It’s Raining Again
Whether we have it or we don’t have it rain plays an enormous part in our daily lives. We can’t live without it but too much of it at one time can cause havoc and not enough of it is devastating.
One of the things that attracted me to the Huon Valley is how green it is. I’d spent most of my life in South Australia, the driest state and the rivers and lakes, green grass and flowers here appealed to me. It does seem to rain more here than some other parts of the state. Naomi says that it always rains when she comes to visit me. She was here Saturday and it was dry until about 5pm and then as she started to think about going home down came the rain.

Not enough rain at the right time of year can be bad for farmers crops but unseasonal rain and hail in summer can ruin the cherry crop and growers lose a lot of money because damaged cherries are no good for export.
At times there are areas that are very prone to flooding. Launceston often suffers from floods in winter but the city has put in levees that they hope will protect the city from the worst of them. We had bad flooding in the north a couple of winters ago when several rivers rose dangerously high.

The Huon River sometimes floods in winter, usually, it is not too bad in Huonville, just water over the road in a couple of places. Two or three times since I’ve been here I’ve seen water in the main street and a couple of businesses have been affected but a couple of years ago there was a situation created by high tides in the estuary, melting snow and a lot of rain and there was a much worse flood. Homes were evacuated, businesses were flooded and livestock lost.
Tasmania isn’t always wet though, people don’t realise it but Hobart is the driest state capital after Adelaide and we have had serious droughts in Tasmania, especially in the eastern part of the state. The area where Naomi lives in the centre of the state is farming country and she often told me how distressed the local farmers were when they had to destroy sheep or sell them for very little because the land would not support them. Lake Dulverton at Oatlands where she lives dried up completely during a particularly bad drought.


I am fortunate enough that my house is connected to the town water supply but I have friends who rely on rainwater tanks and when the rain doesn’t come they have to buy water.
Mostly I don’t mind when it rains. Of course, it is a nuisance at times, at the Op Shop for example when it is too wet for us to put anything outside the shop and the bad weather keeps customers away. Or when I go to the cricket and the match is rained out. On the other hand, rain is nice to cool everything down after a hot day and I like the sound of rain on a metal roof. Without rain, there would be no rainbows.

References:
https://thenewdaily.com.au/weather/2013/11/21/australian-weather-myths-tested-city-fare/
Good thing there’s no climate change, eh?
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Yes, it’s just a coincidence that these one in a hundred year floods are happening more often and that the bushfire season starts in spring and that Sydney airport has had to close runways due to wild weather twice in the last month.
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What a beautiful spot you live in, Vanda.
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It is. I fell in love with it the first time I saw it.
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I’m glad you got that picture of the fisherman with the trees in the background. They are all gone now as the bastard council had them all chopped down.I am still fuming over it. There were 12 or more trees there and I reckon that at least 20 trees around the lake are now gone. This is now a historic photo.
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So those were the trees they chopped. That’s wicked. I was so happy to see water in the lake after the long drought and that was the first time I ever saw anyone fish there or a boat on the lake. How sad that they spoiled it.
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The drought lasted about four years I think. I miss the trees. They were all pines or poplars that have gone over the years. all those at the other side opposite the little island and several around the lake along the walking track. I am still quite upset about them.
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It’s a real shame as the trees gave some structure to the landscape. It must look very flat and featureless now. I bet they got rid of them because they were not natives.
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