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Simon Round

BySimon Round, Simon Round

Opinion

A bit of rain never hurt Noah-body

July 13, 2012 10:12
2 min read

For this week's column, I was torn over whether to offer a nuanced view of the psychological ramifications of the European debt crisis, an analysis of proposed House of Lords reforms, or maybe even an overview of Britain 12 months after the riots. But let's face it, the only thing anyone wants to talk about at the moment is the weather.

It was revealed this week that this has been the wettest summer since 1766 - I cannot begin to imagine how they got Wimbledon played that year. So I've been doing a little research into the prevailing weather conditions to assess just why so much rain has been falling over us during the past three months. The key, it seems, is in the cloud formations. Basically (and I will try not to be over-technical here), big clouds have gathered over British Isles since April (in March they were much smaller).

The clouds turn out to not have been merely big but also very wet. That moisture has been forced out of clouds and on to our heads in a process called "rain". It is this phenomenon that has swept away much of the midlands and north of England.

The Jews have an angle on this. Just look in the Bible. A chap called Noah was forced out of his three-bed semi a few thousand years ago, when a rather severe low pressure system brought what we would now describe as traditional bank holiday weather conditions to the Middle East. While everyone else stockpiled sandbags and stocked up on North Face gear, Noah built an ark, and filled it with friends, family, animals and a flask of chicken soup. It's just this ingenuity that we need now as parts of our nation disappear underwater for the third time this year.