Tornadoes you say? Yes, tornadoes. Welcome back to Indiana! And a rather harsh welcome back it has
been, at least weatherwise. We haven’t even been here for a
month yet and we’ve already had to deal with two fairly close tornado scares,
the kind where there is definitely a tornado on the ground and heading in your general direction so seek shelter soon.
The first episode was a week ago Tuesday, dinner time, Eric was back
in the UK for work (yes, already), so just the girls and I were home when my
phone suddenly started blaring that unmistakable emergency bleeping that stops you
in your tracks and sends you running to the TV to see what the heck is going
on. Tornado warning. Radar suggests and one has been spotted on
the ground about 45 minutes west and is heading straight in our direction. Lovely!
As we hear the sirens going off, I grab a couple of blankets, put them
by the basement door, find the flashlight and put that and my cell phone by the
basement door, and all three of us put on shoes because, I don’t know, seems
like a bad idea to be barefoot when you are trapped in your basement with your house on top of you. We put dinner preparations
aside, much to Leah’s chagrin because she was hungry, tornado or not. Unlike normal children who get very frightened
during situations like this, Leah gets excited and keeps running outside to the
front porch hoping to see the funnel cloud.
Well, as luck would have it, luck for us anyway, said tornado passed
about three miles from our house taking out most of the goals and garbage cans
on the soccer field we are currently frequenting two or three times a week (they
had cancelled soccer practices earlier so don’t worry, no kids were there),
toppled over some trees, but thankfully didn’t cause much more damage than that
as it was a rather small tornado. Thank
you mother nature!!!
But then came Wednesday of this week, two days ago. About 2:30 in the afternoon I hear the sirens. What the heck? I knew there was a slight risk of storms that
day, but no one said anything about tornadoes.
I turn on the TV and sure enough, another tornado, pretty much due west
of us and again, heading in our general direction. Yippee!
Here comes round number two. But
this tornado warning was a little different than the other one the week before
because, you see, all the kids were still in school and they won’t release them
if there is a tornado warning. Period. End of story. Doesn't matter if there is an actual tornado or just a warning based on computer generated meteorological models. No children are setting foot outside of school until the warning has officially expired.
Ellie was to get out of school shortly.
She was planning on staying after for a meeting anyway, but instead of going to the meeting (which eventually was cancelled because of the ensuing events), she had to assume the tornado
position on the first floor in the 5th grade hallway (her locker
and main classroom is on the second floor).
If I tell you in detail how the next three
hours played out, this would get to be a really long post and I’m not at all
sure you are that interested in this anyway, so to make a long story as short as I
possibly can, after the first, second and then third tornado warnings had expired, Ellie finally arrived home from school via the bus about 1 hour and 45
minutes late. As we walked from the bus stop back to our house with the
neighbor kids, everyone buzzing about the fact they had to stay in the tornado
position for over an hour, my phone bleeps that annoying but very important ear
piercing emergency sound once again. This was tornado warning number four for the afternoon. Now, because of the way the buses run in our school district, the elementary students hadn't even been released from school yet, so this new warning meant that all those youngsters once again had to take the tornado position in their classrooms and wait it out. Did you follow all of that?
Well, by that time, it was well over an hour past when the elementary kids would normally have been released from school, there was now a fourth tornado warning, and I think you can understand that I and the other parents of elementary kids on our street just wanted them home safely and sound with us. So one of the other moms jumped in the car and headed to the school to pick them all up.
Well, by that time, it was well over an hour past when the elementary kids would normally have been released from school, there was now a fourth tornado warning, and I think you can understand that I and the other parents of elementary kids on our street just wanted them home safely and sound with us. So one of the other moms jumped in the car and headed to the school to pick them all up.
You aren’t going to believe this, but when my
neighbor arrived at the school, a 5th and what would turn out to
be the final tornado warning of the afternoon was issued. The school officials made her go into the
school and seek shelter in the nurse’s office too! Finally, about 20 minutes later, she pulls into our driveway with Leah in the back seat. It was well after 5:00 pm. Those poor elementary kids had to sit with
their foreheads to the floor for over two hours! And those that rode the bus home didn't even get on their buses until 5:30 that day.
Now, some of you may be thinking
this sounds like a bit of overkill. Are
the school districts here being overly cautions keeping kids in school until 5:30? Well, maybe, but if you saw the video of the
Starbucks in Kokomo, Indiana, a mere hours drive north of here, being flattened that very afternoon around the time the kids would have been on the bus home,
then no. The schools did exactly the
right thing keeping them inside the buildings where they would be much safer if
a tornado had hit than being on the bus or walking home from school (and in case you didn't see the video, it's pretty incredible but all the patrons and staff inside the Starbucks were okay - apparently they had a really well built bathroom/tornado shelter).
Now, what the heck does this all
have to do with this blog about living in England? Well, for the past two years we never once
had to worry about tornadoes or storm warnings of any kind actually. We heard thunder exactly twice over those two
years because thunderstorms are just not common at all in the UK, and while
we did have a few wind advisories and lots of rain at times, that was the
extent of the extreme weather we had to deal with. But now, back to reality. We can’t jet off to Prague for the weekend
anymore, and we need to watch for tornadoes.
Hmm, can I go back to England now?
I will end all of this kibitzing about the weather with some more photos from the UK that I haven't shared with you yet. Kind of a sharp transition in topics I realized, but
man was it nice not having to deal with this bad weather stuff.
This is the town of Conwy in Wales. How have I not shared this amazing and very
proudly Welsh gem with you yet?
We visited Conwy almost a year ago now, back in September 2015, just after the girls had started a new school year in our little English village of Worthington. We drove to Wales just for the weekend because like I’ve said before, everywhere seems like it’s only two hours away from where we lived. Actually, Conwy was more like three hours, and that particular Friday night it turned out to be more like four hours. We left after the girls were done with school and Eric was done with work for the day, but I think everyone else did too and they seemed to all be heading to Wales as well. I know, a four hour drive really isn’t that long to us Americans, but it is when one of your children gets car sick all over herself in the back seat when you are about 20 miles from the hotel (this seemed to come on quite suddenly and with absolutely no warning), and the paper towels are unreachable in the trunk (or boot as it’s called in the UK), AND there is absolutely no room on the side of the road to pull over because they don't believe in shoulders in the UK. That was a long 20 miles in slow moving traffic with all the windows down as we encouraged her not to move a muscle until we arrived at the hotel and could extract her from the mess in the back seat. Fun times, my friends, fun times. We didn't have tornadoes to deal with, but it wasn't all fun and games while we lived in England.
We visited Conwy almost a year ago now, back in September 2015, just after the girls had started a new school year in our little English village of Worthington. We drove to Wales just for the weekend because like I’ve said before, everywhere seems like it’s only two hours away from where we lived. Actually, Conwy was more like three hours, and that particular Friday night it turned out to be more like four hours. We left after the girls were done with school and Eric was done with work for the day, but I think everyone else did too and they seemed to all be heading to Wales as well. I know, a four hour drive really isn’t that long to us Americans, but it is when one of your children gets car sick all over herself in the back seat when you are about 20 miles from the hotel (this seemed to come on quite suddenly and with absolutely no warning), and the paper towels are unreachable in the trunk (or boot as it’s called in the UK), AND there is absolutely no room on the side of the road to pull over because they don't believe in shoulders in the UK. That was a long 20 miles in slow moving traffic with all the windows down as we encouraged her not to move a muscle until we arrived at the hotel and could extract her from the mess in the back seat. Fun times, my friends, fun times. We didn't have tornadoes to deal with, but it wasn't all fun and games while we lived in England.
Well, our trip to Wales improved
vastly the next day when we arrived outside the great walls that surround the
town of Conwy. Conwy, you see, is a
walled market town, full of cute shops and places to eat, and sitting above the
great wall that encircles the medieval town is a mighty castle.
Conwy Castle, one of the best we visited in
all of Europe, dates back to the later 1200s...
and boy was it fun to explore.
From the towers that thrust up high above the town, we were afforded one
of the most magnificent views we would see in the UK...
the beautiful green hills of
the Welsh landscape...
and the Conwy River which flows right past the castle and empties
into the Irish Sea.
Simply
stunning!
So here you go – Conwy Castle in Wales and the great stone wall that still surrounds the town hundreds of years later.
Looks like Eric took a page from my book. Photographing the photographer, only I'm not really the photographer in the family. He is. But I still like to take what I think are cools photos now and again with my camera phone.
Like this actual 'photographing the photographer' on top of Conwy Castle. Can you spot him?
Like this actual 'photographing the photographer' on top of Conwy Castle. Can you spot him?
I liked visiting Conwy so much that I went
back in June when my friend Anna from Wisconsin came to visit. She wanted to see a proper castle, and Conwy
Castle was the first one that popped into my mind. Not hard to see why, is it.
Look very carefully at this photo. Can spot the King? |
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