Monday, October 15, 2012

News from Western Oregon: RAIN!


Sunday, October 14, 2012

Seldom is rain “news” around here, but after a dry period from July to NOW, we finally had some rain Friday night. Not the huge downpour I was hoping for, but a good steady rain for a while and a few showers. There’s a Sou’wester coming in later today which bodes for heavy rain and considerable wind.

This is the second-longest dry spell in our part of the country in recorded history, the longest being in 1942. We natives have been getting pretty fidgety – they don’t call us Webfoots for nothing. I was so excited that I got up in the middle of the night Friday to look out the window. It was wet, was about all you could say for it. No frog-strangling street-washing puddle-making downpour, but at least wet. I went back to bed and must have been dreaming about rain; because I woke up thinking that I felt raindrops on the end of my nose.

But when I opened my eyes – it was just her Highness, Fiona the Feline Princess, licking my nose. “Oh, hello!” she says. “Are you awake? Then you might as well get up and fix my breakfast.”

 6:30 am. The cat won.

I did anticipate either running out in a downpour to get soaked, or sitting in the van to hear rain on the roof and watch it run down the windshield. I like to watch rain running down windows, but our house has such long overhangs on every side that rain rarely reaches the windows.

But I finally found a video (OK, accidentally) that satisfies my need – or will when the “real” rain starts. Best of both worlds and it’s warmer inside the house.

Monday, October 15, 2012 

The storm failed to appear on Sunday, except for about a five mph wind briefly in the morning. In fact, the afternoon was mostly dry and fairly sunny, although we did have overcast all day.

Today started off mildly enough. I glanced out the kitchen window when I went for my first cup of coffee, and three fawns, just losing their spots, ambled down the middle of the street. Since it had rained again during the night and pretty much cleared the air of the pollution that has been hanging over our bowl of a valley, I finally started the day without sneezing my face off. Which Fiona truly appreciated. I have startled her at times so badly that she ran for cover. Besides, when the sneezing bouts started before I got her food dishes ready, it was gustatorus interruptous, a condition she did not appreciate.

But things changed this afternoon. By 3 pm it was so dark from the gathering clouds that I had to turn on lights. The rain finally arrived. So – although we haven’t had the high winds (which we don’t need, living under large trees) the rain is finally pelting down with vigor, a steady thrumming on the roof (for some reason I’m reminded of a passage in an Oscar Wilde story) and the gutters are (yes!) sweeping colored leaves furiously to the sewer grates, which I hope were adequately cleaned out prior to this. I’m curious to see if the street repairs done by the city will eliminate the “lake” that usually forms at a certain intersection.
A huge tension was growing across the population as the rain-free days passed by without a hint of moisture. Now it has largely dissipated. And my intention of dancing in the rain has also dissipated. I put on some wool socks and I’m watching out the window, warm and dry and relaxed. Fiona is, as usual, curled in a ball on the back of the couch, which is covered with her “VIP” blanket. (Gift from True Value – it says DIY on the other side, which suits her not at all.)

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