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July 27, 2009
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Jul 19, 2009, 1:53:41 PM
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:iconsassaputzin:
Well the weather men promised us a long hot summer,
OH GREAT!! we all thought, how c*$p it was last year, god surely must smile down on us this year.....

what a bunch of suckers!!

It has pretty much rained for the whole of July, in my book thats a pretty bad summer..

so when you have this much rain the logical thing to do is go to the rivers, that take on a whole different mood when this much water is coursing down them.

Not quite as much as coursed down this river and the west lyn in 1952, when the worst flooding disaster in britain happened here and moreso in the village of lynton a mile or so downstream a tragedy which claimed 34 lives.

The flooding occurred on 15 August 1952, after nine inches of rain fell in the space of 24 hours.

The downpour caused a wall of water to surge down from Exmoor onto Lynmouth. The East and West Lyn rivers, which drop down from Exmoor, were swollen even before the storm.

Trees were uprooted and formed dams behind bridges, creating walls of water that carried huge boulders into the village.

In all, 34 people in Lynmouth and surrounding hamlets were killed, and 39 buildings collapsed. The army was drafted in to help with the clear-up.

Speculation over the cause of the flooding has raged ever since the tragedy happened.

During August 1952, North Devon experienced 250 times the normal rainfall for the month, and on the day of the disaster, some 90m tonnes of water swept down the narrow valley into Lynmouth.

Among the theories is that the rain was caused by experiments to artificially create rain.
Troops help out

The army was called in to help

In 2001, a BBC investigation discovered that classified documents on the secret experiments have gone missing.

Survivors told how the air smelled of sulphur on the afternoon of the floods, and that the rain was so hard, it hurt people's faces.

The BBC unearthed fresh evidence about the alleged experiment, including RAF logbooks and personal testimony.

The experiment was called 'Operation Cumulus,' but some people taking part dubbed it 'Operation Witch Doctor.'

Alan Yates, who was a glider pilot, told how he flew over Bedfordshire as part of Operation Cumulus, spraying salt into the air. He was later told that there was a devastating downpour in Staines, 50 miles away.

However, the Ministry of Defence says it knows nothing of the so-called 'cloud-seeding' experiments during early August 1952.

More than 50 years on from the disaster, the people of Lynmouth are still waiting for the speculation to be put to rest one way or another.
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:icondj-uni-mekaju:
*DJ-Uni-Mekaju Oct 15, 2009  Hobbyist Traditional Artist
It doesn't even look like water! D= It looks like a river of souls! :iconfinallyplz:
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:iconsassaputzin:
you obviously have an active imagination.....:)
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:icondj-uni-mekaju:
*DJ-Uni-Mekaju Oct 19, 2009  Hobbyist Traditional Artist
Yes I do. :laughing:
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:icondrewhopper:
*DrewHopper Aug 5, 2009  Professional Photographer
Beautiful exposure and composition mate. I do wish the water was clearer..
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:iconsassaputzin:
what do you mean by clear drew?....the water that comes off both moors is brown tinged due to the peaty soil especially when they are in full flow...
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:icondrewhopper:
*DrewHopper Aug 5, 2009  Professional Photographer
I guess I'm just use to seeing clear water around here. It's a great shot, don't get me wrong!
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:iconsassaputzin:
yeah you get very bright clear light compared to us....
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:icondanuk86:
Interesting story and cool shot, lovely greens :D
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:iconsassaputzin:
cheers mate.....
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