De E meen ik te zien op 53.175920, -6.073623quote:Op dinsdag 7 augustus 2018 13:42 schreef Dagoduck het volgende:
Er was inderdaad niets van te zien.
https://goo.gl/maps/VTJEYCrf1y22
Dat is iig niet 1 van de E's van EIRE.quote:Op dinsdag 7 augustus 2018 14:19 schreef nanuk het volgende:
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De E meen ik te zien op 53.175920, -6.073623
Pogingquote:Op dinsdag 7 augustus 2018 14:45 schreef nanuk het volgende:
Ik heb erg veel moeite om de foto's te plaatsen op de googlemap foto. Jammer dat op de eerste foto's niet wat meer herkenning staat.
quote:
The British Heat Wave and Aerial Archeology
The U.K. is experiencing its driest summer in fifty-seven years. It’s not been great. A British summer is usually a doubtful, fleeting thing. Sunshine and heat arrive in bursts from June until September, as if you were walking down a green-shaded path with occasional breaks in the canopy. When the sun does come out—during Wimbledon, say, or for a spell in August—British people go reliably mad, take their tops off, and barbecue frantically for a few days, until the skies cloud over again. This year hasn’t been like that. The country warmed up in June and has baked steadily since, like an oven that has reached its cooking temperature. Between late June and early July, Britain endured sixteen consecutive days when the temperature hit eighty-two degrees. Last month, eastern England had four per cent of its usual rainfall. In London, a city not known for its air-conditioning, the parks turned brown, the road surfaces went mushy in the afternoon ferment, and the nights became unbearably still. Foul, sweet smells hung in the air. This unusual British summer has been accompanied by terrible wildfires in California and Greece, a balmy Arctic, and dozens of heat-related deaths in Japan. Even when it finally rained, late last week, it didn’t bring much relief. Last Friday, Britain was hit by an estimated hundred and thirty thousand lightning bolts—enough electricity to boil a billion cups of tea—as summer storms played havoc with the nation’s roads, railways, and airports. August is going to be even hotter. (The New Yorker, het artikel gaat door).
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