Well with much of the south-east hunkered down against the
worst that Storm Dennis can throw at us, I have to say this is the second
weekend when I know I’ll be going stir-crazy from being confined to quarters. I
was up a ladder earlier this morning securing the tarpaulin that is protecting
the shed roof, against the forecast heavy winds.
I also picked up some of the remnants of our garden seat/
gazebo; most of which ended up in next door’s garden following last week’s
named storm. I’m going to be busy, come the spring, attempting to reassemble
said structure, along with replacing half a dozen fence panels which also took
a battering.
Mrs PBT’s and I took a drive down into Tonbridge around
lunchtime, just before the rain arrived, in order to pick up some shopping. The
town wasn’t quite as grid-locked as predicted, but for those not in the know, a
section of the A21 trunk road, which by-passes Tonbridge, has been closed in
both directions for a week, to allow the re-building of a little-used
pedestrian underpass, along with repairs to the viaduct that carries the
dual-carriageway across the River Medway.
A footpath runs under the aforementioned underpass, and I
used it once whilst walking the Wealdway long distance footpath back in 2010.
Like many others I wasn’t aware that this tunnel-like structure was in a poor
state of repair, but its condition does explain the speed restrictions due to a
“weak bridge,” that have been in place on the A21 for at least a couple of
years.
The next week should be interesting, as the traffic which
would normally use the A21 is being diverted through Tonbridge and
Hildenborough. In mitigation, the
schools are on half-term break next week, so the roads should be largely free
of dizzy blonds, ferrying their little darlings to and from school, in
massively over-sized 4 x 4’s.
Over-powered “Chelsea
tractors” are one of the bug bears of living in the south east, but on the
upside, the area is normally amongst the driest regions in the country. Not so
this year, as I can’t ever recall having endured such a wet and dismal winter
in the sixty years plus that I’ve been conscious of such things.
On my drive into work on Thursday morning, following another
night of torrential rain – that I was completely unaware of, having slept right
through, the surface water was such that sections of road that I have never
known to be affected by flooding in the 14 years I have driven this route, were
only “passable with care.” Where’s it all going to end? Or should that be when
is it going to end?
The damp weather has scuppered any ideas for cross-country
walking, so plans to complete further sections of the North
Downs Way have been put on hold until things dry
out. The same applies to any outdoor work, including replacing the
aforementioned damaged fences.
If it’s any consolation, the weather has been unseasonably
mild, and I can probably count on one hand the number of mornings I’ve had to
be out early, scraping the ice of the car windscreen. It’s been so mild, in
fact, that we haven’t contemplated lighting our log burner. The energy
companies will be complaining soon that as customers are not using as much gas
and electricity, prices will have to rise. How else will they be able to pay a
dividend to their fat cat shareholders?
The mild weather also seems to have fooled a number of
plants into flowering early. The daffodils Mrs PBT’s and I noticed in
full bloom, a fortnight ago on the Gower Peninsular, might have seemed down to the area’s very
specific micro-climate, but I have now seen similar blooms on my drive in to
work. Snow drops, those other heralds of spring, are also in abundance, and I have come across
quite a few during my regular lunchtime walks.
And so to matters beer, where there doesn’t seem to be much
happening; certainly not in an organised fashion. There’s a CAMRA social
planned before the end of the month, involving a pub crawl around Southborough.
This doesn’t exactly fill me with enthusiasm, especially as the town has lost
quite a few of its pubs over the years, although I might still turn up at the
last pub on the list, just to make the point that not all of us are retired and
able to make a 7pm start!
So as the winds from Storm Dennis continue to blow outside,
I’ll sign off and look for something more interesting and entertaining to write
about.