When you live in the tropics you experience tropical weather, plain and simple. We live in the tropics. Where we live gets 160+ inches of rain each year. That's a lot of rain. Bear in mind that the majority of that rain falls during the rainy season (June-Nov.) and about 90% of which falls at night.
Seeing that we've lived here now for over 2 months, we'd arguably say that we've seen our fair share of rain.
The one comment that we most often hear from people around here is "are you tolerating those awful storms?" Andy and I never fully understood. We liked the rain, we welcomed it. Every time it rains the air gets cooled down and the heat becomes that much more bearable. If it had been up to us, we'd want it to rain every night. (Though really it pretty much does.)
Well last night, we finally understood what they've all been talking about. Three nights in a row now we've had big storms. The 2nd night included a power outage that had all 5 of the kids awake and unsettled. When we lose power in this town at night it gets black and we're talking pitch-black-unable-to-see-your-hand-in-front-of-your-face-black. When it gets that dark it's hard to move around let alone work to calm the fears of 5 frightened children. Needless to say it was a long night that night.
Thanks to our daughters' homemade rain gauge, we've been able to keep track of the rain here. Over the past 3 nights we've received over 9" of rain. Last night, we got 5" of rain--4 of which fell in about 45 minutes time. We live on the 2nd floor but no one, and I mean no one can do much to prevent 4" of rain in 45 minutes from wreaking havoc. Fortunately for us this was another night in which we found ourselves with a frightened child standing over our bed. As I escorted her back to her bed that's when I realized what the rain had done. It had come up under our front door and flooded half of our living room, hallway, master bedroom and bathroom. So at 1:30 a.m. we did what we had to do. We cleaned up the water. Within 30 minutes we had the water swept up enough to where we felt like we could go to bed. Our neighbors, Peter's family, didn't fare so well. They live on the ground floor and had probably 4 times as much water in their house as we had. It was disheartening to watch them sweep out so much water from their house in the middle of the night. Yet I would consider their house to be one of the more sturdy structures around. Many houses here have openings in their walls as well as where the walls meet the roof--a lot of places for rain to come in. I imagine that there were a lot of people up last night trying to dry out their houses. I also imagine that a few slept through the storm and awoke to even more water to clean up this morning. This whole town will be moving a bit slower today. Nearly everyone will be that much more tired.
After 2 1/2 months of living here we finally seem to get it. Rain can certainly be a good thing but it can also create a lot of burden. It can literally drain you of your energy and leave you feeling depleted. As we continue to pick up the pieces of last night's storm, we certainly won't take the rain for granted. Not any time soon anyway.
I was wondering how Tropical Storm Nate was treating you. I'm glad everyone is safe.
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