We spent the first part of the 4th of July prepping
for the torrential downpour and thunderstorms that were the outer edges of
Hurricane Arthur. The weather hysterics on TV were calling for one to three
inches of rain. Sandbags had to be
wedged against the backdoor of Silk’s stall so it wouldn’t flood. The ditch
needed weed-whacking to allow the run-off to not pool up in the corral. The
compost pile got tarped otherwise it would get too wet to cure properly. Horses
received a treat of some hay laced with alfalfa that I’ve been saving for a
rainy day. By noon, we were ready for
the worst.
As I sat in my papa’s comfy chair, anxiously watching the
grey sky, I thought about all the huge storms we’ve had in the nine years that
we’ve lived here. I will be the first to admit that I hate thunderstorms. I
grew up outside of Chicago, where the tornadoes flowed by often, and I spent a
lot of my childhood down in the basement waiting for the worst to pass
over.
The first summer that we moved here to New England, my husband was out of
town for almost a month. It was about four o’clock in the afternoon when a big
thunderstorm rolled in, and I ran out to bring the horses into the barn for
safety. Almost as soon as I reached the
house, there was a brilliant flash of white light and an explosion like a bomb
going off in our pasture. Lightening
struck the pine tree between our property and our neighbor’s and it caught on
fire. The current travelled on the wire embedded in the flexible fence of the
pasture down towards the house, shattering the fence post by the gate and snaking like a web into our electric system. It blew out not only the lights
but fried my computer, the coffee pot, the ceiling fan, the microwave and the
television.
My attention was on the blazing pine tree. While my neighbor
ran from her house with a gigantic fire extinguisher, I called 911 and reported
the fire. We live in a land where there
are no fire hydrants, and the rural volunteer firemen have to drop whatever
they are doing and run to the rescue. About ten minutes later, a puttering little
old VW bug made its way down our long driveway. A high school kid in a lifeguard
uniform emerged in his swim trunks, opened the trunk and began donning his
fireman’s outfit. By then, my neighbor
and I had taken care of the burning tree and only the smoldering fence post
remained. Eventually, the rest of the firemen arrived. The chief warned me that
there is a lot of iron in our soil, and that our street had frequent lightening
strikes. He advised that we get some lightening rods for the roof and the barn.
Almost ten years later, and two hurricanes behind us, I can attest that he was
correct but we have never installed the lightening rods. They aren’t
cheap. It’s on my list.
So today, we appear to have been given a lucky pass by
Arthur. In remembering those volunteer
firemen, I began thinking about how we really should also be celebrating
Interdependence Day today. There are also
the volunteer EMT’s on-call down at the local ambulance garage, and the
volunteer aides at my mom’s nursing home. One of the nurses that I know retired recently
after 40 years at the nursing home, and two days later, she began coming back as a
volunteer. We live in a land where people still do take care of each other, but
we don’t hear about it often enough. Mostly, we hear about the arguing and the fighting
and the random violence. Instead of
blowing things up this 4th of July, maybe we all ought to try
hugging each other.
My horses would appreciate that more. They hate fireworks.
2 comments:
That storm last night had my Maggie dog shaking and under my feet all night. I'm hoping with the rain there won't be many fireworks. Stay safe.
I was shaking too - some close calls last night. Yes, let's hope that the rain deters the folks who want to blow things up. But they go on for days and I have a feeling we'll be enduring it all weekend as my neighbors go firecracker crazy.
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