As The Pizza Cooks — Episode 17

Today I’ve been thinking about things I’ve said that I never thought I’d say while living in a desert.  I grew up in the SF Bay Area where the weather was mild and it rained in the winter.  Here where I now live in Northern Nevada, it’s high desert which before I moved here brought to mind vast dry, hot stretches of sand, cactus and tumble weeds.

The reality is a bit different.  So here is a short list of things I’ve said since moving here that I never thought would need to be said in my new desert home:

  • It’s too wet to mow the lawn.
  • I think we need another snow shovel.
  • Yes, I’ll need a pair of snow boots.
  • It’s rained every afternoon this week.
  • Unless an earthquake is above 4.0 it shouldn’t be reported in the news.
  • I think that new housing track is in a flood plain.
  • The hurricane path will go just to the east of us.

I know, but when you go to the National Hurricane Center’s website, you’ll see that hurricane Hilary ends as a tropical depression just to the east of where I live sometime tomorrow.  Now we don’t expect there to be much impact on us, just colder than normal temperatures and maybe a little rain.  One thing about the desert is that rain doesn’t really soak into the ground that fast so flash floods are common here when it does rain.

There’s a lot of local press hype about Hilary, but I doubt it will do much here in the north except get us wet and make me haul in a few tools.  Southern California and Southern Nevada are getting lots of rain and I expect to read a lot of stories about flooding in the southern desert areas.  Here I expect to read a lot about how the press is over reporting the event – a common theme on the Next Door social media platform.

There was an earthquake here a few weeks ago.  I didn’t feel it, but there were news reports of it being something like a 3.0 on the earthquake scale. Sorry, but my California brain doesn’t even register that as being important.  When it gets closer to 5 or 6.0 then call me, because then I’ll be impressed about how strong it is.

I’ll just say this – unless the weather, flood, earthquake, wind storm, wildfire or other natural disaster interferes with me cooking a pizza on Sunday, it’s just something to read about before bed.

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About Andrew Reynolds

Born in California Did the school thing studying electronics, computers, release engineering and literary criticism. I worked in the high tech world doing software release engineering and am now retired. Then I got prostate cancer. Now I am a blogger and work in my wood shop doing scroll saw work and marquetry.
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19 Responses to As The Pizza Cooks — Episode 17

  1. Debra's avatar Debra says:

    It’s been a wild ride for us here in SoCal, Andrew, but it passed through. I have never experienced this much rain. And then the earthquake, too! LOL! I think no matter where we live there are going to experience changes that require us to be resilient in ways we barely yet understand.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I had to chuckle over your line that the media overhypes the weather. Ya think? Here they go ape over snow and I want to yell at them, “It’s winter in Pennsylvania, of course we will have a lot of snow!” My wise hubby says the media goes berserk because with news on 24/7 they have nothing else to report on and it’s their job to try to scare the wits out of us.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Glad you will be OK my son will be at Burning Man wonder if they will see any rain to cut down on the dust 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I envy you the rain. We’re in severe drought and half the province is on fire – rain would be a godsend. Ironic that the “desert” is getting more rain than the “raincoast”, but I guess you’re used to drought and fire from living in California, too. 😉 Enjoy your pizza!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Good list of ‘nevers’ Andrew, but I doubt any of us every thought we’d say ‘The hurricane path will go just to the east of us’.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. PiedType's avatar SusanR says:

    Thought of you while looking at maps of storm tracks. Looked like it would miss you.

    Liked by 1 person

    • It mostly tracked east of us, so we didn’t get much in the way of winds, but it did dump a good half inch of rain overnight – which is a lot for here. Looks like we’ve got another day of cloudy skies and then everything is back to normal.

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  7. Good day – we have had a wonderful summer here actually. It has actually been more like autumn on our side of the province. Not too hot. Rained quite a bit, but small doses at a time – not violent. And fortunately, no fires here. The world is definitely changing. You may need that shovel more than you think. 😉

    Liked by 1 person

  8. davidprosser's avatar davidprosser says:

    You have strabgw bedtime reading Andrew. Hugs

    Liked by 1 person

  9. jfwknifton's avatar jfwknifton says:

    I suppose we never know what the future holds for us, do we?

    Liked by 1 person

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