Showing posts with label Arizona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arizona. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Haboobies! or What I Did on my Summer Vacation

You have to understand that I didn't intend to take two months off from blogging, but it was summer, and the girls were home, and first, I took a few days off, and then it was weeks, and suddenly, at the end of July, it hit me that I had taken a summer vacation... So I waited a couple more weeks, until the girls went back to school, and then another week, for good measure, and here I am, back in your browser, hoping you haven't forgotten that I even have a blog...

Not that the summer was all fun and games.  I do live in Arizona, high temperature capital of these United States, so even before school ended, we were battling the crankiness and lethargy that invades days where the low temperatures start with the number 8.  We did hit record lows this summer... record HIGH lows, as I tried to explain to Fiona.  That means we had a couple of days when our low temperatures were the highest they have ever been; those numbers started with 9s.  We also had (are still having) what's called "monsoon" season here in the Phoenix metro area, which means that it gets humid-- taking away the one advantage we claim: "It's a dry heat!"-- and turning even the sun-baked retirees, who fled here with their aching bones from snow-packed Minneapolis and Buffalo, into whining, sweaty, babies.  During the monsoon, moist, grey, dusty air hangs heavily for most of the day, until the "storm" gathers enough momentum to move across the valley in a dust wall called a "haboob." 












These dramatic pictures I cribbed from the Huffington Post show a 2011 storm, but they all have the same defining features. The feature I especially like is how the girls giggle at the word "haboob" not just when they hear it from the weather people on TV, but for days on end, when they point to each other and say, "haboobies!" and fall down screaming with laughter. You can bet that never gets old...

Sometimes, it actually rains, after some thunder and lightning.  We often get as much as twenty solid 
minutes of serious precipitation, though usually, the rain lands somewhere across town and we only know about it because the evening news shows that people  have palm fronds ripped from the trees and crazy, patio-furniture related debris in their pools.  And, at least once each Phoenix summer, the newscast turns into an awesome action adventure show called "Who Got Stuck In the Flooded Wash?" See, that twenty minutes of heavy precip is enough to flood some of the lower lying boulevards and avenues in town, and drivers know this, because signs are posted in these lowlands with a big red slash and the actual words "Do NOT enter in heavy rain" and everything.  Some people must relish the opportunity to be seen on TV climbing out of the rear window of their floating SUV.  Or maybe they cry "NOT IT" as they start through the flooded area, hoping that will protect them, because, dammit, going around the long way is gonna make them late for that appointment and cost them money...What no one thinks of is the unassuaged scorn of the viewers at home, or bill they'll get from Fire and Rescue on top of the fine from their local municipality.  Oh well, some people just like to throw the dice, I guess... and it does make for some good comedy TV.

When I think about it, this summer vacation was a lot like the ones I remember when I was a kid, except that I had to go to work three days a week, and I never got to go to the beach.  We had some lazy mornings though, and the girls went to fun day camp at the Boys & Girls Club on my work days.  We went to the library and to the dollar movies with friends once a week, and swimming on the weekends.  And we had a couple of days when we all stayed in our PJs all day or closed all the blinds and popped some popcorn and watched three movies in a row. The best thing about this summer was the chance to share the essence of summer vacation, about the absolute value of time spent lolling on the sofa with nothing on the agenda.  There are small windows in life to enjoy low-pressure days.  I think the girls got it, because even though the first week of school was only three days long, they were still looking forward to the weekend when they could sleep late, go swimming, and shut the blinds and watch a movie.  

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Goldilocks Territory


This summer seemed eternal in Arizona, and I've got a gigantic list of things I've been putting off until cooler weather came around.  Like going for a walk or anything else that involves being outside for longer than five minutes. We passed the mark of 100 days over 100 degrees two months ago, but had to soldier on. You know what they say, "everyone talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it." 
This picture is from Deviant Art.


But the hot weather has finally broken here, and I am beginning to remember the better aspects of Southwest living. It especially helps to see snow at the higher elevations in the Rockies already, knowing all the while that we are heading out of our extreme weather as other regions are heading in.  We're still hitting highs of mid nineties in the late afternoons, but the difference between that and highs in the low hundreds is kind of amazing.   It means you can breathe outside in the afternoon without feeling like you are somehow inside a preheated oven.  It is cool enough overnight now that we can sleep with the windows open and feel the natural breeze and listen to people and traffic, rather than the forced air and the incessant hum of the air conditioner.  We're almost in Goldilocks territory:  not too hot, not too cold, just right.

It's not the same the same as autumn in New England, certainly. And nothing makes me wish for the cool winds and turning leaves more that the profusion of seriously cute sweaters and boots on sale at the mall and online.  But there's really no point.  I probably own all the sweaters I'll ever need while even if we live here until I am reaching for a cardigan in the old folks home. And the idea of putting on boots, no matter how incredibly adorable they are, just makes me hot and tired.  It is no small consolation then, that I just scored five pairs of flip-flops and a bottle of pedicure-perfect red nail polish for under 10.00 at my local Walgreen's, because even though we wear them year-round here in the desert, the "sandals" go into the clearance sale anyway.  Soon it will be time to put the blankets back on the beds and stop sleeping on top of the sheets.  We may actually pull out the comforter by Thanksgiving, and then I can enjoy the four or five months of the year that it looks like I really made my bed after I got out of it.  This must be what people mean when they talk about enjoying the natural rhythm of the seasons.  

When I think about the relief I felt when it finally cooled down, I realize that it is very much like the recognition that spring is finally coming back East, when you step out in March or April and feel that the air is soft and sweet, instead of cold and bitter.  Mike said something similar-- leaving the windows open the evenings when he grew up in Buffalo used to mean that summer was finally coming, but here, it means that summer is finally going.  And we don't mind.  

Completely unrelated...
I am happy to say I have a post on another website, The Equals Record.  This is a piece about moving to Maine that didn't appear here originally, so it might be new to some of you.  I have had a couple of other pieces accepted around the web as well, so I will let you know when you can look for those.  For those of you who already followed the cranky link on Facebook, thank you for your support!  Thanks for reading.  I'll be writing more in the meantime.