RocketRaccoon wrote: » Beechwoodspark wrote: » Neighbour of mine actually went for a swim in the local river at half 4 deliberately. Two fingers to the authorities. Leo and co talking absolute scutter as usual I feel like you're lying.
Beechwoodspark wrote: » Neighbour of mine actually went for a swim in the local river at half 4 deliberately. Two fingers to the authorities. Leo and co talking absolute scutter as usual
gmisk wrote: » What a revolutionary! Fight the power!..
Beechwoodspark wrote: » My neighbour told me he was going to do it specifically to give two fingers to the authorities. Not me. I’m too lazy to bother tbh but fair play to him! And if you watched the news earlier you would’ve seen a guy swimming in the height of the snow, I think it was someplace in Dublin.
Alf Veedersane wrote: » Fake news. All the white scenery from around the country was done on the set of Fair City. This is our faked moon landings!!!1!eleven!
Beechwoodspark wrote: » Neighbour of mine actually went for a swim in the local river at half 4 deliberately. Two fingers to the authorities.
nostro wrote: » There has been an orwellian effort to make people afraid of the weather for the last year or two that is getting ridiculous. Naming gusts of wind as storms and hurricanes. Constant weather warnings every second day and now trying to turn some snow falling which is a normal winter event into a national emergency with nationwide shutdowns and bread rationing. We have become a nation of snowflakes
Beechwoodspark wrote: » Dead on. Plenty of ppl were breaking their holes laughing at all these feckin alerts. It’s too prevalent these days. It seems like every few days there’s a new alert. Most ppl seem to ignore them these days.
Spider Rico wrote: » Yes, and I’m not sure specifically what nonsense Leo is talking? 😂
Beechwoodspark wrote: » Dead on. Why are people so willing to cooperate with blanket curfews when large parts of the country seem to be cold yes but not extremes. I don’t get what has happened to the Irish that we just fall into line with these alerts recently.
Beechwoodspark wrote: » It’s 5 hours and counting now.
gmisk wrote: » I was being sarcastic...I thought that was fairly obvious. I hope he didn't drown and if he got into trouble the emergency services should have no obligation to come and rescue him...the prat!
Beechwoodspark wrote: » He said it was VITAL get indoors by 4. Why, I do not know. More bullsheet from the spin master.
Beechwoodspark wrote: » Don’t know how he got on but I can tell you that his attitude is widely shared. LOADS of people roll their eyes at these alerts and think wtf.
NIMAN wrote: » Watching the 9 news it would appear they are trying to persuade us, against the evidence, that things have got a lot worse. And I wish they would stop showing the same clips over and over and over. By 907 tonight they had repeated the same clip 3 times. And if you have been off work and watching news during the day, you'd have seen that clip and the others many times already. The footage seems to show most towns relatively clear for driving but the little back roads up to remote houses bad, but most people would expect that.
Dravokivich wrote: » I'll get Evelyn on to see if she can give you a more personal eta, for yourself like.
evolving_doors wrote: » Anyone find a safe?
Irish Weather Online 35 mins · UPDATE _ Thursday, 1st of March _ 8:45 p.m. ________________________________________The heaviest snow being produced by storm "Emma" is currently over southwest England. Bands of lighter snow, mixed with ice pellets and various other semi-frozen types in the southeast, will continue until these heavier bands arrive late this evening and overnight. It still appears likely that 20 to 50 cm of snow will fall over large portions of the country, tapering to 10 to 30 cm across most of the north and 5 to 15 cm near north coast of Ulster. Meanwhile, some sea effect continues across the north mainly and this will just merge with the advancing storm later tonight. That could lead to some locally heavier totals so that the overall snowfall left on the ground by late Friday or early Saturday may be quite variable in the range of 30 to 60 cms for many. There likely will be some pockets of more mixed precipitation near the south coast and perhaps in patchy form up the east coast, but I think all locations will have at least some intervals of heavy accumulating snow. There will likely be some outbreaks of thunder-snow (or thunder-sleet) tonight and Friday. Blizzard-like conditions will occur regardless of snowfall rates because of strong winds blowing the snow already received plus the newer snow. I mentioned yesterday that the snow could be wetter, in particular across the south and east, but this does not necessarily mean "wet snow" in terms of melting while it falls, more that the moisture content would be higher than the sea effect snow, and therefore this snow might not blow around as readily, but will tend to stick to surfaces (like tree branches and infrastructure) raising the risk level for power outages. As to local variations, keep a close eye on reports here or on weather forum threads, a complex storm like this is bound to produce some large variations from one location to another, and one key to that may be shadowing effects of higher ground, if you're to the east or south of higher terrain you might get heavier amounts, and to the north or west, lesser amounts of snow than some nearby reports.Winds will continue strong east to northeast 50 to 80 km/hr for most and could gust to 100 km/hr at times near east coast and later along the south coast (from east to southeast). Kerry and southwest Cork will likely experience some very strong gusts late Friday as the centre of low pressure moves just offshore towards the west-northwest. High seas will create some coastal flooding near the high tides on Friday and Friday night, both on south and east coast but it will be more severe on the south coast. The storm will taper off to intervals of light snow or sleet by Saturday but the outlook is rather uncertain with several more systems trying to move the cold air and perhaps being less than totally successful, so that the period Sunday to Thursday of next week may continue rather cold and there could be one more significant snowfall in that period. -- Peter for IWO