When I was a kid -- say in the age range of Sparrow (almost 7) or Primrose (7) or Snowdrop (10), my school days (and therefore the month of May) were in New York City and I cared not at all about the weather. If a day was beautiful, I didn't notice it. If it rained -- I suppose I got wet coming home from school. Summers of course were different. I was either away at camp or at my grandparents' home in rural Poland and the weather set each day's agenda. But I never knew what was coming! No TV meant no tracking of a forecast. My grandma would get the Polish newspaper and I suppose there was some rough prediction of what would take place in the week ahead, but I wouldn't have looked at it, or asked her to tell me the forecast. The way we judged weather was to look outside at the sky.
I ask myself -- when did I become so tuned to (my daughters would say obsessed with) meteorological forecasts? Was it a maternal instinct that had me pay attention so I could protect my kids from adverse conditions? Was it gardening, because May frost, May drought, May storms -- these are important to take note of in your planting schedule? Or was it my frequent travels (because I had to pack accordingly)? Maybe all of it. Fact is, I track weather more than I track the stock market. (One influences my day's activities, the other -- my retirement.) I check on what's coming each day, each week, and even the week after. And I take seriously predictions of storms. And because my daughters are more relaxed about the whole thing, I make sure to send texts and reminders if I think a strong system is about to descend on us.
Oftentimes, the threatening whether does no materialize. It goes somewhere else, or disappears inexplicably from the forecast. One minute I see a 95% chance of storms with possible tornadoes, and the next, we're down to 71% and there's no mention of tornadoes. This is of course good news, but it does mean that over time, I lose credibility with all my warnings and precautionary suggestions. I remember a few weeks back texting my daughter, warning her that she should ready for an evening in the basement, with maybe the kids' favorite stuffies for comfort and passports placed downstairs for safekeeping (because these days citizenship seems to be an all important marker of friend or foe in our country). Not only did the storms never come, but in fact we got not a drop of rain. Which is fine, though I'm sure my girl rolled her eyes at this morning's message from me, because experience has shown her that... I... can... be... very... wrong.
And still, I continue to watch, monitor, and spread the word when I think storms are brewing.
* * *
I get up early. Ed is going off to work more on the machining project and I want to have breakfast with him, so it's early or not at all.
(Morning walk: it's still about lilacs, though I see one of the clematis vines starting to bloom; white flowers, big, bold and beautiful)


(breakfast on the porch)

And then I study the weather maps. With strong storms predicted for the end of the school day, I send a message that I can't be the one doing the pickup of the two older kids. I don't want them to count on me and then have me not show up because we have a tornado warning. (The parents live close to the school, I do not.)
This leaves me with a very quiet day. Cats are sleeping, Ed's away. I listen to the wind. It's strong! And yes, it is hot, but the breezes are significant enough to move air around so I don't feel the mugginess that was with us yesterday.
I work the flower fields. Weeds have been awful this year. Who knows why -- the soil is dry, you'd think they'd slow down, but no!
But it's not all garden work: I take out my bike and do our regular old 40 minute loop. I cant let that kind of activity slide! Gardening is hard work and as a result, I pass on stuff that normally fills our days -- walks, rides, leg movement! Today, I'm back in the saddle.

And then I come inside and wait for the storms to come barreling down on us. And when they don't come at 3 and Ed returns from his machining project, I bravely go with him to our local market. I need good asparagus! (There is no good asparagus. But we do take some rhubarb over to the bakers. We have a lot of rhubarb.)
On the drive home I think -- last week we saw a sandhill crane family crossing the road here.
Wait, who is that? Same family??
What are the chances...

Of course, it turns out no bravery was required for the market trip. The storm that came our way once we returned home was short-lived and inconsequential. The flower fields are still thirsty, but on the upside, there is no damage in Madison from the high winds, the hail was (only) pea sized, and no tornadoes touched down here. We surely ducked that one! I am really, really grateful.
with love...