To be fair - I used to teach in Rhyl
and that was, at the time, one of the driest places in the country - it very seldom rained as the land was so flat there until you reached the subhills of the mountains when the clouds took one look at what was coming up that they panicked and dumped all the rain
But on the way home to Bangor in bad weather there was always a point on the A55 where it was totally dry
then suddenly there was a dividing line somewhere around Llanfairfechan where it was wet
often very wet
As an addendum to that
One year we had a new head - the 3rd or 4th in a few years depending on who you count
Anyway - it was winter and a day or so after she arrived there was a big snow warning
so she asked the senior staff that had lived there for a while what the plans were and what the chances of having to close the school were
she was told
"nah - don;t worry - we never close because it never snows here - never been known in decades - literally"
the next day she had to close the school and it didn;t re-open for THREE WEEKS!!
the school was fine - we had to stay closed because the LEA was worried about the poor little darlings falling on snow or ice while walking to school!!!
Boy were those lessons well planned for the rest of that year!!!
(before anyone else says it - when they came back I asked my class what they had been doing for those 3 weeks
The girls had been walking to each others houses and to the shops and all that
the boys had been running around chucking snowballs and playing football
no-one had been hurt!!!)