Part of my St. Albans, Vermont gardens this morning. At the time they were getting a brief drink of water from a passing shower, which pleased both me and the flowers. |
I've been saying the same all summer, I do realize. Call it Rinse (Not) and Repeat.
I managed to collect just over a third of an inch of rain at my St. Albans, Vermont hacienda Saturday, mostly from one rain band associated with former Tropical Storm Fay, plus one brief relatively heavy shower that happened to luckily bullseye my place early Saturday afternoon.
So it helped, but I wanted more. As I write this Sunday morning, I am getting a brief moderate additional rain shower, so that brightens my mood a bit.
Even so, Saturday evening, I watched longingly as a parade of thunderstorms moved northward through the eastern Adirondacks. The clouds looked thick and rich with rain, rumbles of thunder grumbled in the distance. But no more rain for me, despite the air you can wear feel from the humidity.
At least I was out enjoying my gardens, right?
It was like this through much of New England and northern New York. Some pockets got really nailed.
Flash flood warnings were up early today in parts of the central Adirondacks due to a small zone of heavy overnight rain there. A tornado touched down Saturday afternoon in western Maine, near Sebago Lake. Flood advisories were up for a time near Saratoga, New York Saturday.
Today, the humidity rolls on. The risk of showers, though, is diminishing for the rest of today, but some will still roam around, given the humidity.
More hit and miss kind of stuff will be around on Monday, too.
There is the prospect of a brief break in the humidity later Monday into Wednesday before it gets sticky again. Tuesday night, Burlington's temperature might actually drop below 60 degrees for the first time since June 25.
I don't know what the record is for the longest stretch we've stayed above 60, but we're already at 16 consecutive days through Saturday. That's an unusually lengthy stretch for such warm nights.
Signs point to a return to sticky warm to hot weather by the end of the week. It's unclear if it's just going to be muggy and warm (highs in the 80s) or downright hot (90s) by next weekend. We'll just have to wait and see.
Most of the nation except for the Pacific Northwest is very hot and in most cases humid,. It's been like that for weeks, and this state of affairs looks like it will continue most of the rest of the month.
As we all know, it's an incredibly stressful summer for most of us, given the unrelenting coronavirus pandemic, economic crisis, racial tensions and failures of leadership.
Hot, humid weather tends to make people more stressed, anxous and angry, so this isn't helping. The nationwide heat wave is causing droughts to worsen worringly in some parts of the South and Southwest.
In other parts of the country, the heat and humidity is the spark for destructive storms, bringing pockets of flash flooding, hail, a few tornadoes and the constant drumbeat of storm watches, warnings and advisories. Which doesn't help the moods of most people.
Last evening, after a day at work, I was tense, hot, frustrated and angry, even though I should consider myself lucky I have a job. My gardens did cool off my temper, if not my body, even as I longed for the rain and thunder I was seeing across Lake Champlain from my house.
The gardens do help, and I'm thankful I have them.
I hope you all have a refuge like I do. Or are able to create one. It doesn't have to be a garden, just someplace where you can find peace and forget about everything.
Please find your own refuge from the heat, the storms, and the stress 2020 will forever be known for. You deserve it.
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