/éire/

>How bad was that one?
Hurricane Debbie did serious damage, but of course the infrastructure was nowhere near as good back then. Some parts of the country were without electricity for almost a week.

>Shall be sending you lot sandbags with your waifus on them so that they can double as dakimakuras
>boobs are bags of sand
Pottery.

>The Br*tish Isles

If I remember my geography correctly that part of the country was covered by glaciers that were so heavy they pushed the ground below sea level.
I'm surprised Clare is so broken up though, I thought it was a consistent level.

On the bright side it looks like some of us will be getting our own islands, which is just lovely.

>If I remember my geography correctly that part of the country was covered by glaciers that were so heavy they pushed the ground below sea level.
I thought that was Munster during the last Ice Age? Which is why I'm so confused about Munster being so intact.

t. Did Leaving Cert Geography

>I'm surprised Clare is so broken up though, I thought it was a consistent level.
Level, but high average altitude above sea level.

What will /éire/ be doing in case the electricity cuts?

>I thought that was Munster during the last Ice Age?
Well I mean pretty much the whole island was under ice at some stage, but it seems Munster got off fairly lightly, probably for being slightly warmer in the south. From what I remember, the last major chunk of ice left stretched from east Galway to up past Fermanagh in the north east. It moved south west across the land before hitting the Atlantic. That's why there are so many massive fucking rocks thrown about in places around Connacht.

>Level, but high average altitude above sea level.
That makes it even more confusing.

Praying for it to come back.

Don't rightly know. Most my activities resolve around a computer.

>but it seems Munster got off fairly lightly
That was my point, although I might have explained it badly. Munster did not have much ice cover during the last ice age. All the ice on the more northerly parts of the country caused the landmass to depress (same thing happened in Britain), which in turn caused Munster to rise. Ever since though, Munster has been sinking as the island re-balances itself. So if Munster has been sinking ever since the last ice age, I'm confused as to why it gets off so lightly when it comes to rising sea levels.

See: herald.ie/news/forget-the-recession-ireland-is-sinking-27927947.html

>That makes it even more confusing.
How so?

Is it time to panic yet?

Thinking about going on holidays in the Central African Republic
Not if you don't live in a plywood house