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The Great Storm of 87



Max Paper

Sunshiinnnnneeee
Nov 3, 2009
5,784
Testicles
Another who slept through it! Got woken up in the morning by my mum with the news every 8 year old wants to hear, no school today! Remember looking out my bedroom window in Wilmington Way and seeing my old man's CB aerial which used to live on our garage roof, 4 doors down in a garden and ALL the fence panels blown down. Went off to Patcham Place to explore, great day!
 




Lush

Mods' Pet
I was living in Manchester at the time but had come down to visit my mum in Goldstone Valley on the Thursday evening. I was waiting outside Hove Station for her to pick me up and you could feel that there was definitely "something in the air". Got woken up by the wind in the wee small hours - just assumed that I'd forgotten how windy the south coast can be. My mum used to leave her car on the drive, but got up and battled against the wind to put it in the garage in case a tile came off the roof and hit it. Minutes later, a whole load of tiles came off and crashed to the floor where her car had been. I remember still being awake at about 5am and trying to listen to BBC Radio Brighton and find out what was happening.

Remember the walk through Hove Park on the Saturday to go to the match too, as you had to walk round all the toppled trees. Surreal.
 


Mackenzie

Old Brightonian
Nov 7, 2003
34,017
East Wales
Brilliant day. Got up and dressed for school, walked up to the college to be told it was closed.......so I went for a walk into Brighton. Garden furniture and roof tiles everywhere, I found a fiver in Bedford Street, the front of a house had fallen down at the bottom of Bedford street. The waves were crashing in on the beach.....fire brigade were sawing the fallen trees at the Steine.....we went to Gatwick later on that day to pick up an uncle, the trees had fallen like dominos all along the side of the M23 forestry.
 


HovaGirl

I'll try a breakfast pie
Jul 16, 2009
3,139
West Hove
Woke about 5am to the sound of our metal windows rattling and dustbins banging and crashing down the road. They'd just been emptied so I went to check ours and it was at the other end of the garden. I put it back and filled it with bricks. Meanwhile, I saw my neighbour's shed, with all its contents, lift up 6 feet from the ground and fly to the bottom end of her garden, stopped only by the 7ft high hedge. We were heartbroken to see all the enormous old trees which had fallen in Hove Park exposing their huge roots. So many roads were impassable because decades-old trees had fallen across them. Mr Hova had an exam that day, at the Cockcroft Building, but when I got there, another giant tree ensured no one could get in. I had no idea where Mr Hova was, but a mumble went round that they'd all gone to Lewes, and he duly turned up. So many bricks from so many gable ends littered gardens and even neighbours' attics, that it's amazing not more people were killed or seriously injured. People here have mentioned the gale a few years later, but I don't remember that one at all. (I've probably got a photo of you at Hove Park, Lush, I took so many there!)
 


Lush

Mods' Pet
Some great pics around on the net too HovaGirl. This is Hove Park:

1585051665_d52b08e6d6.jpg
 






Kumquat

New member
Mar 2, 2009
4,459
I was at boarding school and needless to say as a kid absolutely loved it. We sneaked outside in the night and watched all the trees that had been in the school grounds for hundreds and hundreds of years all falling down. We thought it was hilarious. The next day some of the teachers were crying and all the kids were laughing. They said we didn't understand that hundreds of years of heritage had been lost and we just laughed even more.

All the electricity and lighting was down for two days and they still made us go to class and try and work. Shithole of a school that was.
 


Daffy Duck

Stop bloody moaning!
Nov 7, 2009
3,824
GOSBTS
We were living up at Fiveways then and remember listening to the gravel off our flat roof getting blown around and pounding on the back windows. Could hear crashing sounds all through the night.

Woke up to get into work and Ditchling Road looked like a war zone and realised all the crashing sounds had been the trees getting blown over.
I worked over in Hove at the time and ended up walking, well climbing really, down Preston Drove where huge old trees had been flattened and had to climb over massive tree trunks that had been blown over.

Couldn't believe the devastation in Hove Park. It looked like the aftermath of a war. Got into work and had to take calls for our insurance department all day in our office.
Rang up Sun Life for a claim form on behalf of one of our customers and the dopey cow on the other end of the phone said "what storm is that then? We've not heard anything about that." (They were up north somewhere).

So I asked her what planet she came from but she wasn't amused.

When I eventually managed to get a bus into town on the Saturday, I couldn't believe what had happened at the Level. Don't think there was a single tree left standing.
I felt so sad at the destruction.

Hubby was a bus driver at the time and walked down Ditchling Road the morning after the storm and had some woman have a right go at him because there were no buses running!!!!!
 




Kalimantan Gull

Well-known member
Aug 13, 2003
13,440
Central Borneo / the Lizard
At the time I was living up near the pepperpot. I slept through the entire storm and awoke next morning, got ready for work and started to walk down Islingword Road. I remember wondering why the street was so messy with rubbish and broken glass,tiles etc. It was only as I got to the Lewes Road/Bottom of Elm Grove junction and looked at the level, that I realised the devestation. I was standing right next to 2 red phone boxes that were at 45 degrees with a large elm tree against them. From that point, I had to climb over trees,cars etc just to get towards my work ( Lombard in Preston Road ). Finally got there 30 mins late to find that I was only the 4th person in an office of 25 to make it!


That will be these ones

PROP4.jpg


loads more photos here http://www.mybrightonandhove.org.uk/category_id__1033_path__0p116p183p.aspx
 




Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
Most of the roof went, the fence, the shed and my brother's motorbike that was in it have never been seen again.
 




Jam The Man

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
8,226
South East North Lancing
I was only 12 but I remember it very clearly..The day before we’d had a school charity event raising money by running laps round the school field. We got to meet swimmer Sharron Davies before for a photo shoot. I was lucky enough to have a chat with her (about toast) as the photographer had to change his film before proceeding with my photo. Rock & Roll.

My Dad woke us all up saying "there's a hurricane outside!"… half asleep I looked out the window watching the bizarre sight of sixty feet tall, hundred year old*trees thrashing back and forth at impossible angles, all being lit up in the middle of the night by*what seemed like constant lightning.
*
Having got downstairs there was this huge crashing noise over and over again! It was the roof literally being lifted off its weakened supports and crashing back down to somewhere near to where it was propped before.*Where we lived*was at the time one of the highest locations on Foredown Hill in*Portslade, so*we were obviously a bit exposed to potentially damaging gusts.

My Dad decided to evacuate to my grandparents half a mile away and subsequnetly we had to clamber over trees that were 4 or 5 feet wide om the way. I remember the noise of the wind being immense and there not being much rain until later in the night / morning.

The next morning we walked back home at about 0830 and saw literally dozens of cars crushed by trees and hundreds of trees down in easthill park.

Our roof was still half on back at home, but had a tree on it for good measure.

Oh and we got two weeks off school!

BOF is right about the other storm a couple of years after - I believe it was in Jan 1990 but largely occured during the day time. I don't recall it being worse though...
 


backson

Registered Mis-user
Jul 26, 2004
2,430
Staying in a caravan park in Dorset on a school field trip. We were evacuated and had to wait in the minibuses until they could sort out some accommodation, in the mean time one of the minibuses got hit by a large chunk of corrugated iron. Ended up in a day centre in the middle of Swanage.

Went back in the morning, to find a number of caravans on their roofs, and a couple had smashed open.

Our trip was actually featured in a documentary on the 20th anniversary, they spoke to a couple of teachers and a couple of the schoolkids, who made it sound far more serious and dramatic than I remembered; me and my mates just thought it was an absolute giggle.
 








Storer 68

New member
Apr 19, 2011
2,827
Was stuck at gatwick Airport overnight. no idea that anything had happened.

Went outside and immediately fell over a bus shelter that had been blown from the coach set down point into the train station platforms.

Took eight hours to get from Gatwick to Hassocks
 


DIFFBROOK

Really Up the Junction
Feb 3, 2005
2,267
Yorkshire
I slept through it as well - woke up to find no power and telephone cables broken and swinging from their poles. I needed some money, so tried to get some out of a cashpoint - I had assumed that the powercut was just my house. Then drove to work, at Brighton General. My office was an old 60's prefab. All the windows were blown and paper and stuff all over the place. Plus a crack that went from the roof to the ground. We were told to go home until the building was confirmed safe. That made my day.

Then drove to my then girlfriends in Portslade, during which the heavens literally opened. Never seen rain like it.
 


MJsGhost

Oooh Matron, I'm an
NSC Patron
Jun 26, 2009
5,026
East
I slept through it until (at about 4am) my sisters shone a torch into my face and asked me if I was awake...

My dad went out in it and had to use his chainsaw to get back after a tree came down in the road right behind him. We had a generator, so were the only family in the area to still have a working fridge, freezer & TV for a day or so. I remember watching 'My Family & Other Animals" on the beeb and thinking how lucky we were!

We had a handful of chickens - most of which were either blown away, or crushed when the coup blew over and collapsed
 




scooter1

How soon is now?
Slept through it. Woke up to find no electricity so switched on the battery radio and heard of the storms. School was closed so me and two mates went to Gamleys in Church Road where the window had been blown in, helped ourselves to Monoply and spent the day playing that
 


brakespear

Doctor Worm
Feb 24, 2009
12,326
Sleeping on the roof
Slept through it and woke up to trees all over the place by Montpelier Terrace and no TV.
 


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