OK so you've all seen the floods in Southern Germany.
Today we had the mother of all thunderstorms in NRW - lasted about 55 minutes. I was driving in town when it hit (the sky turned so dark I thought it was midnight) and had to pull over as visibility dropped to 2m and the roads started flooding so badly, water was sloshing up over the bonnet in 1st gear! To say the sight of muddy brown water 'bow-waving' halfway up the bonnet is an alarming one is a massive understatement!
Some cars didn't make it, they sucked in water through their exhausts, I think, judging by the way they were abandoned (good old Army training - just keep it slow and steady and keep your foot on the gas when driving through deep water and the engine shouldn't flood as long as the air-intake pipe isn't submerged)...
That water went from nothing to about 50cm deep in about 30 seconds as it travelled down the hills and the drains were overwhelmed.
Thankfully the weather-seals along the door undersides stopped me from getting wet feet as the water lapped along the doors as I managed to fight my way into a supermarket car-park, which was higher-up than the road that serviced it, though I did have to spend half an hour pulling all the fallen foliage out of the grilles and around the wheel arches...
The only domestic damage was our sun-shade on the balcony which was reduced to matchwood and some soggy seat-cushions...
So glad we live at 388m above sea level and not at the bottom of a valley...
Today we had the mother of all thunderstorms in NRW - lasted about 55 minutes. I was driving in town when it hit (the sky turned so dark I thought it was midnight) and had to pull over as visibility dropped to 2m and the roads started flooding so badly, water was sloshing up over the bonnet in 1st gear! To say the sight of muddy brown water 'bow-waving' halfway up the bonnet is an alarming one is a massive understatement!
Some cars didn't make it, they sucked in water through their exhausts, I think, judging by the way they were abandoned (good old Army training - just keep it slow and steady and keep your foot on the gas when driving through deep water and the engine shouldn't flood as long as the air-intake pipe isn't submerged)...
That water went from nothing to about 50cm deep in about 30 seconds as it travelled down the hills and the drains were overwhelmed.
Thankfully the weather-seals along the door undersides stopped me from getting wet feet as the water lapped along the doors as I managed to fight my way into a supermarket car-park, which was higher-up than the road that serviced it, though I did have to spend half an hour pulling all the fallen foliage out of the grilles and around the wheel arches...
The only domestic damage was our sun-shade on the balcony which was reduced to matchwood and some soggy seat-cushions...
So glad we live at 388m above sea level and not at the bottom of a valley...