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[personal profile] pameladean
I've gotten one or two inquiring emails, so I thought I'd say that Blaisdell Polytechnic is still standing. There wasn't really even any doubt about whether it would be. We didn't get huge winds, though we did get a great deal of rain in at least three installments.

I did not enjoy the storm. I like thunderstorms very well, but we were under a tornado watch beginning in mid-afternoon, and I never like that. I took Ari outside around six-thirty, and it was quite dark already. He pottered around happily for half an hour and then suddenly sniffed the air, lashed his tail, and indicated a desire to go inside now. The sky wasn't the canonical green color, but it looked vaguely curdled, in small swirls of pale gray and dull yellow. There were some thunderheads in the west, underlit by a garish yellow rather than the usual peach. The birds were flying fast and low, making occasional comments.

Inside the house, the weather radio was going off every ten minutes, and it was never us, and then it was. Severe thunderstorm with winds in excess of seventy-five miles an hour. I was just thinking that we should probably corral the cats and put them in the basement just to be safe, when the Civil Defense sirens went. I hate those bloody things. They do not mean bad weather to me; they mean nuclear attack and probably the end of civilization. I hate the sound of them even on the first Wednesday of every month when they are tested, the weather bland as butter, the voice on the radio saying merely, "This has been a test... ." Lydy, hearing the sirens, scooped Ari out of his box in the window and carried him upstairs, where I told her No tornado, and then Raphael, looking on the web, said, Oh yes there is a tornado. Ari ripped a bit out of my shirt and climbed painfully over Lydy's back, but we got him into a carrier. Then Beryl went in to another carrier, protesting hugely. "Sweetie, just calm down," said Raphael, and was not talking to the cat. I hate those damn sirens. Then we incarcerated Jordan, and lugged all three of them downstairs, in between shutting windows and trying to shut the storm window parts of the incredibly stupidly designed and crappily manufactured combination storm windows that the cheapskate landlords who didn't live in this house put on it. Morons.

Lydy had put Naomi in David's room (which is in the basement), and Arwen had been spotted in the basement proper, so we relaxed about the cats. I noted that there weren't any chairs in the basement to speak of, and said that an organized household would bring in its four lawn chairs in weather like this. Lydy said she loved weather and nothing scary was happening right now, so could she go outside and look at the sky and bring in chairs? She did. They were about as wet as a heavy fall of dew would make them. I mopped them off with a towel, and was glad enough to have one to sit in while we waited for the tornado watch to expire. A few flickers of lightning showed through the glass of the back door. David went into his room and looked weather up on the computer. Raphael got frustrated with the weather radio, which has no map attached, and went back upstairs to check the TV. The trees were not tossing in the breeze. The weather radio kept going off, tornado this, severe thunderstorm watch that, severe thunderstorm with dangerous sky to ground lightning and damaging hail, flash flood, severe thunderstorm with damaging winds, go indoors and stay away from windows. I moved the cat carriers away from the path glass might follow coming down the back stairs from the panel in the door. The cats were extremely unhappy and expressed themselves about it quite a bit.

At a little after eight, when the tornado warning was supposed to expire, David and Lydy went out for dinner. David remarked that it used to be that a tornado warning was not issued unless there was an actual tornado, and now one was issued if a storm might produce a tornado, and there were more and more warnings and yet nothing happened.

A few things did happen, most sadly this:

"09/21/2005 0732 PM

Minneapolis, Hennepin County.

Thunderstorm wind damage, reported by law enforcement.


*** 1 fatal *** large tree branch fell on top of victim."

Where I was, it was quiet. The lightning ebbed and flowed; there was a flurry of thunder. Raphael came downstairs to say that the tornado watch had expired and that the opinion of the experts was that there were unlikely to be more tornadoes because the atmosphere had cooled off too much.

We took the upstairs cats back upstairs and released them, and I let Naomi out of David's room.

It was 88 degrees when the excitement began. Now it's 66. The humidity is 96%. I made a late dinner of black-eyed peas with chard, which used up the adrenaline rush and was very tasty too. David and Lydy came back undrowned.

I hate those sirens.

P.

Date: 2005-09-22 06:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] timprov.livejournal.com
He has warnings and watches confused.

And I'm pretty sure there were actual tornadoes in the northern part of Hennepin Cty.

Date: 2005-09-22 11:41 am (UTC)
laurel: Picture of Laurel Krahn wearing navy & red buffalo plaid Twins baseball cap (Default)
From: [personal profile] laurel
I think one difference these days may be that they issue a warning when the Doppler radar says there's a tornado (or extremely like that there will be one). Maybe. I should ask Shaun.

Date: 2005-09-22 06:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kightp.livejournal.com
Oh, dear, I'm so glad you're all safe and sound. Not the sort of excitement one would wish for (although a 22 degree temperature drop doesn't sound bad - I'd have been hot-flashing like mad from the anxiety, myself).

I often miss the thunderstorms of the upper Great Lakes region, but not the tornado bits. Scare me more than earthquakes, they do.

Date: 2005-09-22 10:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elisem.livejournal.com
*hugs you, if you are willing to be hugged*

And Mike says hi.

Date: 2005-09-22 12:21 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I'm sorry to hear about the fatality. Any word on what part of town that was? The storm didn't seem that bad over near Midway/Snelling.

Date: 2005-09-22 12:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skylarker.livejournal.com
Oh; that's me; I forgot to sign in.

Date: 2005-09-22 01:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
Whew! I don't know which creeps me out more, earthquakes or tornados. Probably quakes because there's no warning, and because the house that usually protects you suddenly becomes your worst enemy. But it's close.

Date: 2005-09-22 01:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] inlaterdays.livejournal.com
i'm glad that you and your loved ones (including kitties) are okay. i'm sorry to hear that there was a fatality.

i hate thunderstorms and tornados (tornadoes?). scary.

Date: 2005-09-22 02:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalmn.livejournal.com
i had people over at my house, which helped a lot. we sat around and knitted and crochetted and talked and watched the tv with the sound off.

the last bout of bad storms freaked me right the heck out.

Date: 2005-09-22 07:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yhlee.livejournal.com
I'm glad y'all are all right!

Date: 2005-09-22 08:34 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Vile, nasty, revolting sirens. I think I told you this story once: At Beloit College, the student body was pretty evenly divided between people from the East Coast and people from the greater Chicago area. It was widely observed that one could identify who was in which group when the tornado sirens went off. The Chicagoans headed for the basements; the East Coast residents headed for the rooftops to watch the bombs fall.

--Emma

Date: 2005-09-22 10:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] plaidkatia.livejournal.com
I went to my basement, actually, or at least what serves us as a basement (a laundry room with windows on either side, and the lower half of the staircase with a window at the top).
With my betta (Admiral Horatio Nelson) in his traveling cup, and a Terry Pratchett paperback. My mother, who grew up in tornado country and has been through a few, called me in a panic at around seven to ask me to go down to the basement because of the storm. I say "what storm?" You can tell how engrossed I get in books when I don't notice the sideways rain. I looked at my flimsy-assed apartment building, all the trees in the driveway and side yard, and my side wall that is mostly windows, and I packed up Admiral Nelson and "Feet of Clay".
Of course, the only thing that happened here was a very wet driveway, and the Admiral was upset about having to sit on a basement shelf full of barbells, but at least I finished my book and the weather cooled off.
Glad you/household/cats made it, too. I hadn't heard about the fatality...

Date: 2005-09-23 02:21 pm (UTC)
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)
From: [personal profile] carbonel
I was totally oblivious to the weather until the sirens went off, at which point I went to the computer and checked weather.com. It didn't say anything about a tornado warning, just a severe thunderstorm warning, so I stayed on the main level instead of heading to the basement.

The thunder and lightning, when they finally arrived a couple of hours later, were quite spectacular, but nothing particuarly worrisome.

Date: 2005-09-23 03:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] clindau.livejournal.com
Sirens? There were sirens?

Several of us at the G watched the sideways rain from the lobby before tech rehearsal resumed for the evening. The lobby, with the floor to ceiling glass windows. Sheesh. All that lightning, and no thunder. Weird.

There was a little discussion about what might happen if the power went out, say, in the middle of a complicated elevator sequence. We dug out the extra flashlights and soldiered on.

Nothing like a busy show to take one's mind off the weather.

Cindy

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