I am amused when I talk to people from various parts of our wonderful country who fear living in other parts of our wonderful country because of various natural disasters. Midwesterners are afraid of California because of earthquakes. Californians are afraid of the Midwest because of tornadoes. I smile and say that I have lived in the Midwest most of my life, but I have yet to see a tornado first-hand. Besides, tornado damage is severe but localized. Earthquake damage is far-reaching. Then there are the hurricanes down south. It's a fact of life that people are never going to be free of the natural forces that abound. I've been lucky, I guess...but I have had some brushes with bad weather, one of which got pretty scary.
TYPHOON!
My family lived in Japan in the late 50s, in Sasebo on the southernmost island of Kyushu. We never gave a thought to earthquakes, although Japan is subject to them. Nor did we worry about tsunamis (which were called tidal waves in those days). But we were also subject to hurricanes. In the Pacific, hurricanes are called typhoons. Each time the threat of a typhoon came around, the Americans always said, "Watch the locals. If they start typhoon preparations, find refuge for your family. Otherwise, don't worry about it." So we did.
We lived in an Americanized Japanese house in a little settlement with other American families up on the side of a mountain, on a street called Yamata-Cho. We would have been out of flood danger there, but maybe not wind damage. One such typhoon warning came along, and we watched as the shopkeepers in the open markets down in the town started boarding up their shops. Dad was stationed on the USS Jason which was on a mission called ComServRon3. (Don't ask! I don't have a clue what that was!) When he got the word to report to the ship because it would be leaving port for the typhoon, Mom knew we needed to find shelter. Dad wouldn't be with us.
I was only 10 at the time. I remember thinking how silly it seemed to send a ship into the ocean during a typhoon rather than have it stay "safe" in the harbor, but I didn't realize that damage to a ship tied up in port was much more likely than taking chances on the open seas. In any case, Mom took us--my sister (15 or 16), brother (4), and I--to town, to the brick Bachelor Officer's Quarters--to sit out the storm overnight on pallets on the floor of the basement. I think we were the only family doing that. Don't remember anyone else there. I DO remember that it was boring. No TV. No radio. No iPods or other electronic devices in those days. Don't recall if we even took games with us. Nothing at all to entertain three children. I couldn't have slept if I had wanted to! We sat and/or laid there on the floor for hours and hours, watching the wind blow just outside the double glass doors leading to the outside. The only visible damage I noted was when one of the outside glass doors broke in the storm. We weren't in danger from it, but I thought it was exciting and scary!
(On a side note, I have to say that I don't know how our mother got through some of those times with three kids to worry about. She called herself a "country bumpkin" and loved the adventure of travel as a Navy officer's wife...but she also had to carry the burden of child care almost single-handedly. The cross-country trips in an un-air-conditioned car, with fueding siblings in the back seat... The times that we arrived at our destinations sometimes a week or two before our household effects did... The constant moves... Amazing that she survived with her sanity intact!)
STRAIGHT LINE WINDS!
Flash forward to when I was a young mother, just getting ready to move into a rented farm house near Pontiac, IL, where my then-husband had accepted a principalship at the local school district. We were preparing the house to move in...putting in some extra electrical sockets in the kitchen...that sort of thing. That weekend, we had my daughter Megan (18-months) and my stepson Eric (about 9) with us. The house was totally empty except there was a Murphy bed on a sun porch where Joe and I would sleep. We had a cot for Eric to sleep on, and a play pen for Megan. We were all enjoying a much-needed night's slumber when, just before dawn, the wind started to howl. I only woke up when Joe left the bed to go hunt for his glasses, alarmed. I told him just to come back to bed. "It's just a little wind." Right then, one of the windows on the porch broke and scattered glass all over the place. Rain was hitting the other windows hard, and that's when the action started. We began to shout at each other to go to the basement. I grabbed Megan and all of the blankets underneath her. We herded Eric down the stairs to the lower level, looking out the window by the back door on our way. Once safely on the lower level, I said, "Did you see that the willow tree is blown down?" Joe responded, "No, but did you see that the garage has collapsed?" Adrenalin was pumping. Megan, a mere toddler, was now awake and thinking what fun it would be to play!
It was all over in a few minutes. When we felt it was safe to go back upstairs, we did so. It was probably 5:30 AM, just beginning to be light out. It was way too early to call the landlady, and no one was going to be able to go back to bed or to sleep, so we vacated to go find breakfast until we could figure out what to do next. The damage on the property consisted of: six trees down, a collapsed garage, broken window, and a hole blown clear through a barn. When we talked to a policemen at the restaurant, he told us that there had been no reports of tornadoes. (And we all know that it isn't a tornado until the National Weather Service says it is! This was 1980, if that tells you anything.) Anyway, I guess that was my first experience with the power of "straight line winds". In time, we alerted the landlady to the damage and eventually drove the 25 miles to my parents' at the family farm before heading back to the Chicago area. What a day!
TORNADO!
My scariest brush with weather, however, came at a time when I was in no danger at all. It was Memorial Day Sunday of 2004. My daughter, son-in-law, and two grandchildren were living at a house on the Friendswood Golf Course just six miles from my house. That day, I was working the Indianapolis 500 with my radio club. At noonish, our responsibilities were done for the day. We could leave whenever we wanted to. One of our club members, who was listening to weather frequencies, reported that our county (the next over from the Speedway) was under a tornado warning. Since we all do Skywarn storm spotting, we thought it was wise to go home. I was ready!
Once I got home, I changed into a pair of shorts, but still had on my yellow Safety Patrol shirt as I monitored our club's repeater for a severe weather net. We had several spotters out in critical areas, one of whom is a level-headed fellow who never gets noticeably flapped about anything. Suddenly, I heard him say to the net control operator, "W9RXR, priority! We have a tornado!" Wow! Bob sounded excited! When he reported the location of the tornado he had spotted, I noted that it sounded close to where my family lived. I had been in phone contact with Megan. In my last call to her, I told her there was a tornado on the ground not far from her location. "What should I do?" I said, "I think you should take cover." When things quieted down on the radio net, I made calls to Megan which were not answered. Then I heard one of our spotters report "heavy damage to Friendswood Golf Course." OMG! My family!
There was nothing to do but rush to the car and head for Friendswood. As I turned onto the road to their house, I was met by a truck turning around. "There are trees over the road. You can't get down there." I thought to myself, "Watch me!" I parked the car near a downed tree and started the hike to their house on a trot. Not far down, I ran into a guy named Dave, the golf course owner's son who was out trying to prevent people from driving onto the course in order to get around downed trees. "What do you know about the yellow house?" I asked.
He said, "The yellow house is fine, and so are the people in it."
"Where are they now?"
"They said they were going to their mother's house." Oops! That would be me!
I went back to the car, turned it around, and returned home, where I was met by Nathan out in the yard, pacing, holding baby Ryan. A shaken Megan was inside with toddler Robin . I said to Nathan, "Thank God you are okay!" His response was, "Yes, but did you see the golf course??"
The tornado had gone right through the golf course. Electricity and phones were out. Clearly, the family would have to stay at my house for the duration, so my brain began to work about what we would need. Nathan and Megan and the children escaped with only the clothes on their backs. Nathan called his folks across town to let them know that they were okay. I headed to the store to pick up diapers and toothbrushes, etc...and food. Nathan's folks came over to hear the stories. I didn't have places for everyone to sleep comfortably in those days, but we managed. The next morning, Nathan was up very early, wanting to go back to the golf course, and Megan wanted to go with him. I watched the children at my house.
Here is the part of the story that I didn't know until after the fact. Megan knew a tornado was in the area. The golf course had an alarm that was sounded in order to bring golfers off the course, but apparently no one paid much attention to it. She was at the back door trying to snare Nathan to come in when golfers began to shout in alarm as they saw the tornado. And that's finally when Nathan came in! They pulled a mattress off their bed, and holding onto both babies and the dog underneath the mattress in a hallway, they listened to the wind howling and the house creaking, and crashes outdoors...and then the lights went out. In short order, it was all over. When they emerged, the house was still intact, but the outside world was different. Lines were down. Nathan decided that they needed to get out of there to prevent potential problems...so they came to my house, escaping from a different direction than the way I had tried to get to them.
The next day revealed 125 trees down on the golf course, one of which was a HUGE old maple just outside the back door of the yellow house. It missed the house by inches. Robin's "tugboat" sandbox was skewered to the ground by a branch that went clear through it, and her Little Tykes playground/slide was nowhere to be found. (Days later, Nathan discovered it, disassembled, in a pile of rubble. It was unbroken! As Nathan dragged it out, I will never forget seeing my little Robin clapping her little hands and saying, "Yay! Yay! Yay!") Remarkably, the electric company had power restored to the yellow house that very day, so the family stayed there that night and thereafter, but cleanup had only just begun. It was a huge task--all up to Nathan, since he was Supt. of the course.
Megan made a stellar little scrapbook of the whole event. (Nathan has it. I sure would like to make photocopies of it.) I hope to God that's the closest any of my loved ones ever have to come to the forces of nature. That one was close enough!!!
So, as our spring progresses and weather abounds, survive as best you can. I'm not worried. My brushes with bad weather have been few and far between. I'd like it to stay that way!