For those of you who had the great fortune to meet my Dad before he passed, you'll understand when I say "It's a Bob Thing". Dad was one of those rare individuals who had a huge heart, a warm laugh, and deep compassion. (Plus a great voice and dry hands, two of the things that Mom loved.) He was also a true World Class Worrier. (He would sit up until all-hours whenever my Sis or I were out, because he wanted to be sure His Girls got home safely - and this continued until he died.)
Any-who, I was thinking of him over the past couple of days, because there were two things that came up which he truly loved - the need for flashlights, and weather. This man loved good gadgets, and to him a great one was flashlights. I must admit I was remiss in never asking him why - he never used the damned things when he was going to the kitchen in the middle of the night to sneak some cookies and milk. Many broken toes testified to that. But that legacy lives on - there's always one within reach here, and many different varieties (flashlights, not cookies). Small ones for peeking into tight places, and large luminous things that will light an entire room.
He also had a fascination with the weather, which I believe came from his youth when he worked on the family farm. (Yeah, we come by this whole Living-On-A-Farm thing on the honest side - farmers a number of generations back on both sides of the family, but that's another story.) When TV cable came out with the Weather Channel I think he actually used to sit in front of it for hours.
So this week, due to Mother Nature, I was reminded of Dad. The weather totally sucked butt. We had a storm of magnificent proportions the evening of April 19th, to the extent we gathered up family heirlooms and important papers and headed to the basement. I may be stupid and wander around the yard during a lightening storm, but I tend to take Tornado Warnings a bit more seriously. Prior to that I found myself making sure we'd gathered up all the flashlights so we would all have our own personal torch - or two per person, as the case may be. And then, I found myself sitting in the upstairs living room watching the local weather report until the storm hit. LOVE that whole radar thing. Watching the Weather Channel right in front of a nasty weather front, with a flashlight in my hand. Oh yeah, it's a Bob Thing.
We ended up with about 3 inches of rain from that little treat, and thought it was pretty impressive (and muckily annoying), until today. Today's weather, while it didn't include any tornadic activity, did provide us with somewhere between 4 and 5 inches of rain in about 8 hours. We got a few hours' break, and then the next storm started up about an hour ago. I actually went out and emptied the rain gauge (hells yeah we got one of those bad boys, along with one of those nifty electronic weather stations that you can have a separate outdoor thermometer that shows the humidity, moon phase, price of bread - the whole ding-danged thing, a True Bob Thing). The rain gauge only goes to 9 inches, and I didn't want to wake up in the morning and find out it had overflowed and denied me an accurate reading. (Are you sensing a Bob Thing Theme here?)
So here we sit, on our little rise with all the surrounding roads flooded out. Good thing I got these:
Soggily Yours!
Any-who, I was thinking of him over the past couple of days, because there were two things that came up which he truly loved - the need for flashlights, and weather. This man loved good gadgets, and to him a great one was flashlights. I must admit I was remiss in never asking him why - he never used the damned things when he was going to the kitchen in the middle of the night to sneak some cookies and milk. Many broken toes testified to that. But that legacy lives on - there's always one within reach here, and many different varieties (flashlights, not cookies). Small ones for peeking into tight places, and large luminous things that will light an entire room.
He also had a fascination with the weather, which I believe came from his youth when he worked on the family farm. (Yeah, we come by this whole Living-On-A-Farm thing on the honest side - farmers a number of generations back on both sides of the family, but that's another story.) When TV cable came out with the Weather Channel I think he actually used to sit in front of it for hours.
So this week, due to Mother Nature, I was reminded of Dad. The weather totally sucked butt. We had a storm of magnificent proportions the evening of April 19th, to the extent we gathered up family heirlooms and important papers and headed to the basement. I may be stupid and wander around the yard during a lightening storm, but I tend to take Tornado Warnings a bit more seriously. Prior to that I found myself making sure we'd gathered up all the flashlights so we would all have our own personal torch - or two per person, as the case may be. And then, I found myself sitting in the upstairs living room watching the local weather report until the storm hit. LOVE that whole radar thing. Watching the Weather Channel right in front of a nasty weather front, with a flashlight in my hand. Oh yeah, it's a Bob Thing.
We ended up with about 3 inches of rain from that little treat, and thought it was pretty impressive (and muckily annoying), until today. Today's weather, while it didn't include any tornadic activity, did provide us with somewhere between 4 and 5 inches of rain in about 8 hours. We got a few hours' break, and then the next storm started up about an hour ago. I actually went out and emptied the rain gauge (hells yeah we got one of those bad boys, along with one of those nifty electronic weather stations that you can have a separate outdoor thermometer that shows the humidity, moon phase, price of bread - the whole ding-danged thing, a True Bob Thing). The rain gauge only goes to 9 inches, and I didn't want to wake up in the morning and find out it had overflowed and denied me an accurate reading. (Are you sensing a Bob Thing Theme here?)
So here we sit, on our little rise with all the surrounding roads flooded out. Good thing I got these:
Soggily Yours!





