Living in the Land Where Clouds are Born
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  1. Paul Campbell:
    Feb 26, 2021 at 12:35 PM

    I did wonder why the blog was called "Where clouds are born" but now i know! This mist phenomenon is quite fascinating, i have never seen anything like this where i live now so its amazing to see. We never get just "wet air" so it must present problems like you say when you want to dry laundry. Does it ever affect the houses? Would you see more damp on the brickwork because of this or is it just and outside kind of problem? On another note, i don't seem to be getting any blog post updates, i joined the mailing list as you know but i don't get any notifications, i do get them about replies on here but not your new blog posts.

    1. rseabrook:
      Feb 26, 2021 at 01:09 PM

      Well there you are, I'm glad I explained! Yes, the damp gets into everything, indoors and out. I dread to think what it's doing to the timbers of my house, but most of the house has been here for two hundred years, so I guess it's fairly resistant to rot.

      Thanks for letting me know about the problems with the email list. I've sent you a test message - we'll see if we can get to the bottom of it.






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Comments (2)

  1. Paul Campbell:
    Feb 26, 2021 at 12:35 PM

    I did wonder why the blog was called "Where clouds are born" but now i know! This mist phenomenon is quite fascinating, i have never seen anything like this where i live now so its amazing to see. We never get just "wet air" so it must present problems like you say when you want to dry laundry. Does it ever affect the houses? Would you see more damp on the brickwork because of this or is it just and outside kind of problem? On another note, i don't seem to be getting any blog post updates, i joined the mailing list as you know but i don't get any notifications, i do get them about replies on here but not your new blog posts.

    Reply

    1. rseabrook:
      Feb 26, 2021 at 01:09 PM

      Well there you are, I'm glad I explained! Yes, the damp gets into everything, indoors and out. I dread to think what it's doing to the timbers of my house, but most of the house has been here for two hundred years, so I guess it's fairly resistant to rot.

      Thanks for letting me know about the problems with the email list. I've sent you a test message - we'll see if we can get to the bottom of it.

      Reply






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