domingo, 30 de septiembre de 2007

storm of the century

As I prepare my personal gear as well as a few support crew supplies for the upcoming Xstream Expedition Race in Moab, Utah, I have to wonder what the H*#@ am I thinking? Remember last year?

The airlines confiscated our camp stove and lantern, which had to be repurchased upon arrival in Moab. Flying with the bike was a lot more expensive than we were originally quoted and the ticket agent gave us a hard time about some of the gear we were bringing along.

But, we love Moab and the team was counting on us, so we continued on. That's when Mother Nature dropped the "Storm of the Century." That's right. It rained, and rained and rained. It rained so much I spent the race huddled in a minivan with all of the gear and only a tarp (thank you to the Colorado police officers whose support team loaned it to me) for shelter. It rained so much that there were mudslides closing the bike trails, and some of the roads, transition areas were flooded and the race was cut short -- very short. Hotel rooms were extremely hard to come by and we ended up with a lot of extra time on our hands. I felt awful. I had wasted my time and my money and never wanted to travel for a race again.

So why are we going back? Well, time works wonders. Also, I know that by definition we won't see another storm like that in Moab until the year 2100.
At four am yesterday morning five hundred miles of clear water lay between Ireland and mainland Europe. During the worst Atlantic storm for a century, England Scotland and Wales had sunk beneath the waves.

Geologists had noted the increasing tilt of Britain throughout the twentieth century. The eastern edges of England and Scotland were becoming closer to sea level while the western side of the island continued to rise. In the latter decades of the century, however, it became apparent that the rate of change was increasing until, by the turn of the century, it stood at eight degrees and rising.

The seriousness of the situation was outlined in a broadcast to the nation in 2002 when the Prime Minister explained the prediction of geologists that, if the tilt reached twelve degrees, the country would be at serious risk of capsizing.

Emergency measures were instigated. Initially, all people defined as obese were relocated to areas west of the Pennines. Objections were raised by many of those required to lose eight or ten stones in weight before they could return to their homes. There was no right of appeal during the emergency, however, and police in Norfolk and Yorkshire made particular use of their 'stop and weigh' powers.

The rate of increase in the tilt was slowed, but still the angle increased. Phase two of the emergency response was therefore put into action, and the whole population was resettled as close to the west coast as possible.

It was known that the greatest increase in the tilt occurred during storms, and after the gales of November 2004 the nation awoke to find the country lying at an angle of eleven degrees. Many had rolled out of bed. Snooker tables required re-levelling. Bowling greens reopened as dry ski slopes.

Also people began to dig. There was now recognition that it might take just one more storm to turn the country over. Those near the coast might be able to scramble onto the upturned land, but those inland would be trapped. Shafts were dug down through the land to the water beneath and were sealed with watertight doors. It was hoped that, if the worst happened, these would allow passage to the top side of the upturned island.

This week, however, disaster struck. The strongest winds and highest seas for a century buffeted the coast of Wales. Thousands of people swung out on trapezes over the Irish Sea in the manner of yachtsmen, to counterbalance the forces, but to no avail. Norfolk, Lincolnshire, Yorkshire and Durham sank beneath the waves, while Milford Haven hurtled nearly four hundred miles through the night sky to land upside-down in the North Sea.

Millions escaped via the emergency shafts, though in the confusion many watertight doors were not resealed, causing the sea to flood in. Britain rapidly began to sink. Tragically, by the time the storm had abated, no land remained above sea level.

Due to the scale of the disaster, no helpline number has been issued and those who had relatives in Britain have simply been advised to forget them. Similarly Britain is being removed from maps, and governments world-wide are accepting UN advice to behave as if Britain had never existed.

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