Greythundercloudys
Member
No global warming in those days, my dad used to talk about that and 1947, said the drifts where up to the top of electric polls, 45 days of snow in Cornwall.
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My dad said 63 was nothing compared with 47 .No global warming in those days, my dad used to talk about that and 1947, said the drifts where up to the top of electric polls, 45 days of snow in Cornwall.
47 was caused by all the smoke from ww2 i reckonI can remember it starting to snow on Christmas night all night. There was a big snow drift in the yard outside the back door right across the yard to the shed where the car and the Dexta were so they were not out for a few weeks. I can remember Helicopters flying up on Sawel dropping hay for the sheep on the mountain and taking supplies to some of the farms on the high ground.
The drifts on the road were cleared using Barney Mullans big Dozer and the tracks were on the road for years afterwards when they dug it out of the Quarry probably a few weeks after and @Hilly you were right dad said afterwards 63 was easy compared to 47. I was five at the time so a lot of the details passed me by.
Y47 was caused by all the smoke from ww2 i reckon
my dad told me in the spring of 47 they went to the pub as it doubled as the shop , an old couple came in and were very grateful to get to the shop as been long winter things had got ruff they had eaten all the hens and had to also burn the hen house to survive but they had made it ! Folks were hard in them days .He also said they had bad lambing after the winter as what sheep were left were lean , and melt made land wet cold .I can remember it starting to snow on Christmas night all night. There was a big snow drift in the yard outside the back door right across the yard to the shed where the car and the Dexta were so they were not out for a few weeks. I can remember Helicopters flying up on Sawel dropping hay for the sheep on the mountain and taking supplies to some of the farms on the high ground.
The drifts on the road were cleared using Barney Mullans big Dozer and the tracks were on the road for years afterwards when they dug it out of the Quarry probably a few weeks after and @Hilly you were right dad said afterwards 63 was easy compared to 47. I was five at the time so a lot of the details passed me by.
Rationing was still in place in 1947 too, including coal and clothes. And yet these days people think it's the end of the world if the boiler breaks down.Y
my dad told me in the spring of 47 they went to the pub as it doubled as the shop , an old couple came in and were very grateful to get to the shop as been long winter things had got ruff they had eaten all the hens and had to also burn the hen house to survive but they had made it ! Folks were hard in them days .
Cloths heating machines all 100 times better now though it would never be as bad as back then in some ways but in other ways it would be much worse .I often think that if we had a repeat of '47 or '63 the country would pretty much collapse. There just isn't the resilience built into society the way it was then. Everything runs on a knife edge. I'd hate to think what could happen, it could be really nasty.
I disagree actually. Machinery for snow clearing is far better now.I often think that if we had a repeat of '47 or '63 the country would pretty much collapse. There just isn't the resilience built into society the way it was then. Everything runs on a knife edge. I'd hate to think what could happen, it could be really nasty.