Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Summer Showers

It has been a dry summer.

Oh, they often claim to see "scattered showers and thunderstorms" rolling through- it is the normal forecast, along with "mostly sunny." We hear it so often, and yet see so few of those scattered showers, we now simply glance over the forecast. It's like in Washington, you just expect that most days it might rain. Or be overcast. This summer, you could just expect you would need your watering hose- it was going to be painfully dry today.

So when we heard the same forecast one night two weeks ago, we went to bed, not thinking anything of it. Until 4am, when we were awakened by a "CRRRACK!"

I awakened to a startling peal of thunder that sounded like it was right outside the window. Rain was pouring down outside -the gutters, too full to handle the onslaught, overflowed and water poured from every direction.

Lightning back here is incredible. When we first moved to Iowa, we would get so excited about a storm, watching it move in over the countryside. Far off in the distance we could see lightning that we could not yet hear, and watch the bolts shoot down or sideways through the clouds. I have always loved storms growing up, and these have just been supersized versions of those I expierenced in my youth.

There are storms you watch from the front room, where the windows cover two walls and you can see far across the landscape. But this was not one of those storms. Not at 4am when it was pounding on our roof and ripping through our sky. This was the kind of storm where you sit in an interior room, positive that if you get any closer to the window one of the thousands of lightning bolts will just shoot right in for lack of other places to go.

Our power went out before we woke up, and with such a racket going on outside, we had no way of going back to sleep. Though I could be confident we had no real emergency (tornado, etc), there is just something frightening about lightning hitting your front yard. It's just too close for comfort. Each time I would lull myself to sleep, reminding myself how safe I was in our brick home, I would hear another loud "CRACK". It just wasn't going to happen.

Though we had no flashlight, we were able to easily maneuver down the stairs using the constant strobe-light effect of the lightning outside. It's hard to even believe - but for two hours we sat, feeling as if we were in the middle of a carnival ride where the strobe lights flash on, and then pause for a split second, and then flash again to taunt the young riders.

When morning broke through, the we went outside, breathing in the wonderful freshness rain brings. We called the power company, who eventually found that we had blown a transformer. (Thankfully, we were able to get power back around noon, after they tracked down a new one.) As I watched the day begin to brighten, it struck me how tender and innocent the line of storms looks. Fluffy white clouds nestled along the bottom of a deep blue sky - letting on nothing of the fury raging within.

"Scattered showers and thunderstorms" seemed to be just a bit too mundane to describe this one. Of course, Ryan slept through it all.

4 comments:

Emily said...

Of course Ryan slept. :) Kids seem to be able to sleep through really loud music, too, most of the time. I guess that's a blessing some of the time. Just don't count on him as a warning signal!

Tracy, so good to see you last week and to know that you all are doing well. If I get too bored when my job ends, maybe I should visit!

Anonymous said...

CRRRRAZY!! I love thunderstorms as much as you must have before you saw "real" ones, but that sounded downright scary!

Glad you made it home safely! Already looking forward to the next time I get to see you guys!

Anonymous said...

You know what.........I tend to have a rather shady reputation with my friends out here in WA state......when the thunder starts to roll, the doors and windows go open at my house........I LOVE IT!! (yes, there are those that think I'm nuts) And the fresh smell of rain, I love even more. You never are blessed with a "rainbow" until a storm has passed......... Love you 3!

Anonymous said...

When we spent the summers in South Carolina, we'd often be sweating away out in the fields. Then you'd start feeling a little tingle on the back of your neck. One time Papa said we needed to get up to the house soon, so we dropped our tools and ran to the house. Just as we got on the porch it started to cloud up and then in a few moments it was almost black as at 5 on a winter night. Then as we sat on the porch talking and Papa smoking his pipe, I got that hair raised feeling again and just then a lightning bolt struck the lane about 15-20 feet from where I we were sitting. Ah.. nothing like the smell of bacon on a stormy afternoon.