"The heat of the sun drives our weather, but water creates its many different faces." "I'm Donal Maclntyre." "I'm about to follow water's journey around the planet from the oceans to the clouds, from a storm to a flood, because I want to experience the awesome power it can unleash." "I'll meet people who've been at the mercy of some of the wettest, wildest weather on Earth." "This is..."Wild Weather"!" "We live on a water planet." "70 per cent of the surface is water." "Every living thing, including us, is made of it." "Right now there are twelve thousand billion tonnes of it, literally hanging above our heads." "And it's this that fuels the world's weather." "Divide it by the amount of people who live on the planet - this is how much each single one of us would have." "A cube of water measuring 46 metres high, wide and deep." "The same water we bathe in, we drink or flush away." "It's the same water that rains on us, that forms the hurricanes and the monsoons." "It's the same water that's been here since Earth was formed." "All things being equal, this would be your share of the weather." "This is the same water that fell as rain before life itself began." "By now it has probably circled the planet over 8,000,000 times." "I'll follow the cycle your bit of water takes around the world." "Along the way, we'll see how it transforms itself into every kind of weather on the planet." "I'm going to start my journey with water in the wettest place in Western Europe" " Bergen, city of rain on Norway's western coast." "It rains here two out of every three days." "What's the one thing you need in a city like this?" "Umbrellas, lots of them." "We have umbrellas for little rain, a lot of rain and storms." " For every occasion?" " Y"es."" "This city is so proud of its rain they can it and sell it to tourists because they've lots of it." "To give you an idea." "If I stood here every day and night for the next 16 years," "I couldn't capture the volume of water that falls on this city in a single year." "400,000 Olympic-size swimming pools of water drench this place annually." "Crashing down on the roof of the average family house every month is a staggering 18 tonnes of rain, that's 225 tonnes a year." "This place is seriously wet." "Devious tactics have to be employed by weather forecasters to keep the people happy." "Enter the blonde." "This is TV2, Bergen's local TV station." "Benedikte Rasmussen has the unenviable job of presenting the weather." "It's not that difficult." "When the meteorologist says something long and difficult, it's probably just going to rain." "The longest period of rain was in 1990." "I know because I've checked." "It rained from the 3rd of January to the 26th of March that year." "That's about 83 days." "I think I was quite fed up of rain after those days." "(SPEA"K"ING NORWEGIAN)" "Prediction is a fine art." "Benedikte, what's happening here?" "We're seeing how the weather will be in the days ahead." "How's it looking for Bergen?" "I'm not sure, I think a little rain but not too bad." "How are these maps created?" "Erm..." "I don't knowl" "Benedikte knows only slightly more about meteorology than I do, but the ratings show that her glowing smile and confident presentation keeps the audience happy and willing to receive the somewhat familiar weather forecasts." "So why is this place so wet?" "Daily, warm moist air flows in from the Atlantic, hits the surrounding coastal mountains and is forced up." "As it rises, it cools, and the result is rain, tonnes of it." "Right this second, 18 million tonnes worth of rain are falling somewhere on the planet." "If all this rain from the rooftops is going to join it, there is only one way it can go, into the rivers." "Yesterday, what's cascading around me now was a rain shower in Bergen." "Before that, it could have been a monsoon rain cloud in India or a cup of tea from the Ritz!" "Today it's a river in Norway." "By tomorrow, it will have joined the North Sea." "After that, who knows where or what it will next become." "The water on our planet connects us all in truly remarkable ways." "All this water racing out into the North Sea is about to join a vast weather-making ocean current." "I'll follow it to see some of the wettest, wildest weather on Earth." "In order to see where this current starts," "I have to travel north of Bergen." "There are many ocean currents that move water around our planet, but there's one, a master current out in the North Atlantic, that's the drive belt of our weather systems." "It's called the Thermohaline Conveyor." "Every ocean in the world is connected by it." "It's a 70,000-mile round trip that takes about 1,000 years to complete." "In that time, the water could have been part of every kind of weather in Scotland or on the Serengeti." "It takes a phenomenal amount of energy to drive this massive engine, the Thermohaline Conveyor." "What turns it on, what kick starts it?" "To see for myself how it works, I have to get under the ice." "The secret lies in when this ocean turns to ice." "At minus two degree Celsius, sea water begins to freeze." "But this ice is made of fresh water, as salt doesn't freeze and is locked out in the process." "This water is very salty, which makes it heavier, so it sinks." "As these billions of tonnes of cold, salty water fall, they begin to flow south." "This sucks the warmer tropical waters up north to replace them." "This action drives a permanent ocean cycle." "From here, the route it takes is truly global." "As the cold waters plunge to the depths of the ocean, they flow along the bottom and then around the Horn of Africa." "After about 500 years, it begins to warm up." "The Conveyor's first stop is in the Indian Ocean, and, much later, in the Pacific Ocean, where the whole system then curves around and the cycle repeats itself." "It's hard to imagine that the next time anyone sees the water I'm swimming in will be when it rises as a warm current and laps a beach in India." "After a 6,000-mile journey within the Conveyor, the water that fell as rain in Bergen over 500 years ago is about to become part of the biggest rainstorm on the planet." "India hasn't seen a drop of rain for months." "Life is almost unbearable." "Well, almost!" "But the monsoon is on its way." "Every summer around June 6th, regular as clockwork, these clouds sweep in from the Indian Ocean bringing life and death in their wake." "How it works is remarkably simple." "For most of the year, the prevailing winds come from the north." "Then, as summer heats up the country, massive columns of hot air begin to rise and, as they do, they suck in cooler moist air from the sea." "When these moist clouds break over land, you get the fury of the monsoon downpour." "That cloud there is the beginning of the monsoon." "To see what's going on up there, I'm going to take a closer look." "I'm about to do something never done before in the monsoon." "I'm going to go up and experience the hot, humid monsoon winds." "To do that, I have to jump off this." "(SHOUTING INSTRUCTIONS)" "Flying with the birds has to be the most amazing and scariest way of seeing the advance of the monsoon." "On a day like this, 75 billion tonnes worth of rain clouds will sweep across this coast." "A third will fall as rain." "It's staggeringly hard to imagine that amount of rain falling anywhere." "Some clouds are ten miles thick and densely packed with water." "You don't want to be here when that lot breaks, so for a little protection, a little warning, you have to know what turns that water into raindrops." "So you have to look right into the heart of a cloud - and right now that one there looks promising." "So how does a cloud produce a raindrop?" "Up close, a cloud is just a swirling mass of water vapour." "Floating in it are comparatively huge particles of dust and pollen." "The vapour is attracted to the surface." "They collide with each other, getting bigger and heavier." "It takes a million of these droplets to make a raindrop only 2mm wide." "Gravity does the rest." "Monsoon downpours are epic." "In a few seconds, they can bring inches of water crashing to the ground." "For this brief period in the year, the monsoon changes everybody's life." "A welcome relief from the tensions of the scorching heat." "When the rains arrive, India lets its hair down and goes mad for football." "The rain softens the pitches, making them easy to play on." "I can't believe I'm 6,000 miles away from home and I'm still playing in mud." "I doubt the monsoon is doing anything for my game but it's doing wonders for my body." "All this rain can actually make you feel good." "As water falls through the air - be it heavy rain, a waterfall or even a shower - tiny particles in the air called ions become negatively charged." "This makes them sticky, which cleans the air by literally dragging dirt and dust particles to the ground, leaving it fresh and clear." "The cleaner the air, the quicker oxygen is delivered around the body, and it's this that makes us feel good." "Which is why the shower is where most of us have our best thoughts." "All this clean air has another effect on the local population." "To find out what, I went to see my friend Antonio." "Antonio, it's raining heavily, I love the sound of this rain." "Y"es, it is beautiful." When it rains it's like music." "When it rains, especially very heavily, you love to stay at home, and a lot of people conceive at this time as I see it." " So the rain brings babies too?" " "Maybe."" "Lots of water babies." "Nine months after the monsoon, the birth rate leaps." "It's an intense period, because in a few months' time those monsoon breezes rushing in from the sea will reverse themselves, leaving just the merciless heat of the sun." "India only manages to hold on to ten per cent of all that rain." "The rest leaves the country by the thousands of rivers and streams that break its shores." "Every second, billions of gallons pour into the oceans to rejoin the great weather-maker, the Thermohaline Conveyor." "The cycle continues, this time back towards the Atlantic." "The warmer surface current takes only 50 years to get there." "This is the same water that fell as rain in the last days of the Raj." "It's about to become clouds in the USA, but this time they won't bring any rain." "This is Texas, land of big skies." "Looking at the crops you'd think, big rain." "In fact, it doesn't rain nearly enough." "The clouds simply don't do what they're supposed to." "In the clouds above the USA and Europe, all raindrops start life as ice crystals." "As they fall, they melt." "But here it is so hot and so dry the rain evaporates before it hits the ground." "The average cloud weighs about 25 tonnes and contains about seven fire trucks worth of water." "Not all of them will actually rain." "Some will evaporate and many last only a few minutes." "Even when there's plenty of water in a cloud, there's often a lack of the vital ingredient to make a raindrop - a little something for the moisture to gather round." "With one corn field requiring 4,000 gallons of water each day and a single cloud containing just enough for one acre, the question is how do you tease the rain from the clouds?" "Science and big business claim to have solved the problem... and they've found the answer in a freezer." "In the 1940s, scientists were trying to replicate the temperatures found at high altitude." "At minus 20 degrees Celsius, the conditions weren't cold enough." "To make it colder, they brought in blocks of dry ice." "At minus 78 degrees Celsius, the temperature was similar to those high up in the clouds." "It was then scientists made a fascinating discovery." "Whilst moving the dry ice into the freezer, they noticed the air around them became so cold that the warm water vapour in their breath instantly froze into tiny ice crystals." "These crystals are exactly the same as the ones that form naturally high up in the clouds." "(EXPELS AIR)" "They are the frozen seeds of a natural raindrop." "They're sparkling and shining." "It's amazing!" "(WORDS ECHO)" "This chance discovery led the scientists to wonder if they put man-made crystals, imitating the ice, into the cloud, would the cloud produce more rain?" "To see if it works, I went to meet the experts." "In Texas alone, they spend millions of dollars a year trying to make it rain." "This is the Hondo airbase, southern Texas." "It's home to a small team from Weather Modification Inc., the biggest company in the rain business." "They've been hired by the local water authority to boost the rapidly dwindling water supplies." "If demand from towns and farms continues at its current pace, some people predict the water will run out in 50 years' time." "Jeremy Price has been flying this beat for four years." "We can keep a storm going about 25 per cent longer, about five minutes - the actual storm lasts about 20 minutes." "What difference would that make to a farmer?" "Dramatic." "We increase the annual rainfall by a couple of inches." "It doesn't seem a lot, but consider the millions of acres." "It adds billions and billions of gallons of water." "(RADIO TRANSMITTING DIRECTIONS)" "(PILOT CONFIRMS)" "We don't do magic." "There's a lot of science behind it." "We're not rain creators, bringing rain out of nowhere." "We seed the rain that's there and make it a little bit more." "Here in Texas, in the afternoon, we get heavy thunderstorms, and we'll go up and fight through the main updraught, as that's where our chemicaliser is most effective." "We'll look for an inflow, an updraught sucking up air and feeding itself moisture." "We allow our burners to produce dust in the air that's being sucked into the thunder cloud." "This seeds and creates the rain." "The burners release a chemical into the air which is sucked up by the storm." "I'll reach across and turn on the left burner... and the burner's lit." "The process is known as "cloud seeding", and the seeds are tiny particles of silver iodide that mimic the shape of the ice crystals." "When these particles are sprayed up into a cloud, water vapour freezes onto them." "They grow in size until they become snowflakes." "As they start to fall back down, they melt into rain." "Even if it rains after the clouds have been seeded, detractors ask if it wouldn't have rained anyway." "The rainmakers are shrewd enough not to claim that their techniques work beyond a shadow of a doubt." "They provide a service that many satisfied customers are happy to pay a fistful of dollars for." "Yet many scientists insist that the evidence for rain enhancement doesn't stack up." "The debate goes on." "But faced with more water shortages, people feel something's being done, whether it works or not." "It's ironic that, trapped in the blue skies above, is all the water they would ever need." "Just south of here, the people of the Caribbean witnessed the deadly power of one of the earth's biggest rain machines." "This one had a name, Hurricane Mitch." "Mitch was born on the 21st of October in the warm waters near the equator." "The sun heats the surface of the sea, evaporating one trillion tonnes of water into the air each day." "Once in the air, where does it all go?" "At about 2,000 feet up, the water vapour cools and condenses back into tiny water droplets." "This is the dew point, it's where all clouds are born." "Each cloud is made of billions and billions of water droplets." "Carried aloft by the rising warm air, they billow upwards." "If the heat from the sea below is strong enough, they grow into massive tropical storms." "The 22nd of October 1998 began as a normal day." "At the National Hurricane Centre in Miami, it was a day they'd never forget." "Out in the Caribbean, a major storm system was building." "It developed quite fast after it became a tropical storm." "For several days, we monitored this cluster of thunderstorms and we knew it would be a threat somewhere in the Caribbean." "In the capital city of Honduras, Tegucigalpa, people were oblivious to the gathering storm out to sea." "It was hurricane season and they were used to it." "(ELECTRIC CRAC"K"LING)" "As it spun towards Honduras, sucking up vast amounts of water, the wind speed picked up." "At 75 mph, Mitch officially became a hurricane." "It was picking up two billion tonnes of water vapour daily, which inevitably had to fall somewhere." "On 27th October, it was business as usual in the capital." "We were in direct contact with the forecast offices in Honduras, Nicaragua, Belize and Central America." "The hurricane was so large, we knew it was going to affect with rain and strong winds all the north coast of Honduras, so warnings were out 20 hours in advance." "The next day, Hondurans began to prepare for the worst." "Out at sea, the warm waters of the Caribbean fuel the cycle of evaporation and rain." "By now Mitch had been rated a category five hurricane, the most lethal on the potential damage scale." "In Tegucigalpa, Pedro Funez and thousands like him were on their way to work." "By the evening of 29th October," "Mitch had reached the north coast." "The destructive power is in the very, very heavy rains, as circulation interacts with a very mountainous land mass - here Honduras, and Nicaragua down here." "It draws in moisture from the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea, from both sides." "The circulation is so large, it's very slow to spin down." "Mitch was so big that while its centre covered the land, its spinning edges sucked up vast amounts of water vapour from the Pacific and Caribbean." "It then poured it straight back down again onto the land." "The real disaster is yet to come in terms of mudslides and the very great catastrophes that occur as a result of several feet of water being deposited over the mountainous terrain." "The water racing down from the mountains was funnelled into the valleys at terrifying speeds, wiping out anything in its path." "Residents watched in horror as friends were swept away, along with whole neighbourhoods." "(CRIES OF PANIC AND DISTRESS)" "In the capital, Tegucigalpa, mudslides washed whole shantytowns into the river." "One of those houses belonged to Pedro Funez." "This is all that's left." "(TRANSLATION) Y"ou could hear people crying."" "People began to scream." "It all happened so quickly." "However much you wanted to take some kind of action, it was very difficult." "We were almost on the edge of the cliff." "I think they died quickly." "When the cliff collapsed, Pedro lost his entire family." "By the 31st of October, Mitch had disintegrated and the remnants moved out into the Gulf of Mexico." "The hurricane is both a miracle of nature and a monster." "When the meteorologist looks at it from afar, he admires it as a thing of beauty." "Many people, even non meteorologists, would say it's spectacular." "But the more beautiful it looks, the more potentially destructive it's going to be." "From the rubble, Pedro was only able to find one body, that of his younger son, Javier." "On a quiet hill above the city, survivors pay their last respects." "(CRIES OUT IN DIALECT)" "Mitch was the most lethal storm in modern history." "Over 7,000 people killed, 8,000 missing and over 12,000 injured." "This death toll ranks with the deadliest hurricanes of all time." "This was certainly a very catastrophic event and one we hope will not be repeated." "An entire country had very nearly been wiped out by one of the most powerful hurricanes the world has ever seen." "When it was over, billions of gallons of water drained away into the Gulf of Mexico." "Having brought destruction to Central America, this same water is about to become a key source of the weather in Britain and Europe." "This coconut could be rolling onto a beach in Cornwall." "To understand, we have to join the most famous part of the Thermohaline Conveyor." "Drawn out of the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico by the Thermohaline Conveyor, the Gulf Stream runs practically the entire length of the North American coastline before reaching out east across the Atlantic towards the U"K"." "It's 10 degrees Celsius warmer than the sea around it, so it heats the air above it." "All that moist warm air is then picked up and carried with the westerly winds to Europe." "Incredibly, this massive river of warm water gives Britain and Ireland the wet and mild climate we all enjoy - so much!" "We've known for centuries that the Gulf Stream exists, because every day the evidence is washed up on beaches like this." "Nick and Jane Darke are professional beachcombers and regular visitors to Cornwall." "After each storm, you'll find them searching along the high tide mark." " Hello." " "Hi."" " "These are seeds we've found."" " Where's this from?" "From central South America." "From one of the rainforests, then down the Amazon into the sea." "The Gulf Stream even brought them a little piece of Honduras." "Six months after Mitch, an enormous number of seeds washed in, particularly on this beach - between 400-500 different species all from central South America on the Gulf Stream." "Everybody's at it." "We get lots of tags from Newfoundland, Canada." "This is from Newfoundland and took 14 months to cross." " You tracked this tag?" " Y"es, it gives the year, '99,"" "Lobster, Newfoundland and the serial number." "From the serial number we can trace the fisherman." "Some tags have telephone numbers so I phone them up and tell them that their gear has come from their side of the Atlantic into ours." "They are all always, absolutely amazed." "What the rest of us want to know is what weather the Gulf Stream will bring?" "It's very cold all day Sunday." "It will be pretty wet across southern areas  but northern parts will be dry, bright, with spells of sun." "For the Met Office based at the BBC, forecasting the weather - and of course the rain - is not easy." "The Gulf Stream is not the only influence at work." "We get reports from some ships and buoys." "We've placed weather buoys out in the Atlantic." "Helen Willetts, an experienced forecaster, explains the other forces that make our weather so wet." "The British Isles, being in the middle of the Atlantic, surrounded by water, it's affected by lots of different air masses that attack it." "Air's coming in from the poles, so that's a cold direction, and tropical continental air from the warm continent in the summer, warm, dry weather." "We get our main weather on this tropical maritime air mass, which is a warm source of air coming over the Atlantic." "No land in between, lots of moisture, thus a lot of rain." "Complicated!" "So how often do they get the forecast right?" "Forecasters aren't always famous for getting it right." "There's a bit of prejudice." "People remember if we get it wrong and don't praise us when we're right." "We get it right six days out of seven, about 85 per cent." "There's always that rare moment when they get it badly wrong." "October 1987 was one of those nights." "Earlier, a woman rang to say there was a hurricane on the way." "Don't worry, there isn't." "Later that night, hurricane-speed winds gusting at over 90 mph struck the south of England, causing serious damage." "Even British skies can produce some world-class weather." "And occasionally some world-class weirdness, as Derek and Adrienne Haythornewhite found out one night at home in Accrington." "It was just a normal night, it was fine." "It was a nice starry night with no wind, no rain." "Then I heard this thudding sound like someone was shovelling up in the garden." "Like that." "Then I went and opened the back door, and to my amazement I saw these giant balls coming from the skies, really fast." "Couldn't tell what they were, too big for hailstones." "I told him it's raining apples or something funny's going on." "They WERE apples, hundreds of them!" "We started to see the garden littered - littered." "Over ankle deep in apples, all sorts of apples." "Not just one type, it rained Bramleys, Coxes, Granny Smiths," "Russets, all sorts, all kinds of different apples." "The only plausible theory about the Accrington apples is that they were sucked up into the atmosphere by the spiralling winds of a tornado." "In the U"K", twisters are surprisingly frequent." "We get about the same as the USA, but ours are small and rarely do any damage." "The increasing amount of wild, wet weather we get is bringing terrible devastation to Britain." "The real danger is not the amount, but the speed it moves." "This is the Thurcross Dam on the Yorkshire Moors, the perfect place to demonstrate that water only a few feet deep can knock you off your feet." "The force of water is always a shock, as this child and his rescuers found out." "What it needs is speed." "Beautiful, isn't it?" "Millions of tonnes of water." "Power waiting to be unleashed." "And they're going to dump it all on me!" "I wondered why there were four divers here, two stunt co-ordinators, safety men, wires and pulleys, and then I saw that." "We've 14 tonnes of water escaping every second." "It's the force of a couple of cars and it will push you over." "Water can turn from nothing to that in a very few minutes." "Trying to fight it is impossible even a metre deep." "Once it gets above your knees, you're finished." "All water needs is speed and volume to have the strength of an explosion." "We're going to prove how powerful shallow water can be on the move." "It only takes an hour of heavy rain to produce a flash flood." "It is this that can wipe out towns and entire cities." " "Good luck, hope you like it."" " Thanks." "It's just started." "Our very own little flash flood." "It looks scary up there, really scary." "It's rising an inch every ten seconds now." "It's really, really hard just to stand still." "I'll try and hold the weight a couple of seconds longer." "I think it's... a lost cause." "It's still only..." "It's only about three or four feet off the bottom, and already our very own flash flood has swept me off my feet." "There is not a chance that I can stand here, let alone swim against it." "It's freezing cold!" "And there's a constant..." "I can't talk!" "It was so cold, all feeling had gone from my hands and feet." "I was amazed how strong the force of three feet of water was." "If this had been real, I'd have had no chance." "The force of water in a river can be lethal, but magnify that a thousand times and apply it to the ocean... and the results can be disastrous, as the residents of Hunstanton on the Norfolk coast learned to their cost." "On 31st January 1953, a severe storm moved in off the ocean and lashed the northern coast of Britain." "It swept round the northern tip of Britain and headed south." "The icy gale force winds grew stronger as they were funnelled into the North Sea." "The sheer force of the wind piled the waters up in front of it, causing it to surge like a bow wave." "Waves of over 12 feet crashed through the sea defences and ploughed inland, smashing everything in its path." "This storm would be a killer, but it would produce a hero." "U.S. Airman Reis Leeming was called in to help." "We arrived on the scene at night and we didn't know the area." "As I looked at the first street..." "They said people were "down the houses" - you couldn't see the houses." "Y"ou couldn't see... all you" could see was this water." "It was like being in the middle of the ocean." "There was water everywhere." "Winds were gusting at over 80 mph, as Reis struggled through the icy water dragging a raft." "I took the raft and went through the gate that was here and carried it all the way back to the house." "I could hear the people but couldn't see them." "These people were on the roof and somehow I got them - and I just don't know how - we got them down and into the boat." "I walked up to this house, and the doorway was open, and I took one or two steps inside and felt something on my leg and it was the leg of a man." "It was a husband and wife," "I found out the next day, an elderly couple, and they had drowned almost immediately the sea wall was breached." "Sure looks different now." "At the town hall, nurse Dot Smith was waiting in vain for survivors." "The first woman they brought in," "I thought, "If she's dead, the others are. "" "Sure enough they were drowned." "Two children were brought in next and I put them all together on trestles close to each other, then the father was brought in." "By the time I got to this area to get these people off, they had certainly been on the roof of those houses since four or five o'clock in the afternoon, and this was like 11.30 at night." "With wind blowing 120 mph, and they were soaking wet, and the rain and the freezing water, it would be amazing to me" ""if all the 2"7"- 30 people" that I got out all survive." "After four hours in freezing conditions, the cold finally took its toll." "I was aware late in the evening that I was freezing, I couldn't move my legs." "I remember thinking, "Oh, boy, you're in big troublel"" "I had to hang on to the raft because there were people in it, and that's the last I remember." "I said to the ambulance men, "How long's he been like this?"" "They'd just fished him out of the water as his wet suit had got torn." "I asked for scissors as we had to cut the legs off the wet suit." "Somebody said, "His legs will have to come off"" "and... that was really frightening." "I thought, "Oh, boy, this is bad newsl"" "Despite his injuries, Reis had rescued 27 people." "A week later, when news of his heroic act had spread, he was in front of the newsreel cameras re-enacting it." "In the days that followed, 60 bodies were recovered." "Thousands of survivors now found themselves homeless." "I thought about these people." "I got a letter from a woman and she said," """Y"ou rescued me" and my two sons that night" ""and we've been trying to find you for 40 years." """Y"ou'll be interested to know" that the two boys..." ""The two boys, one graduated from Cambridge" ""and is a professor there now and the other graduated from M.I. T." ""And is a professor of mathematics at M.I. T. "" "That was neat, you know." "I never did see Reis again." "And I never heard from him from America." "Almost a lifetime later, Dot and Reis are reunited on the seafront." " "Hi there, young lady." - "Oh, my goodness."" " "How are you?" - "Oh, Reis."" " "Oh... a beer belly." - "Exactly."" "(DOT) How long is it?" "'53, when you were 19?" " "A slim little boy." - "A slim little skinny kid."" "I know how skinny, I took all your clothes off." "Y"es, I know and you cut" my pant legs." "And you said, "His legs have to come off."" " "I didn't." - "I thought..." "OK."" "I said, "These legs have got to come off. "" " "The legs of the wet suit." - "Right." "Exactly."" "For fifty years I've lived with that fear." "I've woken in the night and remembered coming to and hearing someone say my legs had to come off." "(CONTINUE CHATTING)" "The memory still haunts the survivors, as does their shock at the awesome power of the weather that night." "Fuelled by water in its many forms, the weather can bring life and death." "Hurricane Mitch washed away an entire country... whilst the Indian monsoon brought the land to life." "The constant cycle of water that flows around and through us fuels the weather that dictates our lives." "Back where we started our journey with water, people here have developed a lifestyle that's almost waterproof." "Bergen - city of rain." "At the TV weather station," "Benedikte's still smiling through the forecasts." "In the town's square, these kids are at the annual rain festival." "The love of a good shower is instilled at an early age." "Life would be impossible if rain stopped play, so they celebrate it." "(SINGING IN NORWEGIAN)" "Today, something's not right - it's not raining." "Such is their thirst for the stuff the local fire brigade have to be pressed into service." "We have a saying in Norway," ""There's no thing like bad weather, only bad clothing. "" "So on a wet day my four-year-old will have a great time." "It doesn't matter the weather, they are used to it." "(CHEERING)" "The key to life in a wet world is to learn to live with it, to love it." "Without water's endless cycle around the planet, there would be no life at all - no weather, no sunny days, no playing in the rain." "In the next programme, I'll take a journey with cold, from the Arctic to the heart of a snowflake." "I'm going to be buried alive, frozen solid and plunged into the lethal white heart of winter, to understand why cold is the weather's biggest killer." "Yet without it we wouldn't exist."