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This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information. Non-necessary Non-necessary. Get Knitted : 39 Brislington Hill, Bristol. BS16 6NH. If you live in southern Bath it is a comfortable 20 minute drive to M-S-N, there is free parking in South Road Car Park and you can have a look at Lidl's special offers at the same time! Shepherd's Purse was always a must visit whenever I came to Bath.

As I look through my jumpers made from wool that was purchased at SP, I have a little spell of melancholy. Cheese just doesn't knit up as well! Sadly Get Knitted in Bristol seems to be going downhill, they no longer stock many of the interesting yarns that they used to.

The Winford Brook drains a small catchment of approximately 20km2 and has steep topography which leads to a rapid response to rainfall, with water levels rising quickly in the village. Chew Magna Reservoir is located on the Winford Brook upstream of the village. This is a small reservoir with a volume of about 70,m3 and at high flow would fill from empty in around an hour.

Despite the fact that the Winford Brook catchment is approximately one-third of the size of the River Chew catchment, it is steeper and more rapidly responding than the River Chew catchment. Consequently, it poses the highest flood risk, of the two watercourses. The River Chew, in contrast, drains a larger catchment of about 71km2. The Chew Valley Lake dominates the catchment, located approximately 2km upstream of Chew Magna and with a volume of about 20,,m3 is nearly times larger than Chew Magna Reservoir.

This results in the response of the River Chew to rainfall being less rapid than the Winford Brook. Chew Stoke Stream drains a small catchment of approximately 10km2 and has steep topography which leads to a rapid response to rainfall, with water levels rising quickly in the village.

There are no reservoirs within the Chew Stoke catchment. Historic floods 7. Apart from the floods, there have been approximately eight floods in Chew Magna and Chew Stoke since Three of these floods occurred in and , but the main flooding occurred in July The Chew Valley and surrounding catchments were devastated when a summer storm centred over the area and caused widespread destruction and flooding.

In only 18 hours mm of rain fell, double the area's average rainfall for the whole of July. Soils in the area were already waterlogged after previous rainfall.

It was in Chew Stoke that the record rainfall occurred. Unlike previous floods, where the water soon receded, the floodwaters continued to rise. They reached the top of the petrol pumps at the garage next to the stream and flooded through the Post Office. In some low-lying areas of the village, water quickly rose to the level of the upstairs windows. In Chew Magna, 88 properties were flooded, many up to 2m deep including a church hall, village school and fire station.

Across most of the UK, was remarkable in climatic terms, characterised by exceptional extremes and departures from typical seasonal rainfall patterns. Early April saw a significant change in the weather patterns. April rainfall totals were the highest on record across most of the country, the wettest April for at least years in England and Wales. As a consequence the focus switched rapidly from drought stress to flood risk. Cyclonic weather patterns continued, and rainfall over the April-July period for England and Wales was the highest since the records began in The subsequent persistence of near-saturated soil conditions made most rivers very responsive to the summer deluges and very unusually, allowed sustained recharge to most aquifers.

In April runoff rates increased rapidly in impermeable catchments and by the final week, flood alerts were widespread. The EA reported that over properties in England and Wales had suffered fluvial or flash flooding by the end of August.

The unsettled conditions continued into the autumn. Bath and North East Somerset and the floods Following one of the wettest years on record in , as with other areas of the UK Bath and North East Somerset, experienced a series of floods.

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