Princes William, Harry sandbag against U.K. floods

2/14/2014
ASSOCIATED PRESS
  • Britain-Floods-14

    Flood waters inundate the area as one home stands alone and dry near the flooded village of Moorland in Somerset, southwest England, Thursday.

    ASSOCIATED PRESS

  • Flood waters inundate the area as one home stands alone and dry near the flooded village of Moorland in Somerset, southwest England, Thursday.
    Flood waters inundate the area as one home stands alone and dry near the flooded village of Moorland in Somerset, southwest England, Thursday.

    Britain's Prince William, The Duke of Cambridge, centre, unloads sandbags, with members of the armed forces,  in Datchet, England today.
    Britain's Prince William, The Duke of Cambridge, centre, unloads sandbags, with members of the armed forces, in Datchet, England today.

    LONDON  — Prince William and Prince Harry helped flood-hit U.K. villagers protect their homes today, unloading sandbags alongside soldiers in the River Thames village of Datchet.

    The princes, who have both served in the armed forces, joined a work crew from about 6 a.m. on what aides called a private visit.

    The princes were not the only royals helping out. Their grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, has sent feed and bedding from the royal farms at Windsor to farmers whose land has been inundated.

    England, which has been lashed by wind and rain since December, had its wettest January since records began in 1766, and the rain has continued this month. Storms this week have brought wind gusts of more than 100 mph.

    Floods have drenched the southwestern coast of England, the low-lying Somerset Levels and the Thames Valley west of London, where hundreds of properties have been swamped after the river burst its banks.

    Another bout of gale-force winds was hitting the country today, bringing large waves and up to 1.6 inches (4 centimeters) of rain.

    Peter Willison of the Environment Agency said today's rainfall would send waters on the Thames and other rivers even higher, flooding hundreds more properties.

    He said it would be “many days,” and possibly weeks, before flooded rivers receded.