Tuesday, October 31, 2023

For Halloween – A Shocking Tale

I am forever grateful to live in Maryland. I consider it the ‘Goldilocks’ state weather-wise.

After five years with too much winter in Wisconsin (at least it was that way 50 years ago) and fifteen years in the sub tropics of Louisiana, I really appreciate four regular seasons. Sure, we get extreme events like 100-degree days and two-foot snowfalls...but...a cool front eventually breaks through the heat and the snow melts away before long. In Wisconsin back then, things cooled off completely and that first autumn snow could linger into the new year...all sooty and yellow in places.

But I digress.

Waiting For the Plow (10 February 2010)

Our cul du sac isolated by 26 inches of snow. To add to the
frustration, it connects to a street that was plowed three days earlier.
At least we didn’t lose power and the fridge was full.

However, ‘Goldilocks’ doesn’t mean perfect. We have thunderstorms and with thunder comes lightning. I’ve noted before that we live in a heavily wooded neighborhood. Sooner or later, A bolt will get close.

7 September 2018. An early evening storm blows through. After enjoying the sound and light show from under the front roof overhang, I retreat to our upstairs bathroom to relieve myself. It is a small windowless interior room with the requisite furnishings. Tub, sink, toilet and no more. As I face the wall, as men usually do at this time, there is that simultaneous flash/boom that we all know means the lightning was very close...plus a spray of paint chips flies at me from the right. What? The chips that don’t hit me make it all the way to the tub to my left.

I thought the house had been hit. I need to see if the roof is on fire...after I finish this business. Not a good time.

The good news – after dressing for rain, I could see that the roof was intact, not broken or burning.

The bad news – a tulip poplar tree thirty-three feet from the house was struck and that strike drove through the tree, crossed underground to the house and blew the paint off the second-floor bathroom wall. In between, it fried the home entertainment system in the room closest to the tree.

The Aftermath (8 September 2018)

Fanned out in every direction from that gash
were splinters from the exploding trunk.

Strike One (8 September 2018)

And that, boys and girls, is why we tell you to never seek shelter from a storm under a tree. If I was next to that tree when the bolt hit, I’d look like a fried porcupine now.

Flying Splinter (8 September 2018)

This six-foot long splinter was stuck in
the fence twenty-six feet from the tree.

      

The paint chip explosion came from around the electric socket and over the nails in the wall studs. Curious that this kind of damage only happened in this one small room (where I happen to be...as if the bolt sought me out).

Scorched Poplar Trunk (6 June 2019)

The following spring, we took down the damaged trunk. Fortunately, as poplars often do, this tree had two main trunks and the surviving sibling is doing fine. Meanwhile, I imagine the path of killer energy shooting from here to the house and what that might have been like for all the poor subterranean critters...moles and cicada larvae and other burrowing beasties.

I still like living in the woods. And it’s even more comforting if you believe what they say about lightning striking twice in the same place...

6 Comments:

At October 31, 2023 4:25 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

My sentiments exactly, Ted! Great area of the country to live!

 
At October 31, 2023 6:52 PM, Anonymous Renee Ripley said...

Glad that heat seeking missle was unsuccessful in his/her quest for my brother in law!❤️

 
At October 31, 2023 7:18 PM, Blogger Ven said...

A near miss Theodore, thankfully. TMI on the loo visit, though.

 
At November 01, 2023 5:55 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great story telling, Ted. So happy it missed you. A house in our neighborhood was hit and didn’t survive. Fortunately a neighbor saw the roof on fire and alerted the homeowners, a family of five.

 
At November 01, 2023 8:47 AM, Anonymous Jack Vest said...

Jo and I had a similar experience years ago when we lived in Baltimore. Our detached garage was struck by lightning and the bolt travelled through the handlebar of my 10-speed bike before blowing a hole in the bottom its small cloth basket. It then punctured the sheet metal of my 1968 Shelby just above the right front tire before exiting out the left taillight and jumping to conduit for the light switch just inside the garage door. The jolt of electricity then sped down 40 feet of telephone line into the house where it blew the phone off the wall into the kitchen.

I replaced the taillight but still hadn't repaired the sheet metal when I sold the Shelby years later. Rather than admit it had been struck by lightning I made up some story about getting shot at while driving in the wrong part of Charm City.

 
At November 02, 2023 3:12 PM, Blogger Ted Ringger said...

Thank you all for your responses. I can count on ONE hand the posts that have prompted five comments. Quite the story from Jack. You win. But I have pictures.
Again, your visits are appreciated.

 

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