With thoughts of fire and hopes for rain
DENNIS McTIGHE
Lots of folks are having a real bad day. Lots of animals, too. Our
faith is being tested, this time by some fools who thought this would
be cool.
We here in Laguna, know exactly what a real bad day is too; 10
years ago today was a rough one for us.
We’re praying hard.
We kinda knew it wasn’t gonna be easy, what with the first hot
October Santa Ana howler since ’93. In 2000, our first Santa Ana
wasn’t until Christmas Day late afternoon, but five inches of rain
had already fallen by Dec. 25.
We’ve had a 10th of an inch since late April, coming in a brief
morning thunderstorm on July 22.
The vegetation grew tall this season, because of above normal
rainfall by 15 to 30% in the fire stricken regions and back in
October ’93 we were coming on the heels of double normal rains for
the ’92 to ’93 season.
By a small miracle, our neighborhood experienced only brief
offshore winds late Saturday night that did not exceed 20 mph, Lord
knows, some loser woulda been out there by the highways with a
lighter or flare.
The last time we had significant moisture in October was Oct. 30
1996 when 1.70 inches fell.
On a lighter subject, certainly taking a back burner in priority
in light of current circumstances, but the surf gods have been very
good to us in October.
An early run of northwest groundswells (good direction) and an end
of the month strong Southern hemisphere have kept a lot of us in the
66- to 68-degree water a good deal of the time.
On Oct. 27, it was 6 to 8 feet at the Lowers and 8 to 10 feet at
the Wedge.
Patricia came and went without even a whimper, we’re 0 for 16 in
Baja swells in 2003.
It’s really hard to write about such frivolities as surf, weather,
etc. when this catastrophe is around us. I don’t mean to be
insensitive, quite the opposite.
Hope things are better next week -- please.
Be bold in prayer.
* DENNIS McTIGHE is a Laguna Beach resident. He earned a
bachelor’s in earth sciences from UCSD and was a U.S. Air Force
weather forecaster at Hickman Air Force Base, Hawaii.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.