Monday, July 17, 2017

Gratitude Monday: Weathering summer

All last week the Metro D.C. area was engulfed in your typical summer weather: temps in the 90s (with no discernable cooling off after sundown), humidity almost the same, and a consequent heat index hovering in the low three digits.

Each morning, when my colleague in the next office, who also came here directly from California, arrived at my doorway, we’d moan about how hot and miserable it is. Because—even when it’s hot in California, there’s almost never the humidity you find here, and you can count on the temperature dropping by 20 degrees at night.

“Eighty-three degrees at 0520 today,” I said on Friday.

“That’s brutal.”

“And 91 degrees last night at 2130.”

“Brutal, man.”

By 1130 on Friday, the heat index had hit 105, and I was already worried about making it home on the 50-minute Metro ride, without anything to drink.

(Yeah, I know—“eating, drinking and smoking are prohibited on any Metro train or property.” But since Metro staff turn a blind eye to it, you see it all the time, especially in the summer. Maybe it’s just the tourons doing it, but I doubt it. Metro staff might step in if families started hauling out their KFC-and-two-litre-bottles-of-Pepsi and handing round the cole slaw to each other, but I doubt it. That train has left the station, as it were.)

(As an aside: Metro would have a better case to make for prohibiting beverages—and even food—on their trains if they could convince passengers that they had a reasonable expectation of getting to their destination in a timely manner, and therefore they wouldn’t feel obliged to provide sustenance for a five-hour journey from Foggy Bottom to West Falls Church.)

Then there was a later forecast for possibly very strong storms moving into the area late in the afternoon, with the hope that at least they’d break the heat spell. Man, it’s always something, eh?

Okay, as I walked the block from work to Metro Center, there were clouds, but no sign of imminent rain. I got on my Silver Line train and started working on some spreadsheets until we emerged from underground past Ballston. At that point, you could see the almost-black clouds blanketing the north and west, and I thought, well—hope it’s not too bad on my quarter-mile walk from my station to my car.

Then I cranked up my mobile phone to check what fresh hell the administration was causing, via Twitter. And when I looked up around Tysons, the rain had started. Back to Twitter and a couple of miles past Spring Hill I noticed that the train had slowed a whole lot, until about a mile before Hunter Mill when it just…stopped.

And the rain was pouring down around the car’s windows in sheets. It was like going through a car wash—absolute sheets. I watched cars on the toll road driving through it with their emergency blinkers going, and recalled rain like this when I drove once from Houston to Lafayette, La. That was so bad that you could barely see the front of your own car, much less anyone in front, behind or on either side.

Must be Metro protocol to stop when faced with this kind of downpour, even though we were on raised tracks, so not really any danger of flooding. After some minutes, the train started up again, and we eased onward toward the final station.

Funnily enough, there wasn’t really any rain falling at the platform (I was in the first car, so no overhead structure), but when I emerged from the station, it was raining fairly steadily. And we were in downpoursville by the time I got home. And it indeed was somewhat cooler than it had been when I left work in D.C.

So here’s what I’m grateful for today: that nature here offers such a variety of weather—sometimes in the span of a few hours. That rain can make you pause and just watch it—even in a Metro train. And that this particular deluge meant I didn’t have to go out and water my plants, so I was spared the swarms of mosquitos that lie in wait for me.

None of this would you find in California.



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