
'He touched me in places he shouldn't have': TOWIE's Ella Rae Wise slams co-star Dan Edgar for 'inappropriate' behaviour 'I get a lumpy throat when I talk about it': Florence Pugh, 26, reveals she and Zach Braff, 47, have split up after parting ways earlier this year WHO will be the next James Bond? Henry Cavill, Regé Jean-Page and Tom Hardy lead favourites to play 007 as Idris Elba 'walks away from talks' PICTURED: Michael Owen and Luca Bish finally meet! Love Island star enjoys dinner with Gemma and her dad during family holiday to Portugal 'What do you do for a living? You were BORN!' Brooklyn Beckham is derided for claiming he bought £1MILLION McLaren P1 supercar from his fledgling career as a CHEF It has noises, smells, dust and mud on the road.' They don't get that the countryside is a workplace, not a holiday camp. Andy Tradesmantrucker (inset) wrote: 'When will people get it, the countryside is not a theme park, it's a workplace.' Sue tweeted: 'This is what happens when people escape cities for the idyll of the countryside. After the latest story was shared in national press, readers shared their incredulity at the incident, with one condemning the man's 'overwhelming sense of entitlement' while others described their own stories (pictured right). It is just one of a host of hare-brained clashes involving visitors to rural communities, with reports of holidaymakers' cars parked in farmers' fields and tourists blocking roads while taking selfies. Twitter users mocked 'entitled townies' clashing with locals in the countryside after a bizarre video emerged of a man marching up to a combine harvester in a Berkshire field (pictured left) to complain about dust, which he said had 'ruined his family picnic'. Pictured today: Heavy rain on the M25 near Swanley in Kent (top left), flooding near Perth station (bottom left), rain cascading down steps at St Mabyn in Cornwall (centre), downpours on London Bridge (top right) and a mudslide on the A358 at Combe Florey in Somerset (bottom right). The Met Office said people living in 'low-lying properties' should make sure their valuable items are 'ready to go', or 'on a higher level of your house'. The London Fire Brigade said people should be 'prepared and know what to do should a flood occur' and 'use sandbags to limit the water flow and move belongings to a higher level'.

The National Flood Forum said a flooding 'grab bag' should contain insurance and other important documents, mobile phones and chargers, emergency cash and credit cards, and any medication or prescription forms. Families braced themselves for traffic chaos and power cuts as forecasters warned of dangerous flash floods - while authorities told people to prepare the emergency bag of vital belongings in case their homes are damaged. Diversions were put in place, and council workers joked they were 'working hard to ensure no chips on drivers' windscreens'.

The A358 in Somerset was closed at Combe Florey after a mudslide last night which saw workers remove more than 50 tonnes of mud and potatoes – and it was still shut this afternoon due to the amount of debris. Firefighters said people should prepare a flood kit, with those living in basement flats or low-lying properties particularly at risk as the heatwave ends with a bang - and up to two inches of rain falling in three hours today. Britons have been warned to prepare a 'grab bag' of essentials in case of flooding as torrential rain and thunderstorms hammer parts of the country today, causing mudslides while deluging rail lines and streets.
