A friend of mine posted on social media yesterday that at 7.45 in the evening the temperature was 32°. This was South Manchester not the South of France or the Spanish Costas!
The Guardian reports that yesterday was hottest day ever recorded in May with temperatures reaching 34.8°. The previous all-time May peak stood at 32.8C, reached in 1922 and 1944. Today temperatures above 36° are predicted.
“In the past, heatwaves built and built and built and built over days and days and days, these now just develop so quickly,” the Met Office senior forecaster Greg Dewhurst said on Monday, adding that the climate crisis was boosting the heat. And still some people think we don’t have a climate crisis!
One reason for the heatwave in the UK is that Phil and I have flown to Portugal for a holiday with chess (this kind of holiday happens quite often). Sod’s Law sends the UK good weather when we are out of the country. The first time we experienced this was in the much talked about summer of 1976. We went camping in Brittany where it was so hot I got sunstroke - serious stuff, collapsing with the heat, swollen ankles, dehydration but not serious enough to need hospital treatment. When we returned home with our tales of continental heat, we were pooh-poohed! It had been equally hot in Manchester and indeed continued to be hot and dry until September. And that was before we knew about global warming!
Because it has been the May Bank Holiday weekend in the UK, silly events like cheese rolling in Gloucestershire have taken place. Not so much cheese-rolling as such, which was how I imagined it, but more or a race down a steep hill chasing after a wheel of cheese which the winner receives as his prize! Even stranger and definitely more hazardous than an egg and spoon race, cheese-rolling has become so popular that the BBC broadcast this year’s event on iPlayer. The corporation had three reporters on the scene and two editing its live blog.
I suppose cheese-rolling gets people out in the countryside, which is good for you. According to this article half of UK adults spend less than 3 hours a week in nature. Now, I am not really surprised to hear that. Phil and I are fortunate to live in a place where we can step,out into a country walk on our very doorstep. But people who live in city centres don’t have that possibility. And as many people are working hard to earn enough to keep up with the cost of living, three hours is a big chunk of time out. So it goes.
Our friend Colin frequently writes in his blog about “caminantes”, people walking the Camino de Santiago. Here’s a link ,
Elsewhere they make special pilgrimages where Virgen del Rocío is brought out to bestow blessings in the crowds. Thousands of devotees gather around the Virgin of Rocío during the traditional procession in Almonte, Huelva, southwest Spain. The pilgrimage is one of the most important traditions in the region
Elsewhere in the world chaos continues. Talks are supposedly going on but the US has launched further attacks on Iran.
Experts in such matters say that Nigel Farage’s claims about Russian interference in his life are all unsubstantiated nonsense. I can’t say I am surprised!
Federal officials in the USA have taken subpoenaed Hassan Piker and CodePink founder Medea Benjamin uber an aid mission to Cuba. Apparent.y the Treasury Department is investigating whether the activists violated US sanctions during their trip to Cuba. So much for the land of the free.
Hey ho!
And here’s a link to an article about women in Gaza. They're still suffering.
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!
























