Monster waves slam into UK after US
storm
People watch and photograph enormous waves as they break on Porthcawl harbor, South Wales, on Monday, Jan. 6.
Huge waves up to 27 feet high slammed into Britain's southwestern coast as coastal residents braced for another round of flooding.
LONDON — High winds, waves and tides lashed the western coasts of Britain and France on Friday, flooding seaside towns and low-lying areas.
Wales, southwest England and Northern Ireland were the worst-hit U.K. regions by the latest in a recent series of extreme winter storms. Parts of northwestern France also suffered flooding.
A combination of heavy rain, winds gusting up to 90 mph (144 kph) and exceptionally high tides sent water flooding Friday into several British seaside towns. Some western rivers also burst their banks.
The U.K. Environment Agency issued eight severe flood warnings — meaning there is a threat to life and property — as well as almost 400 less serious flood warnings and alerts. That was down from 14 severe warnings earlier in the day.
AP Photo: Danny Lawson, PA
A train passes along the coast at Saltcoats in Scotland, Friday, Jan. 2014, as Britain is braced for the worst as a combination of high tides, heavy rains and strong winds are expected to bring yet more severe flooding to many parts of the country.
Floods also washed over parts of northwestern France, as heavy rains coupled with unusually high tides left the streets of some coastal towns underwater.
Finistere — a French region jutting out into the Atlantic whose name roughly translates as "Land's End" — was under high alert Friday for flooding. In town of Quimperle, further south along the Brittany coast, shops and homes were evacuated as the Laita River overflowed its banks.
The storm follows severe weather in early December and over Christmas that also hit western Europe.
AP Photo: PA, John Giles
Waves crash onto the promenade between Fleetwood and Blackpool as high tides and huge waves hit England on Monday Jan. 6.