Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2015

Does Praying for God to Protect Us Actually Make Things Worse?


   Throughout human history, our forebearers bowed before God and asked for protection as they headed out, spear in hand, to kill a bear or to cross a body of water on a rickety sailboat. And why not? Our species has always felt compelled to believe in a deity or a higher power. Asking Him to protect us back then was pretty much all we had had in our tool box when it came to preparing for a safe undertaking.

It's also pretty easy to understand why -- before science, before we knew we lived on a round planet -- humans tended to believe in a literal heaven and hell. The sky above was the source of all that is good and holy -- the warming sun, the life-bringing water, the famous "silver lining" on the clouds at sunset.  Beautiful, right? Makes even the most hardened atheist wonder if God really does exist after all. Meanwhile, the ground below was cold and dank, the home of creepy worms and other scary, dirty rodents that would one day engulf our bodies after death. Of course God lived "up there." And the devil -- well, you know (pointing down). But now that we know we live on a tiny round planet circling an obscure star in the far edge of one of trillions of galaxies in the universe -- believing in a literal Heaven or Hell takes more of an act of faith. I'm not even sure which way is up and which is down in our impossibly grand universe!

I've been transfixed and saddened by the two devastating avalanches that have killed countless climbers and Sherpas on Mt. Everest in as many years. Everest base camp is lovingly encircled by Buddhist prayer flags, which are meant to send prayers to God and to the mountain deity with each flutter of breeze, asking for protection as they climb the mountain. The Sherpas say: "We ask the mountain to give us permission to climb her and to protect us as we do so."

Every climbing team participates with the Sherpas in a somber, sacred ceremony before ascending the slopes of the great mountain, asking for protection as the prayer flags flutter and send their entreats up the slope of the Kundu icefall.

Despite the sincere, faithful prayers for protection -- despite asking the mountain to keep them safe --  men were killed. Many, many men.

This morning I read the news of the recent Dauphin Island Regatta disaster in Mobile, Alabama, where 6 sailors lost their lives and many more boats were destroyed or lost in severe weather during the race.

Mobile Bay is where Civil War Admiral Farragut uttered the famous words "Damn the torpedoes -- full speed ahead!" in 1864. Fateful words, indeed.

The Dauphin Island Regatta is a 17 mile sailing race which, in order to complete it, finishes across open ocean. It is advertised as "...a polite dash down Mobile Bay to Dauphin Island, where the party to end all parties is held." Well. Pour me some Southern Comfort and belly up to the bar! Sounds like fun!

I've done yacht racing, and it is not uncommon for races to be cancelled due to wind and weather predictions. Why this race was not cancelled is being debated even as we speak. Everyone agrees that bad weather was predicted.

Several of the entries were Hobie Cats or small sailboats in the 20 foot range. Hobies don't even have VHF radios, let alone sophisticated weather radar mapping or wind speed indicators. And while the press release makes the race sound like just a genteel little get-together of southern gentleman, Dauphin Island is definitely out to sea, and open ocean must be crossed to get there.

I've read that the National Weather Service sent out several warnings before the race start of possible severe weather and wind gusts of 60 knots or worse.

For a Hobie Cat to head to open ocean with this weather forecast would be considered pretty insane by the average thoughtful person.

Now, I've never been to Alabama, but from what I hear, fundamentalist Christianity is very big down there. So I wouldn't be surprised if there was an official group prayer before the race, asking God to keep the sailors safe, deliver them to the finish line, and to provide "fair winds and following seas."

There is one particular verse in the New Testament that is a source of much of this trouble, I think:

"Jesus said: 'If you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain: 'Move from there to here,' and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you.'" -- Matthew 17:20

Yikes.

When I was young I fell into the loving arms of a large, loving church group in my hometown. I accepted Jesus into my heart, and for several years the church, my new friends, the music and the ritual provided a respite from the storm that is "the teenage years." I met my husband in those rooms, and though I have long since left the church, I still enjoy lifelong friendships with many I met there.

Once in my early 20's, though, the steely concrete bunker that was my faith began to crack and weaken. I remember well a specific incident that smashed a hammer into that bunker of faith:

After college classes one afternoon, my friend Debbie-Sue and I were praying together in a small room attached to the main church youth area. There were dozens of kids on the grounds hanging out, reading, playing ping pong, running around, etc. Debbie-Sue and I were enjoying a private prayer session together, alone in that side room, and kids kept running in and interrupting us. After it happened several irritating times, Debbie-Sue and I agreed with a gulp that we would take that leap of faith from Matthew 17 and ask God (with faith much larger and greater than that tiny mustard seed!) to keep the kids from running in and interrupting us for just five minutes. "Lord," we humbly prayed, "we ask you with our sincere faith -- to give us just 5 uninterrupted minutes to pray together, in peace. Since we ask with absolute, pure faith, we know it will be done."

About 11 seconds later, a male friend lurched the door open and burst into the room with an ear-piercing yell. I still remember the image of his open, shrieking mouth, filled with braces as menacing as sharks teeth. He quickly apologized with a shrug before bursting back out the door with a slam.  He had no idea what damage he had done.

I was crushed.

My faith in a benevolent, protecting God was all downhill after that.

I am a Christian, and I try to live life in the manner that Jesus encouraged. I don't know for sure if God exists, but like my wise husband says:

"If I live my life as if God exists, things tend to go well."

My faith is more in a God that fills our hearts with joy and love if we humble ourselves before Him and pray for compassion for others.  But that's about the extent of it.

During our thousands of miles sailing the open ocean, we faced countless dire weather predictions, equipment failures and every other risk you can think of. Never once did I pray to God to protect us.

My husband and I knew that we were completely responsible for our safety at sea. It's Thoreau's vaunted "self-reliance." We alone would make our decisions based on data, facts, and OK -- maybe our gut. And the responsibility of the outcome would also fall solely on our own heads.

Our surviving and arriving safely at our next port was completely up to us. 

Yes, this is a daunting realization -- but it's an empowering one. For it cuts away any fanciful images of a benevolent God parting the Red Sea on our behalf with a gigantic holy hand.

Most of us have today at our fingertips countless ways to scientifically gauge any risk involved in any endeavor. Why do some knowingly cast aside the science and the data and still head to sea or start a high-risk business with a shrug, muttering that it's in the Lord's hands now?

The sad result of this phenomenon is that some people take much greater risks than they would normally, because having prayed ahead of time, they insist that "The Lord will protect us."

Look, I'm not saying that intercessional praying never works. Honestly, I have no idea.

But for me, there is a saying that makes much greater sense, that rings deeply true in my heart of hearts, that I used over and over again during our travels at sea:

 "Pray to God, but row away from the rocks."






Monday, February 24, 2014

Scary Winter in Green Valley Lake



                                              Tons of snow threaten to crush the cabin back in 2007


    We love snow. That's why we moved to Green Valley Lake, CA. At 7,000 feet, some years this little hamlet gets 24 feet of snow.

 But not this year.  It's been weeks and weeks since our last major precipitation.



                                      Well, we did suffer this deluge in early January... :-/


    We're not alone. Major swaths of California, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas are also suffering the same severe drought.



                                       An Eyewitness News truck sits at the shore of GVL,
                                          waiting in vain for a snowstorm to report on...


   In January, there was even a major forest fire on nearby Mt. Baldy -- unheard of in the middle of winter.



                    The view of the freaky winter forest fire from our street in Green Valley Lake

 
       Some meteorologists predict that due to climate change, this may be the scary new normal.

       What to do, what to do? Panic? Freak out?  Neither of those are good options.

        As always, the only viable option is to just settle in and adapt to the new surroundings.

                                Welcome to the NEW winter in Green Valley Lake:



                                             A robin basks in the February sun




                                          Chris takes a stroll in shorts and sandals



           Daffodils, confused by the warmth of the sun, pop to the surface months early



                                 Chris practices the fiddle outside in the beauty of the forest



                                               And me? I'm back in shorts and sandals.
                                                  Sigh. May as well enjoy it, right?


     Lastly, I wanted to share a nature meditation by Trappist monk Richard Rohr, one of my favorite writers and thinkers:


Go to a place in nature where you can walk freely and alone, ideally some place where human impact is minimal—a forest, canyon, prairie, bog, mountain. Tell someone where you will be and how long you expect to be there. Take adequate water and clothing for the conditions.
Begin your wandering by finding or creating a conscious threshold (perhaps an arched branch overhead or a narrow passage between rocks). Here offer a voiced prayer of your intention and desire for this time. Step across the threshold quite deliberately and, on this side of your sacred boundary, speak no words, but only expect!
Let the land, plants, and creatures lead your feet and eyes. Let yourself be drawn, rather than walking with a destination or purpose in mind. If you are called to a particular place or thing, stop and be still, letting yourself be known and know, through silent communion with the Other. Before you leave, offer some gesture or token of gratitude for the gift the wild has given you.
When it is time to return to the human world, find again your threshold and cross over. But now you have learned to expect God in all things.






Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Researcher, storm chaser or thrill seeker?




            Tim Samaras (who died last week) getting up close and personal with a tornado



     Last week, storm chasers Tim Samaras, Paul Samaras and Carl Young were killed on the job chasing an EF-5 tornado in Oklahoma.

    It is evident from the media coverage that these men, and especially Tim, were much loved and well respected in their fields. And it appears that the tornado may have taken a sudden turn to the north, rendering the men unable to escape. It is a tragedy, clearly -- as is, of course, the billions of dollars in property damage and civilian lives lost throughout tornado alley in the past weeks.

  Inevitably, since their deaths there has been much speculation and discussion as to what, exactly, we should call these guys.  Storm chasers? Thrill seekers? Or researchers?

 The day after the tragedy, The Weather Channel insisted on calling Tim Samaras a "scientist" or a "researcher." They never used the term "storm chaser."  They insist that his entire purpose -- his main goal -- was to study tornados and to save lives. Epitaph after epitaph has insisted that Tim continued to risk his life day after day, year after year, in the service of others.

  On the other end of the spectrum, a perusal of online blogs shows that many feel these guys (unfairly, I think, lumping them in with all "amateur" storm chasers) were nothing but thrill seekers who knew the risks they were taking, and whose eventual deaths -- if not deserved -- were certainly not a surprise.

 This is a good time to state the obvious: I'm obsessed with tornados, hurricanes and all types of wild weather.  I love shows like "Storm Chaser" and watch them whenever I can.

 Tornados, and extreme weather in general have it all: beauty, power, tragedy, drama...and if you look close enough, you might even see God.



                        Tim and a fellow storm chaser experience the majesty of a supercell --
                       and the thrill of being so close to such a dangerous force of nature.



  So I get why storm chasers do their thing. Tim Samaras started out as an amateur storm chaser 20 years ago. He evolved into a photographer, scientist, meteorologist, and yes -- TV star -- through his years storm chasing.






               The 1996 movie "Twister" showed the frat-house like environment of storm chasing. They were also researchers...who got their rocks off chasing storms.



  It's clear that storm chasing is as dramatic, electrifying, heart-pumping and even death defying as base jumping, sky diving or any other extreme sport.

  And it's got the hit-and-miss quality of a good Vegas game of craps. They put all their money on the table, point the van in the direction of the highest probability of tornados, take a big swig of Red Bull, crank the Creedence Clearwater Revival, floor it to 90 and let it ride... 

 But it's more than that. It's the silence of the thick, humid air as the immensity of the supercell forms over the prairie. It's the power. And the inexplicable beauty.




                    The terrible beauty of a spectacular supercell rises over the heartland




You're simply not human if a teensy-weensy part of you does not want to be there and see it with your own eyes -- to share the same space of the planet with such majesty and unspeakably dangerous drama.

   So to say that these guys were not in it for the thrill of the chase rings hollow to me. It's like guys who say they read Playboy for the articles. Pleh. Puh-lease! 

   One of the problems with modern society is our increasing inability to see things in any colors other than black or white.  Are the terms storm chaser, thrill seeker and researcher really contradictions in terms?

Why can't these guys have loved the chase, and been drawn back again and again to the majesty, danger, mystery and beauty of these incredible storms? Why is that something to be ashamed of?

 Yes, they did research, they helped pinpoint the location and the direction of storms, and saved lives.

But in the end, they did it for love.

 And there's nothing wrong with that.


                                         "My passion for storm chasing has always
                                           been driven by the beautiful and powerful
                                      storms displayed in the heartland each spring."

                                                                             -- Tim Samaras












Saturday, April 27, 2013

Tornado in the Keys



                            Impossibly gorgeous scene between Key West and Marathon Key


    Our day passage east from Key West to Marathon Key started off beautifully enough, as the photo above shows. Impossibly azure seas and gentle breezes propelled us happily east.




                                                           Happy skipper


    Soon enough, though, the skies darkened and the seas whipped up. Squalls began developing. We continued eastward towards Marathon Key, where we hoped to arrive before sundown. A particularly bad squall formed off to the north. Lightning flashed menacingly. Then we saw this:




                                                Yee- Haw!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


       Fortunately the water spout was at least a mile away and heading away from us. I averted my gaze towards the horizon off our bow and simply said:

 "Just keep on sailing."

 What else can you do, right? Immediately we heard the national weather service warning for water spouts and severe weather blaring on the radio on channel 16, complete with sirens and  scary WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! sounds. Alrighty, then...  Welcome to Florida, which is, I believe, the tornado/water spout capital of the world.

  About 2 hours later, with a sigh of relief we entered the Marathon Key harbor and scored a mooring. The next day dawned a bit clearer, with more settled weather.





The mooring field at Boot Key Harbor in Marathon


There are hundreds of boats moored and anchored here. Many live here year round. 




The cruiser's lounge here sports the biggest and best book exchange I've seen during our entire trip!


I was so hot and exhausted after we hooked up to the mooring that I dove into the water for a quick swim.  As I relished the warm and refreshing water,  our new neighbor at the adjacent mooring casually advised me:

"I wouldn't swim in there if I were you. There are bull sharks in this harbor."




As this National Geographic photo shows, Bull sharks are the slightly smaller cousin of the Great White. And as their name implies, they are not to be messed with.


I finished my swim and casually (yet briskly) climbed up the swim step and exited the water.

We thanked our new neighbor, whose name is Larry, He's on the trawler Sea Horse. Larry, it turns out, is a pretty good banjo player. We wasted no time and set up a small jam aboard Espiritu that night.




We actually played Dueling Banjos from Deliverance. Here in the south.
 In murky, mangrove waters. When in Rome...!    :-)  

We set about exploring Marathon Key. The first thing you notice is the amazing black-headed seagulls which rule the island.



Aren't they beautiful?




We were out of fresh fruits and veggies, so Scruffy's Produce helped us out. 




We saw this sign in a thrift-store window. "All Books $1.00, except Bibles and Physician's Desk Reference (PDR)." Well. I guess we really are in the south now. I can understand the Bibles, but PDR's? Maybe there are lots of folks wanting to look up Oxycontin and amphetamines, I guess? 




OK, I'm sorry. Here's a real fashion DON'T. I guess our hapless first mate here gets extra credit points for the fact that her gigantic visor actually matches the magenta top,  but Lordy.   :-/  Fashion gone wrong, IMHO.




Thunderheads form on the horizon


Captain Chris got another mechanical disappointment when our outboard died on day 2 here in Marathon. He and Larry worked on it for hours, but to no avail. Being very far out in the harbor, we now had no transportation, and were reliant on the kindness of strangers to help us get around until we could repair the outboard.




Meet another new friend,  Lance the salty sea dog. He helped us out and was there for us when we needed him. He's the real deal -- a true Florida man of the sea. 


The next evening Larry arranged for another jam, this time aboard his roomy trawler Sea Horse.
He invited his friend Brian, a very talented local guitar player.




We had a fantastic jam in Larry's "living room" aboard his trawler. Space on a boat -- what a concept! 

The next morning, we were greeted by this little guy swimming past the boat:



Yep. Iguanas swim. I can't help but wonder if they're a tasty meal for the Bull Sharks?


More Marathon Key images:




Well. As if we needed another reminder that we are back in the U.S. of A. We rarely if ever saw an American car during our 17 months in Central America. And we literally NEVER saw a muscle car,  monster truck or Escalade-type giant SUV.  I think we Americans are pretty much the only ones who drive these things anymore. 




We loved this cute little barber shop, but sadly, it was closed.




OK, check this out. I placed my water bottle next to this flying crustacean for perspective. I've gotta hand it to Florida -- after all those months in Central America, who would have thought that my "biggest and most disgusting bug" award would go to the state of Florida. Well done!  I guess our adventure is not quite over yet, eh? 





I loved this. This is an actual front yard (see the yellow home to the left behind the trees). I think life is pretty good here in Marathon Key. 




I love how they built the fence around the palm trees




We took the outboard to a local mechanic to be repaired. 
I loved this shot of Chris --  That's my handsome husband... :-) 


We had a mini-drama here in Marathon, which made the local papers. Law enforcement boarded a rather derelect sailboat here in the harbor with great fanfare and took away the skipper in handcuffs. Turns out the perpetrator had an illegal weapons stash and had threatened to assassinate President Obama. Yikes.




Interesting cloud formation off the stern




Here's something you don't see every day: Tibetan prayer flags strung above an American trawler


We celebrated the repaired outboard by grabbing a meal in a cute little waterfront seafood place.




Look who came ambling right through the middle of the restaurant looking for scraps?




The snowy egret patiently waited while his friends in the kitchen prepared his kibble




From this angle, he looks a bit like Big Bird, doesn't he?




Dozens of mobile homes line the harbor. Beautiful waterfront property, no doubt. But how do they fare during hurricanes? They seem more than a little bit vulnerable, IMHO...




We visited Sombrero beach, one of the prettiest on the island




A trip to Marathon is not complete without a visit to "The Stuffed Pig." Oh, my...




Gigantic sand dollars (courtesy of Home Depot, according to the locals)!




A sign on a locals property warns: "Beward of Attack Iguana."

After our two rousing jams here in Marathon, we couldn't believe our luck when the guitarist Brian invited Chris, Larry and I to a jam at his waterfront home with his friend, Len, another guitarist! Before we knew it, we were in Brian's cozy living room having a whole lot of musical fun.




Music. How fortunate are we? New friends and another amazing evening of fun and laughter here in the Florida Keys. We'll always remember this place.


Well, the plan is to make the one night sail northeast to Miami tomorrow morning. I'll check in online when I get a chance, so give us a few days.


XOXOXOXOXO Liz and Chris



Tuesday, November 20, 2012

The seas were angry that day, my friends...

                         
                                    Seas so angry, even a fake marine biologist would be a little freaked


               Well, the good news is, Espiritu is safely anchored at Providencia Island, Colombia.



                              Heading north from the Canal, we first visited Isla de San Andres,
                                        then our current home, Isla Providencia.


     It´s been a squally, wet and wild couple of weeks since we first left Panama and headed north. We bashed into 10 foot seas and squalls, which have been pretty much unrelenting. Right now, you can practically set your watch to them. They blow through about every 3 hours around the clock.

   What made our passages extra challenging was the mechanical problems which plagued our motor. First we blew a gasket at 2AM in the middle of a squall south of San Andres. Chris tried to fix her, but unfortunately the motor would not run. So we had to sail into the anchorage at Isla San Andres without a motor, in the middle of a squall, in 27 knot winds. No problem! We got her in and the anchor down.

   After buying and replacing the gasket in San Andres, we headed north to  Isla Providencia. As we were again bashing into north winds and taking breaking waves into the cockpit, the fuel tanks got flooded with sea water, so we had to again sail into harbor under sail, with the motor going in and out, this time in pitch blackness and again in the middle of a 25 knot squall. Fortunately our friends on Talaria and Liberation II came to our aid by jumping into their dinghies and leading us into the anchorage at Providenia by flashlight.

  Let´s hear it for the Brotherhood of the Sea!

  Chris has worked very hard finding the seawater access point and has repaired it. So now, we´re waiting out the squalls and storms here at Providencia Island with several other boats. We are all so very tired of the rainy season.

  We´ve been in the thick of the rain, lightning, squalls, waves and wind for more than 6 months. When will it end?  Staying positive is challenging. But we know that the key to keeping a positive attitude is focusing on the little things. Like bacon.


 
                                                              Bacon is good


   For reasons unknown, we were priced out of the bacon market in Costa Rica and Panama.We´re talking $10.00 a pound. Lord knows why -- we certainly saw enough pigs sitting by the side of the road in Central America. Anyway, we haven´t had bacon for months.

  To our happy surprise, here in Colombia, a big-ass package of the good stuff is 5 bucks!

   Yee Haw!

    This morning, as the latest squall rumbled and blew around us aboard Espiritu, I cooked bacon. Amidst the happy sizzling sound, and the tantalizing aroma, Chris and I literally danced and cheered with happiness.

  You know the scene in "Swingers" where Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau are excitedly driving to the Nevada border, and they cry excitedly: ¨Vegas, baby! VEGAAAASSSSSSSSSSSSSS!"




        Well, this was us, except we were yelling excitedly: ¨Bacon, baby...BAAACCCOOONNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!"

  Yes, it had been that long. And yes, it was good.

   I believe it was Bertrand Russell who said that it is impossible to live a happy life without being without something you want. So learning to live without, and learning to make do, has been a big part of our journey so far. And anyway, we all know you simply can´t eat bacon every day, right?





  

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Are you cut out for rainy season in Central America?


                                         A tropical thunderstorm as seen from the space station


     Well, Espiritu and her crew have been in the midst of the tropical rainy season for nearly 6 months now. Without a break, just like the locals.   Hundreds of inches of rain have fallen on us. Thousands and thousands of tachycardia-inducing close bolts of lightning have violently invaded our space.




                                 Yet another tropical weather system looms black on the horizon


  By the way, in addition to ourselves, the tally of our friends on sailboats who have been struck by lightning this year in Central America has now risen to SEVEN.

  We're so ready for it to be OVER.




            I was a big Croc-basher in my former life. But my pink Vans/Croc squeakers have
                              taken very good care of me in these very wet months.





   
                        Just another sizzling, crackling, grumbling, anxiety-producing night
                                             in Central America during the rainy season




       
         This photo of dark storm clouds moving in over Shelter Bay marina shows why none of our friends have been struck by lightning in marinas. The numbers are on your side here. You are surrounded by lots of other targets. At sea or in an isolated anchorage, one solitary mast may be the  highest spot for miles around.
       

           As the last weeks of the rainy season go out like a lion (lightning crackles above and around me as I write this), I ask myself the question:

 Do I recommend sailing through Central America during the rainy season?

 Sigh.

 Well, you already know the downsides. The constant layers of mold which blanket the inside surfaces of our floating home anew the morning after scrubbing her clean the night before. The extreme challenge of living in such close quarters day in and day out,  extreme heat and humidity, wind, waves, lightning and squalls adding fear and arguments about how and where to proceed to the mix.

   Looking at the whole thing as the adventure that it is, rather than a slog, can help.



               Having a sense of community is always good for the morale, as we did on
            election night when 25 of us gathered in the cruiser's lounge to watch the returns.




            And, I suppose, being a Democrat meant election night was good for the morale as well...

       
                                        Bonding with animals also helps:



                       Meet Cooper, the overly-friendly marina dog. He's sweet, but...(and there's no nice way to say this)...he really, really needs a girlfriend. Badly (I'll just leave that up to your imagination to fill in the blanks of this scenario).


  And then there are days like the one recently where we shook off our malaise and frustration with mechanical issues and took off into the rainforest which borders our marina.

                                           This was our reward:





                                          A chestnut mandibled toucan sighting!


       For all of the downsides of these months down here, in the end the huge reward is simply being immersed in nature.



                                            A muddy bog after the days rain



   In the 21st century, the balance has shifted so far that for all practical purposes, nature has nearly completely disappeared from modern society. In modern life, we are completely surrounded by man and his creations.




                                        Great leafy vines creep all the way up this tree


In modern life, nature is but a fantasy -- a dream of the past long gone. But down here, we're literally swimming in it. I have a feeling that after we've survived the rainy season, I'll have the attitude of one who has prevailed through anything hard -- say a triathalon, or childbirth, or obtaining a college degree -- and say yes, yes, YES! It's hard but it's worth it! And it changes you. Forever.

  But first, we must survive the rainy season.  Espiritu's electrical system is repaired, so our plan is to sail North to the Colombian island of Providencia on saturday.




      It's a trip of about 260 miles, which should translate into a 2 or 3 night trip. Looks like we're finally saying goodbye to Panama, our home for the last 5 months. We'll never forget you, Panama.

   Onward!   :-)