Just visited the allotment. Two of my greenhouses have glass which has succumbed to the weight of the snow.
I've never seen this before and didn't tralise snow could be so heavy.
My next door neighbour has a massive polytunnel. It has a 75mm diameter curved steel framework which spans about 10 metres. The polythene is intact but the steel piping is buckled and bent to the ground with the weight of snow.
When nature decides to show us her true colours she is unstoppable
I had to carve blocks of frozen snow off the area where the glass has broken and fell out. Reminicent of video's I've seen of eskimos making an igloo.
I have chooks in one of these greenhoused and its amazing none were decapitated. Bitsof glass are stuck vertically in the soil below the broken windows.
Temporarily I've wedged a wooden board over the top to stop them flying out but if it gets windy (raw nature again) cripes knows what will happen.
Be safe out their folks!
I've never seen this before and didn't tralise snow could be so heavy.
My next door neighbour has a massive polytunnel. It has a 75mm diameter curved steel framework which spans about 10 metres. The polythene is intact but the steel piping is buckled and bent to the ground with the weight of snow.
When nature decides to show us her true colours she is unstoppable
I had to carve blocks of frozen snow off the area where the glass has broken and fell out. Reminicent of video's I've seen of eskimos making an igloo.
I have chooks in one of these greenhoused and its amazing none were decapitated. Bitsof glass are stuck vertically in the soil below the broken windows.
Temporarily I've wedged a wooden board over the top to stop them flying out but if it gets windy (raw nature again) cripes knows what will happen.
Be safe out their folks!
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