Heatwave alert
Moderator: Peak Moderation
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 14290
- Joined: 20 Sep 2006, 02:35
- Location: Newbury, Berkshire
- Contact:
My wife broke her arm slipping over on my daughter's decking last winter. Daughter has now stapled steel mesh over the wood to make it non slip! Looks err...?acman wrote:Decking has to be kept clean, even then slightest moss/algae growth on the stuff makes it really slippy when wet, also as E fan says, soon looks shabby, most I've seen does look poor in a relatively short space of time, then usually taken up.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
- adam2
- Site Admin
- Posts: 10904
- Joined: 02 Jul 2007, 17:49
- Location: North Somerset, twinned with Atlantis
More here
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23341504
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23341504
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
-
- Posts: 1324
- Joined: 05 Mar 2010, 14:40
Ditto with our bloody patio - proper little suntrap with 35 degrees air temp, hotter near reflective surfaces, and 2.5 tonnes of type 1, mortar, and 140 slabs to be laid.stevecook172001 wrote:I've been out in the sun for several hours and my senses can be definitely said to have tuned in to experiencing the weather along with experiencing the copious amount of sweat running down the crack of my arse whilst laying 50 square yards of turf.Tarrel wrote:A suggestion:
Go outside into the sun for 10 minutes and tune all your senses into experiencing the weather; the heat, the sweat running down your neck, the smell of the vegetation, the brightness of the sun. Drink it all in and mentally bottle it.
Then, next winter, when we're in the middle of a cold, grey Siberian blocking pattern, with a raw easterly blowing, unbottle it and savour the pleasure!
It's too ******* hot....
"Tea's a good drink - keeps you going"
-
- Posts: 1324
- Joined: 05 Mar 2010, 14:40
There are inserts that can be pushed in to the grooves to prevent this happening. I hope your wife's arm is ok now.kenneal - lagger wrote:My wife broke her arm slipping over on my daughter's decking last winter. Daughter has now stapled steel mesh over the wood to make it non slip! Looks err...?acman wrote:Decking has to be kept clean, even then slightest moss/algae growth on the stuff makes it really slippy when wet, also as E fan says, soon looks shabby, most I've seen does look poor in a relatively short space of time, then usually taken up.
"Tea's a good drink - keeps you going"
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 14290
- Joined: 20 Sep 2006, 02:35
- Location: Newbury, Berkshire
- Contact:
It was just before Christmas so I had a busier than usual time. She still gets the odd ache and pain from it but the bone has healed, thanks.featherstick wrote:There are inserts that can be pushed in to the grooves to prevent this happening. I hope your wife's arm is ok now.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
- BritDownUnder
- Posts: 2487
- Joined: 21 Sep 2011, 12:02
- Location: Hunter Valley, NSW, Australia
23C today and yesterday in this part of Australia. 6 degrees higher than average for this month so a mini heat wave here too. A beautiful day yesterday and also this morning. I put some potatoes in yesterday evening trying to beat the real heat which usually starts in November. I was too late last year. All is well in this part of the world.
G'Day cobber!
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14814
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
-
- Posts: 1683
- Joined: 02 Jun 2011, 00:12
- Location: SE England