Thunder & Ligtning

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raleighnut

Legendary Member
FWIW if you really are caught out in the open the best advice is to stay out of caves and depressions in the ground because lightning will track along wet ground and may go through you on the way. Trees obviously; I've seen an oak tree that was struck and the lightning boiled the sap and blew the bark off leaving a naked tree. If you crouch down on the ground, try to have only your feet actually on the ground as lightning could also track along, up your arms and down your legs. Don't throw away your bike or ice axe, they make no difference.

My sister got struck in a tent in the bottom of a valley in Andorra; the lightning (or a small branch of it) came down one tent pole, jumped through the frame of a camp bed on which her BF's child was lying, through a big tin of Brillo pads, which were fused into one smoking mass, and then into the other tent pole and to Earth.
:eek:
 

vickster

Squire
Don't put your feet down but just in case wear wellies? Or sod it, and go to the nearest Costa/pub/private shop depending on your preference?

Thunder and not too heavy rain here now in Epsom
 
OP
OP
cycle_bug

cycle_bug

thought i had something more to say
So far not much reassurance for it!

Just as I was working with the radio on here .. Radio: "a man walking with his son in Lisburn, Northern Ireland was struck by lightening in the past hour. His condition is critical"

Dammit, I seriously consider car-free and this lightning thing has got me thanking God I'm driving home in my car today.. :-/
 

Tim Hall

Guest
Location
Crawley
So far not much reassurance for it!

Just as I was working with the radio on here .. Radio: "a man walking with his son in Lisburn, Northern Ireland was struck by lightening in the past hour. His condition is critical"

Dammit, I seriously consider car-free and this lightning thing has got me thanking God I'm driving home in my car today.. :-/
From Torro (TORnado and storm Research Organisation)
Analyses of lightning fatalities over the past 25 years in the UK shows that, on average, two people are killed by lightning each year and around 30 people injured. Prompt resuscitation of people who have suffered cardiopulmonary arrest due the electric shock of a lightning strike has, on average, prevented another death each year.

And RoSPA says
30-60 people are struck by lightning each year in Britain, and on average, 3 (5-10%) of these strikes are fatal.
 
OP
OP
cycle_bug

cycle_bug

thought i had something more to say
From Torro (TORnado and storm Research Organisation)


And RoSPA says

Feeling a little more balanced on the matter now!
 
Location
Midlands
I think we have some thunderstorm action

1800hrs

Screen Captures.jpg


Left = great big thunderstorm rain blob - right = Lightening strikes in the last three hours

however looking out the window apart from being a bit dark nothing going on
 
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