We're right underneath a thunderstorm. The sky lights up and then a beat and a half later the thunder rumbles towards us, crackling at first but loud and bass as it seems to roll over the house, shaking the floors a little, impossibly loud for a second before it moves on. And then the rain batters the windows, the roof. First it was hail, rivalling the thunder, now it's just spilling rain. It all sounds so angry. Impotent raging.
Thankfully, it is impotent here, and the most I have to fear is a wet bathroom floor. Sometimes strong wind drives the water into the roof and it drips down the cord of the fan and pools on the floor. No one's been electrocuted yet.
I go upstairs to watch out a corner of the window, and check on the kids. My boy lies oblivious, snug, after finally falling asleep. Olivia is tucked in, light on, immersed in her DS, throwing me an irritable 'what?' when I check she's ok.
As I look out the window, catch the lightening, I see my neighbour standing smoking outside his bungalow door, watching the sky. The smoke he exhales expands and expands out into the rainy dark and orange night, caught in the house light.
We're storm watching.
I hear hail again. This is strange time of year for hail.
7 comments:
i read your post, thought "that's odd. i wonder where she lives?" and ten minutes later got a fright because the hail on the windows sounded like someone flinging gravel.
I think it was finishing as I was writing, but when I talked to my husband in Deansgrange, it had hailed an hour earlier but the lightening was just starting. It was moving fast because it was right over Bray.
I complain about the rain and grey, but it's nice to get soem non-dangerous impressive weather.
Though, maybe that's actually a shitty thing to say when so many people are flooded out of it at the moment. Hem.
I love impressive weather, too. Us not loving it wouldn't help the flooded people one bit now, would it?
I stood outside watching that storm too, Jo. I love doing it.
If you read this, laughykate, the first flash and bang started exactly as the All Blacks were starting the haka on the TV before the French game. It was very impressive.
ah..you know i love the storms..you know i do..and i wish i had a neighbour like you..or ratrher you as a neighbor to watch the storms together with...:-)
One of my all time favourite things about living near the beach in Holland... storm watching.
I love storms, the windier, wetter and louder the better (I'm still talking about storms by the way).
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