Cathryn said:
That was a stonking storm, Dannyg!! One of the loudest I've ever heard!!
I was safely tucked up in my flat thinking how glad I was not to be out on my bike, but it scrambled our digibox signal just as the live coverage of the tour started...I only got to see the last 30k!!
See what you think of
this beauty which hit Hebden Bridge a couple of years ago

!
I got caught out in one of those storms a few years back. I was in Oxenhope near Haworth and on my way back to have a meal with someone in Hebden Bridge. The hill between Oxenhope and Hebden Bridge is about 1,100 ft higher than Hebden Bridge itself so you can imagine what it was like up there in those conditions. I took one look at the lightning bolts continuously blasting the hills above me, thought better of it and took refuge in Oxenhope railway station (you may remember it from
The Railway Children)!
Once the storm had receded I rode over the hill as fast as I could and was quite shocked at what had happened to the road in the hour or so since I'd passed the other way. Great rivers of water were cascading down the middle of the road and in places underground streams had burst through the road surface sending jets of water several feet into the air. Tons of gravel had been washed off the hillsides onto the road (you can see examples of that in the video I linked to). The awesome power of nature, eh! PS IMHO
that is the kind of thing that the word
awesome should be reserved for, not what you thought of a Big Mac or a birthday card

.
As for being protected by rubber tyres - ho ho, that's a laugh! Would you volunteer to stand on a hillside in a storm like that if someone offered you a piece of rubber to stand on?