Thursday, December 8, 2016

In thrall of/ to Nature

             After an earlier chide from the gas company about my using waaaay more gas for heating than my “efficient” neighbors, I received another letter giving me a “GREAT” and two smiley faces. I had used 80% less gas this month, only two CCF. “Efficient” neighbors averaged ten CCF and “All neighbors” used 19. My rank—out of 100 neighbors—was #6. ( How were they to know I was gone for two weeks during that period? Ha! Joke’s on them). Their suggestions for energy saving: check air filters each month, seal air leaks, be smart about dish washing—only full loads, use air-dry setting, avoid special cycles like ‘rinse only.’
Happy 54th birthday on December 3 to my second son Eric, a soon-to-retire career highway department employee, who lives in Hot Springs with wife Lisa and daughter Lainee. His son James lives in England AR. Color me proud, proud, proud.
Here are some unusual (to me) facts about weather gathered in one place from my readings over the last few years. Perhaps you will find them interesting, too.
* In January, 2010, the United Kingdom was the coldest in thirty years. The lowest temperature was minus 8.1 degrees Fahrenheit. Norway was the coldest in two decades at minus 44 degrees, F.  [Understatement: “It’s cold. It’s just cold.” ––John Lewis, National Weather Service meteorologist, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, hereafter known as AD-G) article by K. Heard.]
* The “Acqua Alta” phenomenon denotes exceptionally high tides that often flood most of Venice in the winter.
* The 2010 earthquake in Haiti at 7.1 on the Richter scale was the worst in 200 years. [Joe Downey, New York fire battalion chief, describes the earthquake in Haiti as of “a magnitude at least 100 times worse than Katrina. Leonard Pitts, in an AD-G column January 16, 2010, said, “Sometimes, the earth is cruel.”]
* “I’m not going to miss the sight and sound of rain and thunder in February to sit inside a church building and wish I were outside.” – Pat Laster, on a Sunday morning after retirement as the church music director.
* Any time the earth moves under one’s feet, it’s scary.” – Scott Ausbrooks, on Guy’s [Arkansas] several earthquake swarm, October 2010. About 100 earthquakes have been recorded since that September in Faulkner Co (AR)—all near the community of Guy.]
            * Any earthquake less than 43 miles deep is considered shallow.” – Ibid [Unfathomable! That is the distance from Benton to Arkadelphia!]
* “We took on Mother Nature. She threw everything at us but the kitchen sink, from timber, to boats that were sunk, to tree branches,” said George Pavlou, acting regional administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency. “We prevailed in the end.” --AD-G, October 12 2009. [ I doubt that! Perhaps temporarily.]
            * In mid-January 2011, every state but Florida had snow on the ground––even Hawaii.
            * Two phenomena caused the extremes of weather during winter 2011: La Nina and a large high pressure system over Greenland.
            * On February 28, 2011, I actually felt the 4.7 magnitude earthquake, one of the Greenbrier-Guy swarm. First, my recliner shivered, then the strangest sound began, centered in the dining room. By the time I arose, the sound was dying, and I could see the gentle shaking of the dishes in the china cabinets.
            *April 2011 was the deadliest tornado outbreak since March 1932 that killed 332.
            *The Mississippi River crested at 59.2 feet in Arkansas City on April 21, 1927 and in Helena, 60.2 feet on February 21, 1937.
            * Sand boils . . . can cause cavities to form in levees, especially if the pressure on both sides is not the same. Sand boils with sediment seeping is NOT good. Clear seepage is okay.
            *One definition of tornado: “indifferent destruction of the wind.” – S. McCrummen
            I am in complete thrall to/of Nature. We are forecast to be hit with frigid temps from a polar vortex very, very soon. So glad that good neighbors/ friends lit the pilot lights here.








1 comment:

Elephant's Child said...

Nature is a marvel. Beautiful, destructive, and often indifferent to us. I do hope we learn to treat her better though.
And would agree, our prevailing is very temporary indeed. And often down to luck rather than management.