Hi there, another great video like I always say but I know I always say that to you. I think you do great content really informative. Great information keep up the good work. Can’t wait to see the next one
I REMEMBER THE SHIP LAYING THE CABLE ANOTHER WELL INFORMED VIDEO JANE WELL DONEONLY YOU COULD CALL IT A " COCK -EYED RECTANGLE" AND WE ALL KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN ARE THEY STILL WEIGHING AND GRADING THE ROCKS PLEASE KEEP UP THE EXCELLENT WORK
A rhombus is a sort of pushed over square. The shape you are looking for is a trapezium , not that it matters much. Actually you would have made a very good engineer because you have excellent communication skills, which is sometimes lacking in the technically adroit.
@@JohnHughes2002 A parallelogram has two pairs of parallel sides. The coffer dam steel sections are trapezoidal , which allows them to be press formed in manufacture and gives strength through shape. Just goes to show how Mrs Rabbits vlogs encourage practical discussion…..who would have thought!
@@calderdale6795 actually, I think @JohnHughes is right - I was looking for a parallelogram - the overall shape of the cofferdam itself. The sheet piles look more trapezoidal to me... (Maths for beginners, lol)
@@visitfyldecoast Aha….. I was only considering the cofferdam sheet profile , not the shape of the actual excavation which had passed me by. Apologies to John and others for my mistake in not paying proper attention !
Was parallelogram the shape you were thinking of? Also should I be feeling tremors in my house every time they move boulders at the Jubilee Gardens compound? My house borders Jubilee Gardens and I've noticed it a lot recently. Worried it might be disturbing my foundations.
Keep an eye out for 45 degree cracking in your outside walls , which is an indication of foundation movement. If you see any , usually following the mortar lines on brickwork , go to see Balfour Beatty. However , given the type of substrate you , and everyone else’s house is built on I wouldn’t worry too much. The unlithified nature of the substrate will absorb ground impact and you will only feel the attenuated shock wave.
They're taking noise and vibration measurements all the time and nothing has come even close to what might be a problem. Like @CalderDale says, the ground is carrying it so we feel the wobble
I need to ask a question; what happens when the tide comes in? Do all the earth movers retire to Rock HQ and hope that the Irish Seas does not completely rearrange what they have achieved [as was the problem building lighthouse bases!] or does the tide generally not come up that far? I have often seen the sea strand of sea weed etc quite far up in the VFC beach walks. I do realise that this is probably a daft question of course :-)
😊That part of the beach northwards is dog friendly year round. From my experience the local dog walkers in Cleveleys clean up after their dogs , and are a very friendly bunch. As an aside , the wave energy increases northwards on the Fylde , as indicated by the transition from sand to pebbly beaches south to north. Pebbly beaches therefore “ self clean “more readily , not to be confused with strand line deposition .Pebbly beaches are also less popular with holidaymakers hence our canine friends can be tolerated.
Brilliant thanks Jane, so well informed it turned into a documentary, so exciting to watch the progress. Thank you again. 😘💚
I love how bright and cheery u are hi jane
Hi Jane thank you for another great video as always that was really interesting cleveleys and Rossal beach are amazing have a lovely day xx
Well done with your information another good video
Well done Jane for this very informative video
Thanks Jane
Very interesting Jane thank you.
Hi there, another great video like I always say but I know I always say that to you. I think you do great content really informative. Great information keep up the good work. Can’t wait to see the next one
I REMEMBER THE SHIP LAYING THE CABLE ANOTHER WELL INFORMED VIDEO JANE WELL DONEONLY YOU COULD CALL IT A " COCK -EYED RECTANGLE" AND WE ALL KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN ARE THEY STILL WEIGHING AND GRADING THE ROCKS PLEASE KEEP UP THE EXCELLENT WORK
Thanks for the update, very intersting info, we were there on thurs, when they were doing this bit.
Great update jane
A rhombus is a sort of pushed over square. The shape you are looking for is a trapezium , not that it matters much. Actually you would have made a very good engineer because you have excellent communication skills, which is sometimes lacking in the technically adroit.
I think she is referring to a parallelogram, not a trapezium.
@@JohnHughes2002 A parallelogram has two pairs of parallel sides. The coffer dam steel sections are trapezoidal , which allows them to be press formed in manufacture and gives strength through shape. Just goes to show how Mrs Rabbits vlogs encourage practical discussion…..who would have thought!
@@calderdale6795 actually, I think @JohnHughes is right - I was looking for a parallelogram - the overall shape of the cofferdam itself. The sheet piles look more trapezoidal to me... (Maths for beginners, lol)
@@visitfyldecoast Aha….. I was only considering the cofferdam sheet profile , not the shape of the actual excavation which had passed me by. Apologies to John and others for my mistake in not paying proper attention !
And i have enjoyed this series. And important work it is. To keep the Irish sea from flooding the Fylde Coast😊👍👌🤗
Was parallelogram the shape you were thinking of? Also should I be feeling tremors in my house every time they move boulders at the Jubilee Gardens compound? My house borders Jubilee Gardens and I've noticed it a lot recently. Worried it might be disturbing my foundations.
Keep an eye out for 45 degree cracking in your outside walls , which is an indication of foundation movement. If you see any , usually following the mortar lines on brickwork , go to see Balfour Beatty. However , given the type of substrate you , and everyone else’s house is built on I wouldn’t worry too much. The unlithified nature of the substrate will absorb ground impact and you will only feel the attenuated shock wave.
They're taking noise and vibration measurements all the time and nothing has come even close to what might be a problem. Like @CalderDale says, the ground is carrying it so we feel the wobble
I need to ask a question; what happens when the tide comes in? Do all the earth movers retire to Rock HQ and hope that the Irish Seas does not completely rearrange what they have achieved [as was the problem building lighthouse bases!] or does the tide generally not come up that far? I have often seen the sea strand of sea weed etc quite far up in the VFC beach walks. I do realise that this is probably a daft question of course :-)
The monsters track back to Rock HQ when the tide comes in
@@visitfyldecoast Thank you Jane, the sight of that must be reminicent of the elephants being bought back to their quarters at the Tower Circus! :-)
I hope they don't allow dogs on that beach. They need to do what south shields did by keeping the beach ⛱️ clean. Great work, as always 🙏
There's a dog ban which started 1st May, but that doesn't stop some ignorant owners.
😊That part of the beach northwards is dog friendly year round. From my experience the local dog walkers in Cleveleys clean up after their dogs , and are a very friendly bunch. As an aside , the wave energy increases northwards on the Fylde , as indicated by the transition from sand to pebbly beaches south to north. Pebbly beaches therefore “ self clean “more readily , not to be confused with strand line deposition .Pebbly beaches are also less popular with holidaymakers hence our canine friends can be tolerated.
@CalderDale is right - this bit of beach is dog friendly all year round, and most dog owners do clean up after their pooches
Very interesting. Thank for the information.