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10-03-2020 9:56 AM
Sure - but that's probably the case for the majority of homes in the UK.
About the only "no flood risk" place to build would be on the peak of a mountain.
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10-03-2020 10:18 AM
Not a bit of it. You don't need to be on a maountain at all. If a river has an exceptional flood 25 feet above "normal", anything above that will be OK.
Anyway, rivers are usually enclosed within "banks" and the "normal" level can be anything from 10 feet or more below the banks so if the river was deepened, much more of the building level would be above the exceptional flood level.
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
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10-03-2020 4:40 PM
Anywhere that is downhill from somewhere can suffer from flash flooding
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10-03-2020 5:43 PM
Deepening rivers - isn't that just taking steps to mitigate the risk of flooding?
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10-03-2020 7:03 PM
If they actually did some deepening, that really would mitigate some risk of flooding.
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
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10-03-2020 10:21 PM
But then so many people don't think a bit of habitat damage here and there, or a loss of ecosystem function here and there matters. It does, and it all adds up.
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10-03-2020 10:29 PM
More work for the eco people to fathom out how to balance reduction in flooding coupled with habitat re-instatement?
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
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11-03-2020 9:07 PM
I notice the Severn at Caersws rose nearly 2 metres about 30 hours ago.
As for how quickly a river can silt up, there was a length of the river where a few yards from the bank I would be wading about hip deep to fish, within two years it shallowed to no more than halfway to my knees.
At the junction of the Trannon there used to be a large deep pool, the run in widened one winter and the pool filled up over the next three years. The same with the pool where the Carno entered the main river.
It's what happens when the flow slows down.
Parents of young, organic life forms are warned that towels can be harmful if swallowed in large quantities.
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11-03-2020 10:05 PM
Ah well, out with the dredger.
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.
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16-07-2021 3:03 PM
My turn to ressurect an old thread!
We've just seen the devastating floods in Germany? Now leaving those aside and concentrating on drainage here, isn't it high time the rivers were cleared and deepened? It's OK going on about creating more wetlands to hold water back but when the wetlands are already saturated, they provide no benefit whatsoever?
Lots of land has been built on and other areas covered in concrete and tarmac so what rain that used to soak in there is now run-off and it has to go somewhere by some means? The drainage system taking the run-off to rivers can't cope with it and the increase in water in the rivers is causing more flooding anyway because they're at capacity (or more?) in times of exceptional rainfall.
If areas of housing get flooded and the drainage system is improved (bigger pipes?) it'll move the flooding to the riversides?
There's no doubt we're heading for a "warm period" so that means more evaporation of sea water. When the clouds are "full", that means a lot more rain. There's nothing we can do about the warming or evaporation but we can ensure the rainwater makes its way back to the sea more easily so it's about time that was done?
It's life Jim, but not as WE know it.
Live long and prosper.