Tag Archives: Rain

It’s Fall, Didn’t You Know

14 Oct

The rain followed me to L.A. Boulder traded theirs for snow.

Rain

A flood of drizzle blankets the city in a never-ending pelt, cleansing the town of its dry dust; now swiftly moving into the sewers and out to sea.

Other than the traffic, which ebbs even slower when water abounds, there isn’t much that can’t be found in other metropolitans under a downpour – the people running, newspapers above heads, colorful umbrellas, crowds shivering under stoops and covered bus stop benches. However, there is one despotic change – the smell. Some sort of scented emanation has erupted; wherever I am – chugging up along Fairfax, gunning it on the 110 Highway – I am hit with a redolence of rosemary, jasmine and dense earthy dirt. As it happens, everything has turned darker – with the sun no longer shining, the bark of trees soaked to black – and the contrast sets the greenery on fire; the greens greener, the yellow leaves yellower.

This sort of approximate weather change occurs each year; the sudden transition from summertime heatstroke to chilly torrential downpour strikes the line between Summer and Fall, and suddenly we’re swathed in wool coats and cashmere sweaters when a week prior, weekends meant neon bikinis and surfing at the beach. Though the weather is expected to be temporal and therefore hardly marks the Fall season inasmuch as the yellowing and falling leaves in the Midwest. Likewise, it is the beginning of a season that goes mostly unrecognized in Los Angeles – that is, unless a mudslide or fire threatens to drown us in a different sort of downpour.

Despite the decorous scenery and enchanting aroma, which seem to occur on the precipice of any sort of jeopardy (i.e. recent red dust storms in Australia), each weather change invites a new hazard. For those recently travailed with fires, they now face another endemic adversity – that of mudslides. California is indeed a concrete jungle – if the taxes don’t kill you (or the people, or the traffic), Mother Nature might.

Rain Dance

5 Oct

Photobucket

I prayed for rain. I prayed for rain when I came home to Colorado because the stale air in California was starting to make my skin peel. Upon my arrival, the rain came in a downpour. It makes navigating the city a cold, damp endeavor, but the chilly air conjures up lit fireplaces and steaming cocoa, and I’m snuggled in my favorite bookstore, the best whip cream in the world, surrounded by the earthy, flagstone (almost all buildings are made of it here), organically obsessed, city of Boulder. There is no traffic, there is no walk of fame, there are no tourists (well, you can’t tell anyway), there are only the makeup-free faces of incoming freshmen on campus and an abundance of independent coffee shops, bookstores and bicycle repair stores. A relaxing reprieve. I haven’t slept better in weeks.

Daily Photo: It Rained!

5 Jun

@ 7:45 this morning. It poured. Photobucket

Il Pluie

6 Feb

It rains, it pours. We are lucky to feel so cozy inside on a Friday.

Trash City

3 Dec

After two years, I’ve yet to make up my mind about sunny Southern California. Do I like the fact that driving five miles takes me forty-five minutes and that parking means a 20 minute ride around the block? Does anyone else miss the seasons? Meh. It has been a cloudy week, creating the cool winter I remember should exist about this time of year, and certainly it’s welcome. A walk on the beach however, it is not…


..and this is Santa Monica…

But the landscape under a cloudy sky feels immense.

Certainly, my walk to work the next morning was redeemable.

The jury however, is still out.