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> Forecasting the Arizona Monsoon, free-verse (sort of) written for fun
Ali zonak
post Jul 16 17, 14:04
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From: Arizona, USA
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Real Name: Ali Zonak
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Forecasting the Arizona Monsoon

Because he thinks he can, a blind man
climbs Mount Everest, challenges feats
of extraordinary men who had shamed
strong-winged birds accustomed to heights.

On that note, what prompts me
to disregard my cursed affliction,
discard my wife’s objection and climb a wobbly
ladder? Oh, I could tell you about my malady--
But not now, for I must venture onto the roof
and tag the wind--the shifty, shifting wind.

“I think I can; I think I can,”
wheezes the little steam locomotive
that huffs and puffs inside my head,
and I set one foot on the tall ladder’s
first rung. I am on a mission:
to prove the TV weatherman wrong.

“Clear sky, no clouds, no precipitation,
and it’s the same outlook for tomorrow,”
so he said.

Windbag! Liar, liar! I sense rain!
True, “If fleecy white clouds cover the heavenly
way, no rain should mar your outdoor plans today.”
but that “Pretty Weather Boy” is soooo wrong!

Cumulus congestus clouds tower in the south,
the ache in my joints predicts coming rain, and
my ringing inner ear is the barometer I can trust.
But does intuition make me a professional forecaster?
I need data to back up my gut feelings.

Until today, I gauged wind directions by holding
a wet finger into the wind, and estimated
its speed by observing swaying tree branches
and other vegetation. But now—I must mount
an anemometer on the roof.

“Careful! Don’t be a fool,” she says,
but I cast my wife’s valid concerns
into the rising breeze. The ladder
sways beneath spasmodic legwork
of someone who ought to avoid high places.

Now exposed to growing turbulence, on the roof
I am a weathercock turning into the wind.
Even my tallest cypress yields to such strong
persuasion, but this fool resists—and so I sway—
and smile at those first falling raindrops.

(Word from below: “I’m receiving data . . . .”)

“Beam me down, Scotty,” I quip, yet pray
for the agility of a younger man to safely
make my way down— But, if not—

at least there’ll be a record of the force
and direction of those wily gusts
that blew me—toolbox and all—
off the roof.


Note: for the record, yesterday, 7/16/2017, my retirement community received the first monsoon downpour (2.6 inches within 10 minutes) accompanied by 51 mph. gusts that uprooted trees, including my beloved 20 foot desert ocotillo. I'm all right, but will I be able to withstand a repeat of such a storm? charliebrown.gif


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JustDaniel
post Jul 16 17, 16:36
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Real Name: Daniel J Ricketts, Sr.
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This is a very engaging little story, Ali! It certainly grabs the tension of the moments interacting with your caring wife and the uncaring weather!

So your animus for your weatherman caused you to mount an anemometer? That's taking it to an extreme. I'm glad that you got down the ladder. In the meanwhile, at least get yourself a good, durable ladder!

deLighting in your sharing, Daniel sun.gif


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Ali zonak
post Jul 16 17, 19:00
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Posts: 102
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From: Arizona, USA
Member No.: 5,325
Real Name: Ali Zonak
Writer of: Poetry & Prose
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QUOTE (JustDaniel @ Jul 16 17, 16:36 ) *
This is a very engaging little story, Ali! It certainly grabs the tension of the moments interacting with your caring wife and the uncaring weather!

So your animus for your weatherman caused you to mount an anemometer? That's taking it to an extreme. I'm glad that you got down the ladder. In the meanwhile, at least get yourself a good, durable ladder!

deLighting in your sharing, Daniel sun.gif


Hi Daniel;
yeah, when the weather guy--or gals, yak about the very distant airport temperatures, wind force, humidity and dew point, that's when I stand in front of the TV and call him a fraud. It may be bone dry at his weather station but raining here in my backyard while the front yard stays parched. And don't get me started on temperatures that will fluctuate wildly, not to mention wind forces. Yes, weather conditions fascinate me. But does an old codger like me have any business climbing tall ladders? Probably not. It's getting cloudy for another round of wild weather within the hour. I love it. My roof is secure, the air-conditioning is humming--I even have a back-up generator in readiness for power outages. Thanks for reading, my friend. lifepreserver.gif


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~~~~
 
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