We had thunderstorms today, but now we just have rain. We had thunderstorms yesterday and also the day before that. Or maybe two days ago. Anyway, we have had quite a lot of thunder and a lot of rain. Most of it, I imagine, will go to waste as we don’t have enough water storage.
Historically, we would have got round this by flooding a valley, preferably in Wales or Scotland. They have plenty of space there. In England we don’t have quite so much space. We also have public enquiries.
These, for those of you who aren’t familiar with them, are normally expensive and lengthy proceedings requiring us to pay vast sums to legal advisors in order to delay things. They may sometimes be good things, but mainly they just enable pressure groups to get publicity and lawyers to make additions to their property portfolios.
However, many reports point to problems by the middle of the century when our rainfall will fail to meet our water consumption, regardless of our ability to store it. Lower rainfall, high rates of water usage and increasing population all point to problems. By the middle of the century, if I’m still here, I probably won’t know what’s happening so it isn’t my problem. On the other hand, I would like to think that future generations have plenty to drink, so I’m going to start looking at more ways to save water. I have already reduced the the toilet flush and refuse to wash my car as a principle (rather than because I’m lazy). We also have water butts. and I’m planning our new garden with drought resistant species.
The current rain will also probably overpower out fragile sewerage systems and create more pollution of waterways. When we have a lot of water flowing companies are allowed to discharge the “overflow” directly into rivers and the sea.This can include raw sewage.
It’s a sad thing to see this happening at an increasing rate, and even sadder that we have yet to see the CEO of a water company flogged through the streets and given twenty years hard labour. I imagine you would only need to do one, and the rest would up their game.
Unfortunately judges are notoriously unlikely to jail the relatives of old school friends. We see this when they go soft on the killers of birds of prey and we see this when water companies are allowed to discharge sewage unpunished. There were over 300,000 discharges last year. There will probably be more this year as it is likely to be a wetter year.
The number of CEOs who suffer even minor judicial inconvenience? I’m guessing zero.


We’ve also been very low with rain for the past month or two. Thankfully, we had an inch about a week ago and then another inch on Friday. That helps the gardens for a week, but doesn’t do much for the low aquifers.
Regarding judges . . . well, I’m from the United States. Julia’s pitchfork ideas do have their appeal, I have to say.
It is Mrs T, not Julia. They are both sensible women with fine men as husbands, so I see where the confusion arises. 🙂
Excessive personal hygiene is definitely bad for the planet (and a great waste of time). I agree that more hounding of CEOs would produce results but unfortunately, as you say, this is not going to happen. Mrs T believes that the punitive use of pitchforks is a regrettably underused part of political life these days.
I think Mrs T has hit on something there. At this moment I have a mental picture of myself outside a water company office with a pitchfork and a blazing torch. Of course, Health 7 Safety and Public Order requirements would probably put a stop to it, but it’s a lovely dream . . .
It is only when the posteriors of the rich and pitchforks are in close proximity that anything changes, she believes.
This should be enshrined in posterity as “Mrs T’s 1st Law of Civic Improvement”.
You are quite right. Water will soon be a limiting resource on this planet.
We are finally getting a little rain here yesterday and today. Much needed, but won’t be enough.
I blame personal hygiene and car washing. Well, that’s my excuse . . .
You must be getting our rain.
Send buckets and I will let you have some. We were forecast for “a chance of scattered thunderstorms”. It turned out to be a bit more than tha. 🙂