I think I know what it is like to have the eye of a hurricane pass over your house.
We had an incredible storm Friday night. It made the national news--650,000 homes without power in Minnesota. The worst storm in history according to those statistics.
The wind was so strong and the rain was blowing sideways--I can't even describe how awful it was but if you've been through it you know what I mean. It lasted for about a half hour.
The damage all around the metro was incredible. I rode my bike and drove my car through my town on Saturday and saw the same thing over and over. Half the houses had big branches down that they were chopping up and putting in piles at the curb. Every street had one to two big trees uprooted, some even more. They were mostly big pine trees that fell. One house on my street had three fall--one on their house. Of all the down trees I saw (maybe two dozen? more?) that's the only one that had fallen on a house, but I know there were many more. The next street over had three trees fall between two houses.
We had a few big branches fall and will lose some shading but are so much better off than other. If our big pine had fallen it would have blocked our yard.
We lost power from about 8 p.m. Friday to midnight Saturday. We stayed out most of the day Saturday. Despite the warm, muggy day, our house stayed cool so it wasn't uncomfortable when we came home. The most frustrating thing was not being able to get our lanundry done.
We're still in a stormy weather pattern. It's nice right now but there is a chance for severe storms and 4" more rain through Thursday. But we're keeping our fingers crossed that next weekend will be the first without precipitation since early April. And I'm not joking--a couple weeks ago on the news I heard it had been 12-13 weeks in a row. Noticed I said "precipitation" because that brings us back to our spring snowstorms.
Too bad ignorance isn't painful.
"Standing at the forefront of human ignorance." Daniel and Jorge Explain the Universe