Thats a fabulous one considering the amount of rain thats fallen on the UK this past few months lol
Are there many people out dancing in the rain near you Grannymar??
I do have a couple of umbrellas, but seldom use them. I see them as weapons of torture. In windy weather they are useless. Perhaps it is time to update the umbrella….?
Interesting how those that live where it rains a lot don’t seem to use umbrellas. My WA crew always say they can spot a tourist because they have a umbrella!
Years of almost having been poked in the eye of umbrellas carried by other people, having to stretch my arm and umbrella above the level of others, thus having their drips run down my arms. drove to leaving them at home. I stick to a hood or hat in wet weather.
Thats a fabulous one considering the amount of rain thats fallen on the UK this past few months lol
Are there many people out dancing in the rain near you Grannymar??
Way too cold for that, Cathy! Still there is a strange brightness in the sky this morning….. I think it might be the sun!
I suppose one does lose the inclination to dance in the rain a bit when one’s house starts floating away! 🙂
Running or dancing between the drops is a skill worth learning, if you live in Ireland
And being very quick on the draw with an umbrella!
I do have a couple of umbrellas, but seldom use them. I see them as weapons of torture. In windy weather they are useless. Perhaps it is time to update the umbrella….?
They are ideal for steady drips in windless weather, or to unsettle charging lions.
This steady drip has decided to live dangerously without an umbrella! 😆
If with what you have been going through there, you can still come up with this one-liner, I doff my topic to you.
Better than adding tears to the already rain soaked world around me.
Interesting how those that live where it rains a lot don’t seem to use umbrellas. My WA crew always say they can spot a tourist because they have a umbrella!
Years of almost having been poked in the eye of umbrellas carried by other people, having to stretch my arm and umbrella above the level of others, thus having their drips run down my arms. drove to leaving them at home. I stick to a hood or hat in wet weather.