The Mail on Sunday

You probably guessed already... but it was the wettest February ever!

- By Jake Ryan

FLOOD-HIT towns took another severe battering yesterday as February was declared the wettest on record.

Storm Jorge was the latest in a series which have struck the UK, bringing heavy downpours, 70 mph gales and snow.

More than 300 flood warnings and alerts were in place across England and Wales yesterday.

And today there are wind warnings across Northern England, North Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland.

A fourth successive weekend of severe weather in the wake of Storm Ciara and Storm Dennis has left flood damaged parts of Britain struggling to cope.

In South Wales police declared a ‘critical incident’ yesterday before the alert was later stood down.

But more than 600 homes and a similar number of businesses in Wales have already been affected by the floods – accounting for around a quarter of properties flooded across the UK.

The police’s concern yesterday centred on Pontypridd which was flooded two weeks ago. Residents in the town, which is 12 miles north of Cardiff, were told to stay indoors unless ‘ absolutely necessary’.

Ely Bridge in Cardiff was closed on Friday night and police warned of a landslide in Pontsticil­l, near Merthyr Tydfil, which completely blocked the road.

England has had more than three times the amount of its average February rainfall, according to the Environmen­t Agency.

Some areas have had a typical month’s rainfall in just 24 hours.

The UK average for this February was 202.1mm, beating the previous record in 1990 of 193.4mm since records began in 1862.

Met Office forecaster Greg Dewhurst said: ‘ The relentless rain with the storms – and even between them it’s been raining – is what has made this month very unusual.

‘It’s been a very wet and windy month across the whole of the UK.

‘ Showers will continue today, moving across the UK. There are also some sunny spells and not the same persistent rain.’

Rain-soaked areas in East Yorkshire have been battered by torrential downpours for several days causing the River Aire to burst its banks. Over four tons of sandbags have been deployed to t he area as t he Environmen­t Agency issued eight flood warnings on the River Aire.

The Environmen­t Agency has warned water levels will remain high for several days.

It said 1,000 staff per day have worked on maintainin­g f l ood defences and pumps, clearing debris and repairing damaged barriers. Heavy rain – which started with Storm Ciara continued with Storm Dennis and now Jorge – has contribute­d to record river levels which have seen safety teams put in ‘Herculean efforts’ to erect flood defences.

Storm Jorge also brought misery to the West Country in the form of landslides, flooded roads and power cuts. Torrential rain on Friday night is thought to have loosened soil that caused a 400-ton ‘mountain’ of mud that blocked the A381 in Devon between Totnes and Ipplepen.

Ironbridge and Bewdley along the River Severn in the Midlands are among the worst- hit areas in England.

Last night a total of 86 flood warnings were in place – mostly in the South West and along the EnglishWel­sh border and in Yorkshire – while 215 ‘ flooding is possible’ alerts were also in force. Gales were forecast across Northern England, North Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland until 3pm today.

The Environmen­t Agency said 3,340 business and residentia­l properties had already been flooddamag­ed by Storms Ciara and Dennis but the figure could rise following Storm Jorge.

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