Yorky
Fullritis Member
I am afraid so...............................
It shouldn't be a problem now that we've had a few days respite and the floodwaters have dispersed (or they have in my village).
I am afraid so...............................
F*&KING GREAT.
They must have gone to Sisaket then!!!!It shouldn't be a problem now that we've had a few days respite and the floodwaters have dispersed (or they have in my village).
A weather forecast is only that, a forecast. One does the best one can but, at the end of the day, it is only a forecast.Thankfully you've been incorrect before on Surin weather coming in from the east.
A weather forecast is only that, a forecast. One does the best one can but, at the end of the day, it is only a forecast.
A weather forecast is only that, a forecast. One does the best one can but, at the end of the day, it is only a forecast.
Ah! The Michael Fish Moment. I know It well. I have come face-to-face with Michael. Quite embarrassingly too. Myself, and half a dozen other new recruits for BAe Systems, or British Aerospace as it was then, had just met up in the hotel bar at Lytham St Annes, for a few bevies on the first evening of our induction course. The beer was flowing freely and, as is the wont of ex-RAF types, so were the bar games. Can't remember the precise game, but someone was down to his underpants, he had just removed them, and with a flourish, threw them across the room. At that precise time, these underpants were flying through the air, who walked into the bar to be confronted by these offending undergarments hitting him full in the face? None other than Sir Michael Fish. He made a very hasty retreat. No quiet nightcap for him."In reaction to the controversy, the term "the Michael Fish effect" has been coined, whereby British weathermen are now inclined to predict "a worst-case scenario in order to avoid being caught out". The term "Michael Fish moment" is applied to public forecasts, on any topic, which turn out to be embarrassingly wrong."