arthwollipot
Limerick Purist
Almost 400pc jump in forced closures of food venues
Regulators issue a prohibition order to shut down a food business when there's an imminent threat to public health. So why have so many been issued?
And the local news?A 5.6-magnitude earthquake rocked Queensland yesterday.
The strongest on-shore earthquake in 50 years rattled Queenslanders as they woke up, …
The epicentre struck around 200km north of Brisbane about 9.50am at a depth of 10km, with thousands of residents reporting they felt the quake.
…
Locals in the rural Queensland town of Kilkivan, where the epicentre is located, couldn't quite believe the ferocity of the earthquake.
"Tiny town. Nothing normally happens out here.”
LOL= Its actually weird- many on the southern side of my town felt it (enough to rattle windows and set off car alarms), yet no-one on the northern side of town did at all...
hell, we are well below average (less than 50mm for all of winter to date)Meanwhile, in Sunny South Australia...
We've had above average rainfall this winter, and another 50mm is expected this week!
Wooooooooooooooooooooooooot!
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It's not going to stop.
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BOM forecasts wet spring as severe storm barrels towards nation's south
Spring is shaping up to be warm and wet for large parts of country as warm seas off WA's north-west kick a major climate driver into gear.www.abc.net.au
Severe Thunderstorm Warning - Adelaide Region
for TORNADOES and DESTRUCTIVE WINDS

Phew! Thanks for the update!That warning has been cancelled now.
"Danger has passed" apparently.
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On the day of the failure, South Australia experienced a violent storm reported as being a once-in-50-years event.[3] There was gale force and storm force wind across wide areas of the state. It included at least two tornadoes in the vicinity of Blyth,[4] which damaged multiple elements of critical infrastructure.[5] The state was hit by at least 80,000 lightning strikes;[6] the grid operator had not anticipated substantial lightning risks to the transmission system and therefore had taken no protective actions.[7] The wind damaged a total of 23 pylons on electricity transmission lines, including damage on three of the four interconnectors connecting the Adelaide area to the north and west of the state.
I won't be here. I'm going to Rutherglen for the weekend.On the news this morning, snow is expected in Canberra today. (On the hills and mountains.)
So you should have some pretty views.
I won't be here. I'm going to Rutherglen for the weekend.
Are you talking about the grandpa or the kid?Oh for goodness sake they all pretty much look the same at that age, what does it matter which one he picked up?
Both? Has anyone made sure that the grandpa was the right one - he may have picked up the right kid, and the real problem was that he was the wrong grandpa.Are you talking about the grandpa or the kid?
Town I used to live in in northern NSW near Lismore, had a tornado passed through it and did a LOT of damage- multiple houses were damaged or destroyed, as was one of the local churches and the local school!!!Some extra info about us and tornadoes (in case anyone is interested)
From time to time, we get small 'tornadoes' typically described in the media as 'mini tornadoes'.
Maybe one or two homes lose a roof, or part of a roof.
A local football club lost their scoreboard during a match, and a few cars were tumbled around in the carpark.
Way up North, in the deserts around and above woomera, big ones form, but I've never heard of one intersecting a building.
While I was based in Woomera, someone took me out into the desert to see the tornado tracks across the landscape.
It looked like a madman, with a giant grader, had gouged loops across the gibber.
(Made me very glad it hadn't come through the village.)
Probably our most famous ones, were the set that tore the high voltage transmission line towers out of the ground, causing South Australia's major blackout.
I recall a TV interview with a grazier from the area, after the event, who said something like:
"There was a a line of thunderstorms that went from horizon to horizon, and they were just spitting out tornadoes, one after another. It looked like an invading army marching across the plain."
It's fun comparing that description with the wiki article about the event which says: "at least two tornadoes in Blyth" but, to be fair, I have no idea where the grazier was from.
2016 South Australian blackout - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org




Oh for goodness sake they all pretty much look the same at that age, what does it matter which one he picked up?