UTC)I saw that France is doing water restrictions, but is allowing water use exemptions for golf courses - climate activists are pouring concrete into the golf course holes in protest.
"Climate activists in the south of France have damaged lawns and filled golf course holes with cement, protesting against golf courses' exemption from water bans as the country faces its most severe drought in history."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-08-14/french-climate-activists-fill-golf-course-holes-cement-drought/101331456
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-14 05:16 pm (UTC)We just saw the news about the Thames headwaters having slid, because the original springs dried up?
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-14 07:46 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-14 07:58 pm (UTC)I've never seen anything like it. We were there for three weeks and in all that time there were two maybe five minute long sprinkles of rain.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-14 09:11 pm (UTC)on one hand I'm moving in less than a week so I could just let her garden wither and not give a fuck but on the other hand, I also want my deposit back. (I'm pretty sure not watering the garden is not grounds to withhold it from me but I also don't want to have to fight to get it back, so.) I just. seriously lady. this massive drought and you don't even independently think that maybe watering your flowers shouldn't be a priority??
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-14 10:52 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-15 05:51 am (UTC)I'm not sure if sociology might be as comforting to you as it is to me, but sometimes I find a little "why" helps. You might be interested in this recent dissertation about how governments decide when it's a drought (and therefore when to start doing anything -- or if to start): https://escholarship.org/uc/item/37p1v27w. It's CA-specific, but there are lots of generalizable observations in there, I think.
ETA: blah, I just noticed that diss is still under embargo for public-access readers, which makes it the opposite of helpful! I am sorry. Instead, I will just send you wishes for rain and sun safety.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-15 09:05 am (UTC)I wish I could send some of the cold to you (and get some of that heat here). Stay as cool as you can and I hope the heat breaks soon.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-15 10:59 am (UTC)We've had water restrictions put in place regionally by communities where it's the worst, but not nationally and I also don't think it will happen nationally in Germany. For various reasons.
The reason why governments are not doing it are manyfold, but to be fair, most countries in continental Europe (and certainly not the UK because of weather patterns) are overly familiar with bush fires. We will get that overly familiar in just a few years' time, but we're not actually there yet. 2022 is a record year for bush fires, so there's that.
Stormy deluges are not actually a good idea right now for neither the continent nor the UK. The problem is currently that the soil is so dry that it's unable to take on water especially when it comes as a deluge. The result would be that most fields would have the most fertile topsoil (if which a limited amount exists in the world right now due to how erosion works) would be washed away with any deluge, actually causing problems for years to come.
What we all need is a few days of gentle rain. Which is not what we'll get anytime soon, so the problem will continue.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-15 11:36 am (UTC)Though, yes, I have been looking over at English weather and that would be warm for summer here. Hopefully gentle rains come your way soon.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-15 02:41 pm (UTC)Do you think the lack of government action is because of lack of government experience with drought (Australia has more extreme weather more often, I'm assuming, so it probably has some procedures in place?) or general Conservative failures?
I've spent the rest of the time at home, strategically opening and closing windows and curtains depending on the position of the sun, doing very slow, gentle yoga, reading undemanding books, and watching undemanding TV
This sounds lovely!
I'm hoping for some rain for y'all very very soon!
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-15 05:58 pm (UTC)There was a recent article warning about a pending megaflood in California soon. They're so dry they're on fire, and the megafloods are rare but not unheard of, so the public has largely forgotten them. It really seems lately that if it's not one thing, it's another and with little time between events.
=^..^=~
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-15 09:29 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2022-08-17 03:35 pm (UTC)In the meantime, I hope you're able to stay cool and the temps drop soon!
(no subject)
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