Been in lunchtime. Because its a flood plane situation forking is a complete waste of time -it would be like taking a fork into the sea! Also it would destabilise large areas and turn into mush. The holes would fill straight back up. It has to drain away naturally and that depends on river levels dropping. The pump is on so efforts are being made. The pitch -bar the far end has actually drained well from all the rain-this is outside a normal rain scenario this is all about rivers levels. All on tonight.
paulk wrote:Been in lunchtime. Because its a flood plane situation forking is a complete waste of time -it would be like taking a fork into the sea! Also it would destabilise large areas and turn into mush. The holes would fill straight back up. It has to drain away naturally and that depends on river levels dropping. The pump is on so efforts are being made. The pitch -bar the far end has actually drained well from all the rain-this is outside a normal rain scenario this is all about rivers levels. All on tonight.
Paul, one thing I noticed last week when on the pitch, its quite bumpy, due to what looks like worm "sh1t" the best way to describe it, and a bit lumpy here and there. What would be the impact on rolling the pitch, I guess its not been done for a reason, ie damaging grass etc.
Sorry to anybody else, I realize this could turn a little boring to read
Problem that I see is that even if does drain away tomorrow morning and the ref deems it's OK to play with the heavy rain forecast from around 3pm it would mean that with an already saturated pitch the game might not finish. :evil: