6th July 2007

Thunderbolt and lightning! Very, very frightening!

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Okay, so as Singing Bird says, we southwesterners are rather monotonous at this time of year, yapping on and on about the weather, waiting for the rain, yearning for the monsoon season, wondering when it will start, and how long it will run, and how much rain we’ll get.

People in Texas right now must be bug-eyed at the thought of an entire region of the country wanting rain.  I’m sorry, folks.  I know you’ve been drowned to within an inch of your life, that you’re sick and tired of water.

But…being a southwestern gal, I have to dance and sing and spin about with my head arched back, just like a little kid.

It starts with tiny, wispy puffs of cloud.  As you watch, the puffs grow.  They expand.  They get fat.  They tumble over each other.  Go away for half an hour, and when you return, the little white wisps have turned into huge, towering thunderheads with leaden grey bottoms.

Usually, we have a week or two of those leaden grey bottoms producing only skeins of rain, thin veils that never reach the ground.

And then…then the miracle occurs.

WaterFalling from the sky!

Being a born and bred Chicagah girl, there are times when my gut response to the first storms of monsoon season is just…totally incomprehensible.  After all, Chicago has one of the largest bodies of fresh water in the world.  You dig a hole in the ground, and if you’re too close to the lake, you only have to dig about five feet before water starts showing up.  And, of course, it rains–wonderful, fierce midwestern storms, where you can feel the cold front passing through as the deciduous trees bend down before the wind.  The idea of just getting incoherently excited by water!  Falling from the sky! is bewildering to the Chicagah girl in me.

But there it is.

And there it was, today.  Rain.  Blessing of moisture, falling down on upturned faces in the office parking lot.  Sharp scent of hot rock and sun-warmed pines being touched by H2O.  Electrical excitement of watching the lightning sizzle between cloud and ground, and between cloud A and cloud B.

Alas, it wasn’t really much rain.  I think we managed a total of about .2 inches.  Enough to cause the aforementioned excitement, but not enough to really do diddley in the tinder-dry forest.

Last year, in June, there was a large fire in Way Cool Creek Canyon, to the west of Mills Park, the less hippy-dippy forest enclave to the south of us.  Fifteen miles away as the crow flies, but separated from us by the canyon, and by a highway.

Today’s storms brought our usual dozen or so fires started by lightning, the majority of them extinguished by hyper-vigilant firemen and women who are strung to the edge by the constant worry–”Is this the killer fire of the year?”  One of those fires, however, took hold.  Between, oh, 3 p.m. and 8 p.m., it had grown to (at least) 350 acres.  This fire is to the east of Mills Park, on our side of the highway.  It certainly didn’t look to be a mere 350 acres to me as I drove down the highway to deposit the dotter with OmegaGranny.  And driving back through the darkness, at one or two exits on the highway, it looked like the fire was right there, the red glow silhouetting ponderosas, highlighted by yellower spots here and there, and drifts of smoke.

So, a message to the karma gods:  I don’t really want the house to burn down.  I was just saying it.  ‘Kay?

There are currently 7 responses to “Thunderbolt and lightning! Very, very frightening!”

  1. 1 On July 7th, 2007, Kirstin said:

    LOL, whereabouts in Alaska are you moving to? If its anywhere along the southeast coast, you’ll get very well acquainted with the water again.

  2. 2 On July 7th, 2007, Julie Pippert said:

    TAKE IT!

    TAKE IT ALL!

    ALL THE RAIN…it’s ALL YOURS!!!

    We’re are mildewed away here; the children have gone cabin fever mad and I’ve been driven stark raving nutters.

    I guess on the flip side, my blogging is good and steady.

    Make sure to knock on some wood too. ;)

  3. 3 On July 7th, 2007, GrannyJ said:

    Julie — we’ll take it! Every last drop. Every gallon behind your damns. You can redirect your rivers while you’re at it!

  4. 4 On July 7th, 2007, SBird said:

    Okay, so y’all have had the rain, and Atomic Mama down in Old Pueblo town has had the rain, and here? Nada.

    That fire sounded very scary.

  5. 5 On July 9th, 2007, VinegarMartinis said:

    Wait - water falls from the sky? What kind of magic do you have out in the Southwest to make this happen? Must be the same magic that allows only crabgrass and kudzu to survive this drought in Georgia!

    Send me some of this magic water from the sky, please!!!

  6. 6 On July 9th, 2007, figlet said:

    Does everything start blooming like crazy after the rain? If so, please post a picture. That is if you aren’t too busy packing….

  7. 7 On July 11th, 2007, omegamom said:

    Kirstin–We’ll be in “South Central Alaska”; interestingly, it gets *less* precipitation there than we have here! On the other hand, San Francisco also gets less precipitation than we do…it’s nature’s constant mist and drizzle approach. So, yes, we’ll get accustomed to rain again!

    Julie–I’d be glad to steal your rain away. Really! Truly! If I could wave a magic wand and move that low to the west, I’d do it in a flash.

    SBird–The fire has grown to about 2,500 acres, but the fire-folk seem pretty nonchalant about it at this point; it’s 50% contained, and the humidity and cool temps have kept it pretty tame.

    Ms. VM–It just doesn’t seem possible to put the words “drought” and “Georgia” into the same sentence. I hope y’all get some moisture soon!

    Figlet–As I said, things do start blooming like crazy (and growing like crazy) once the rains really start, but so far we really haven’t had diddley…My reported .2 inches was actually .02; I had misread the graph. Today we had some, but not enough, no way.

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