London could drown

Do you know what tomorrow is apart from Saturday? Here’s a clue:

St Swithin’s Day, if it does rain, full forty days it will remain,
St Swithin’s Day, if it be fair, for forty days t’will rain no more.

This baseless meteorological superstition dates from the late 9th century. Saint Swithin was Bishop of Winchester from 852 to 862. At his request, he was buried in the churchyard, where ‘rain and the steps of passersby might fall on my grave’.

According to legend, after his body was moved on 15th July 971 by a group of over-zealous monks to a more prestigious location inside the cathedral a great storm ensued.

Legend tells us that this botched exhumation caused it to rain for forty days and forty nights. Common sense tells us that this legend is rubbish, and has continued to be rubbish for every single one of the last 1,502 summers.

Having said that, given how unpredictable this summer has been so far, this might be the year that finally proves the rhyme.

So just what is up with the weather at the moment? Maybe this is global warming kicking in? Or could it be that, as usual, we can experience in London three seasons in one afternoon?

The scientific boffins are certainly worried, suggesting that it won’t be long before melting ice caps cover the globe with rather more water than a few shower clouds can produce.

And London is one of the world cities with the most to fear.

Should the Greenland ice cap ever melt then the sea level would rise by nearly 30ft and a large part of the capital would be flooded. The Houses of Parliament are particularly vulnerable, rising sea levels would completely submerge the lower floors of this riverside building, given its inhabitants, some might say hurrah! It’d also be farewell to Westminster Abbey, 10 Downing Street, St James Park and the Tower of London, and that’s just for starters. A huge swathe of London lies below the 30ft contour, including Fulham, Chelsea, Docklands and Stratford north of the river, and most of Wandsworth, Lambeth and Southwark south of the river. The City and the West End would remain safely above the rising waters, although the tube network would be flooded out.

We continue to pump excessive amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere like there’s no tomorrow, except here in London, where in 6 weeks’ time we can hold our heads up high with the proliferation of electric vehicles on our streets thanks to ULEZ (just a pity we’ve moved the generation of the power and its pollution somewhere else!).

Future generations will pay the price of our materialistic greed, and not enough important people yet seem to care. But I suspect our recent wet weather has nothing at all to do with global warming and is merely a symptom of the wildly variable British climate. Last summer was record-breakingly hot, followed by ‘The Troll of Trondheim’ giving us low temperatures not seen for a generation, as the BBC like to describe our weather.

London’s weather is unpredictable and that’s why we love to talk about it.

St Swithin’s Day 2023 is as unpredictable as ever, CabbieBlog will be keeping a tally over the next forty days to see whether St. Swithin’s predictions prove accurate. Come back on 25th August and see if London is underwater.

Featured image: Heavy rain on the Euston Road: It’s not evident in this picture other than the light reflecting off the large umbrella but it is currently raining very heavily on Euston Road by Philip Halling (CC BY-SA 2.0).

8 thoughts on “London could drown”

  1. By current doomsday predictions, where I live in East Anglia may be underwater by the 2050s. If I live to be 100, I might experience that, but living to that age seems highly unlikely.
    Good luck to everyone else left behind!
    As for Winchester, at one time it was the nominal capital of England. Perhaps it will be so again one day, once London is a lake?
    Best wishes, Pete.

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  2. Up until a handful of centuries ago in the area where I live, the fens were largely underwater; the villages and towns were islands in a boggy sea. An extensively engineered drainage system with enormous pumps only keeps the land dry. When much of the housing is only a few feet above current sea levels, then I am not too keen on seeing any increase in these sea levels.

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  3. Here in the Colonies we have Groundhog Day to predict weather. I am not sure if St Swithin or a large lazy rat are particularly reliable or if the scientists know any better about future climate changes. Things sure feel strange, at so many levels, you know, that wheels falling off the cart sense of a spiraling doom. And yet, my young friends have great hopes for technology and the basic goodness in humans to save us all. Still, I will leave my boat on the roof, just in case.

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