poukali
Well-known member
Wow... I'm at Bathurst and 7 and although it did rain quite a bit we were never without power.  Be safe out there.
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I know im pretty ****** off about this summer...Holy cow I can't believe how much it rained... This is such a crappy summer... there have been like 7 or 8 nice days in the last 2 months.
By 10 p.m., an unofficial one-day record of 123 millimetres of rain had fallen at Pearson, exceeding the 121.4 millimetres that fell during Hurricane Hazel on Oct. 15, 1954.
To put that in perspective, the city gets an average of 74.4 millimetres during the month of July. Overwhelmed, the Don River breached its banks on its lower stretches, spilling muddy water onto the parkway for the second time this season. Downtown near the Rogers Centre, a manhole cover vibrated and sprayed water like a crazed garden sprinkler as the pressure built up underneath. Another manhole nearby turned into a geyser.
Environment Canada meteorologist Mark Seifert says that two storms hit the city in short succession. Coming in from the northwest, they were sluggish giants -- not particularly violent, but heavy and slow. Because they took so long to traverse the city, they dumped an unusual amount of rain. And in an urban environment such as ours, covered in concrete and asphalt, "the rain really has no place to go."
I laughed when I saw the 3 cars on the DVP, not because they were stranded, but if you look at other pics it was just one car at first. I'm laughing at the two idiots who decided to go for it despite seeing the one car almost up to the windows in water.
I know im pretty ****** off about this summer...
Gonna really need to go away on vacation now at the end of the year
+1 After such a **** winter to be hit with this crappy summer I don't know how ppl can take it. I'm lucky that I can travel extensively, but don't know what I would do otherwise. Probably contemplate moving somewhere else.
By 10 p.m., an unofficial one-day record of 123 millimetres of rain had fallen at Pearson, exceeding the 121.4 millimetres that fell during Hurricane Hazel on Oct. 15, 1954.
To put that in perspective, the city gets an average of 74.4 millimetres during the month of July. Overwhelmed, the Don River breached its banks on its lower stretches, spilling muddy water onto the parkway for the second time this season. Downtown near the Rogers Centre, a manhole cover vibrated and sprayed water like a crazed garden sprinkler as the pressure built up underneath. Another manhole nearby turned into a geyser.