‘You can’t leave home in normal shoes’: Flooding leaves residents cut off

Residents in Burton Joyce are regularly unable to leave their homes without wellington boots after heavy rain leaves part of Whitworth Drive underwater.

Burton Joyce residents claim they have to wear wellies to leave their homes during torrential downpours because drains are blocked.

The corner of Whitworth Drive, which links to Nottingham Road in the village, is often left submerged in water after heavy rain.

Rainwater from a nearby field travels down a ditch along Whitworth Drive, then enters a culvert under the road, where it is released.

Residents living nearby say the drain system “just can’t cope” in extreme weather, and more maintenance is needed on the regularly blocked ditch grates and water pipes.

One couple, who have lived near the culvert for 15 years, say the drain at the end of their driveway is like a “letterbox” and regularly gets blocked with debris when the corner floods.

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One said: “We have floods at the bottom of our driveways to such an extent that the only way we can actually leave is either by wearing high wellingtons or in the car – you can’t walk in normal shoes.

“The water coming down is already bringing twigs and debris, so it soon blocks it. It just doesn’t work.”

The residents said the flooding happens “more than once a year”, continuing: “The way the climate’s going at the moment, we’ve had much heavier rainfall this year than ever before, so it’s going to get worse.”

Her partner said two to three inches of mud are left behind once the water clears, and Nottinghamshire County Council has to clear the street with a tractor and road sweepers.

He added: “When it’s steady rain, I think it’s alright, but when you have a sudden downpour, it just can’t cope; it breaches that culvert.

“That grate [at the bottom of the culvert], the water just bursts over the side, so whether they could raise the banks up? When it gets into the pipe, it’s just not a sufficient diameter to cope with the volume.”

Jillian Archer, 69, who has lived at the flooding hotspot for 22 years, said her husband decided to raise the entrance of their driveway to stop the water that was coming “seven feet up the drive”.

She believes more regular maintenance is needed on the culvert.

Ms Archer said: “The water’s got to obviously come down off the field, so if they put some more barriers or a drain barrier somewhere further up to try and stop it.

“We’re pre-fortified against it with the driveway being slightly higher. If it comes down, we’re out with brushes when it subsides to wash the mud away… we try to keep our own spots clear, but there’s not really much else we can do.”

A section of land in between the junction and the Colwick Loop Road serves as a bund – a mound of earth used to control water flow – where residents say the ground underneath is filled with cages and stone dozens of feet deep to help collect and filter rainwater.

Ms Archer said: “If it did, if that functioned as it’s supposed to do, any water coming down from that culvert would go straight into that.

“When that gets to capacity, it filters it straight off into the dyke across the road, which then filters down towards the River Trent.”

A 466-signature-strong petition was given to Nottinghamshire County Council in September 2025 by Conservative councillor Mike Adams, calling for improved drainage at the junction.

The authority gave its response in March, where a document stated it was aware of the “historic” flooding problems there, continuing: “Following Storms Babet and Henk, works were carried out to clear vegetation, de-silt the watercourse, and install leaky dams to help trap debris upstream.

“The grill is now inspected monthly, as well as before and after storm events triggered by severe weather warnings. The grill is cleared as needed during inspections.”

The council says it will be carrying out a survey on the culvert system underneath the road, where, if it’s found to be working properly, the problems may “stem from water unlawfully flowing” onto the roads from higher up land.

Cllr Mike Adams said: “When kids are walking to school, they then end up walking on the road to navigate themselves through the water.

“So much water comes down. It’s not just a drizzle; it’s a torrent… It spills into the A612, where, if you’re driving inland towards Burton Joyce, the whole left lane gets covered in water.”

Cllr Adams hopes the pipe carrying the water under the road gets expanded in future or that more drains are put along that section of Nottingham Road.

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