by Skerry on February 12th, 2014, 9:59 pm
It's official. The weather in Ireland has gone nuts.
High winds and mini tornados are a perfectly normal, if dreadful, occurrence in other countries. Those other countries are usually used to such weather and as a result have some measures in place to deal with them. Ireland does not have any measures in place because hurricane force winds don't happen that often.
You get the occasional small storm, yes but not all that often. Usually we just get rain, Ireland is good at rain but we do not often get amber and red alerts. Around Christmas, we had two large storms with amber alerts. We've had a few wind warnings and then suddenly yesterday the wind starts picking up a bit and BOOM! Today there's a sudden, "oh actually that wind might be a bit worse than we first thought, whoops!" Actually if I remember rightly, we were basically told it was going to be cold... Cold and storm are not the same, I don't think.
So today has resulted in Shannon airport an Dublin airport being temporarily closed, Dublin I believe is still diverting. Cork airport is suspended. 215,000 homes and business are without power because lines have come down (they've restored 45,000 so far). Trucks have been tipped over, 100s of trees have been ripped out and buildings being severely damaged. Dublin has been fairly all right apparently (though the wind was pretty vicious and hard to try and walk through) but the storm which is called Darwin, will be passing over it properly tonight.
A couple of days ago, the weather crisis was flooding but mostly in places along the west coast and Cork of course. Flooding, we should have measures in place but we don't. This sort of extreme winds? This isn't normal so how on earth could we have stood a chance.
Good luck places in Wales and England because if it doesn't calm down when it reaches you, you're going to have great fun. Scotland will probably be all right.