JupiterKid wrote: » Yep, remember it well. It was 1986 and I was just going into 6th class in primary school. There must have been very strong winds because a lot of big old trees in the Phoenix Park were blown down.
Rhys Essien wrote: » It reached 191kmph during Ophelia.https://twitter.com/severeweathereu/status/919891856774885376?s=21
Graces7 wrote: » Interesting how the naysayers live where the bad storms have less effect. Out here on the west coast? Never yet (!) as bad as when I lived on a North Sea island. Once 72 hours of gale, with gusts of 124 MILES an hour. My neighbours stable chicken shed flew. Huge boulders in the fields near the sea. Flung there by the gale. Feeding my stock clinging to washing poles and feeling as if the skin was being flayed off your face. We are getting nearer that now. It has been getting nearer the score of years I am here. The landscape here is as it was there; no real trees. a pleached landscape. But nowhere near hurricane ;; watch the film from rthe Bahamas Still serious though and not to be downplayed Would not live anywhere else though!
US2 wrote: » Grace they're not naysayers. It's literally impossible for a a hurricane to hit Ireland, the water is too cold. Also, you are not the only one who lives on the coast. The Atlantic is literally at the end of my garden .
Arghus wrote: » Ophelia was a great day around here - Galway City - we all got a day off work and it was pretty much just a blustery day, nothing more. C'mon Lorenzo, more of the same please.
Maggie Benson wrote: » Anyone remember Debbie?
Harry Palmr wrote: » Climate change could be what stops hurricanes becoming a threat, the Gulf Stream could be weakened or even break down due to Arctic ice melt being fed down the Labrador current this would cool the North Atlantic so reducing the energy available to hurricanes as they move north.