I thought you might like to see the extreme privations we're facing in drought-stricken England.
As you may have seen on the news, most of England is labouring under its worst drought since 1976, a drought brought on by Global Warming, with strict hosepipe bans being enforced in the south and east and our reservoirs at crisis level.
The Met Office said a month ago that, due to Global Warming, the drought will last until October at least.
But how does it look on the ground? The burnt lawns? The parched farmland? The dust storms blowing away the topsoil?
Well, at great personal risk, people have been out with their cameras taking pictures of the stricken areas. This is how the drought season looks in the village of Elsworth, nine miles west of Cambridge in the parched county of Cambridgeshire in eastern England.
This, by the way, is a street, which the drought has made unrecognisable by transforming it into nothing more than a strip of parched soil and dust.






