“The …[sky] was angry that day my friends.”—George Costanza
It was one of those August days in central Illinois where, weather-wise, anything might happen, except possibly a snowstorm. The recent heat wave seemed to be officially over, but there was lingering humidity with definite warmth still in the atmosphere that radiated a sort of unstable uneasiness.
I sat on the edge of Quiver Lake, an Illinois River backwater, that was half mud flats because of low river levels, a normal August condition. There were shorebirds out there on migration from the high Arctic, replenishing energy levels, resting, and preening—staging for the next big push southward. I searched the birds for rarities, then gradually noticed the atmosphere toward the northwest, across the river valley, becoming a thicker bluish-gray. It looked like it might rain, but I didn’t recall rain in the forecast.
Quiver Lake bottoms with mud flats, seeps, and open water.
After a while, the gray clouds rather quickly changed to a darker shade, and far off in the distance, maybe five miles, rain fell in a curtain advancing in my direction. The radar app on my smartphone showed a small, fast-moving system, denoted by red, barreling toward me from the northwest, and I calculated that it would be directly overhead in ten minutes or less. So without haste, I grabbed my backpack of books, spotting scope, and binoculars, then climbed the bluff side to our cabin’s screened-in front porch.
Within minutes, the storm abruptly hit in all its fury: rain pouring from the sky and blasting in with the wind straight off the lake, lightning, thunder, twisting trees, falling leaves, twigs, and branches. Quite a bit of water shot through the screens onto the carpet and some of the furniture. I retreated further back from the spray and managed to stay dry, being in the storm and sheltered from it in the same instant. But within a short time, the wind visibly lessened and the rain became a light dribble, more water falling from the trees than new rain from the sky. And soon the sun was out again, then hidden again, then out again within the patchy sky. I walked out to the road to watch the isolated storm race eastward, away from the river valley and across the landscape, still dumping rain all the way.
The described storm on August 9, 2023, moving eastward.
Steam rose from the road’s surface, adding to the air’s rising humidity, also giving off the unique odor of cool water dropped on warm pavement. And I was transported back in time almost 60 years as I recalled the exact same smell rising from my Chicago neighborhood’s streets after a short, heavy rain when the sun again reclaimed the day. We lived in a brick bungalow with a small front porch that was sheltered under the same roof as the rest of the house. When a storm hit, I enjoyed being on the porch, but if the wind blew toward the house, the porch was no shelter at all. In any case, I would eventually hear my Czech-born grandmother calling, “Tomáš, come in the house.” But she would prevail only sometimes.
The author's childhood home on Chicago's west side, the mid-1960s.
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In the city, with so many buildings and sometimes tall trees blocking distances, a storm could be on top of you without warning. But at the cabin, along the shores of Quiver Lake, or out at the county road, you can see for miles unobstructed. I once watched a slow-moving system drifting in from the west when everywhere else, the skies were clear. I could see the rain falling straight down below the storm clouds; there was almost no wind and no lighting or thunder. It was a friendly rainstorm, bringing needed water for plants struggling in the usual mid-summer drought, but only within its narrow pathway. When the storm advanced over the lake, I began to see the moving front where raindrops made contact with the lake’s calm surface, and I sat on a log and watched until the rain began to fall around me. For a moment, I thought, Why leave? It’s summer after all. What’s a little water? If I were a kid, I might have stayed, but the adult in me said, Go back inside to the cabin. (It’s not the first time I realized that kids can get away with so much more than adults as far as indulging in unusual behavior.)
Many times I’ve been caught in the rain while hiking on a woodland trail, and I don’t recall ever being in a panic to seek shelter. Water falling on trees, moistening the ground, flowing down ravine slopes; it’s all part of a vast cycle; and being within it seems like the most natural thing in the world. Even with a hard rain and thunder. As for the lightning, if a shelter is nearby, I might be better off following my grandmother’s cautious ways.