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    <updated>2006-07-23T14:04:12Z</updated>

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    <entry>
        <title>QotD: A June storm in rural Illinois</title>
    
    
    
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        <published>2006-07-23T14:01:24Z</published>
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            <blockquote><p><strong>What&#39;s the most extreme weather you&#39;ve been in? A memorable storm? Heat wave? Or something else?</strong></p></blockquote>
 











    

 











    

    
    
    
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<p>


It was about 10 years ago - in the month of June - we were visiting
Drake&#39;s folks in rural west-central Illinois. Drake and his Dad (Jim)
were working in the pasture; my mother-in-law (Lorna) and I were at the
house. Lorna had the radio on so we knew that some nearby counties were
under a tornado watch. But the weather looked fine were we were. I
could see, however, some stormy clouds off into the distance. Since we
almost never get storms in Seattle, I pulled a lawn chair into the yard
and decided to watched the clouds for a while. Meanwhile, Lorna went
off to pick some raspberries.</p><p>As I watched the sky, I realized
that pitch-dark clouds now seemed to be moving our direction. I looked
around for Lorna, but she was nowhere in sight. I looked at the sky
again; the clouds were clearly racing towards us. I decided to go into
the house to check what the radio was saying, but as I came inside, the
electricity went off.</p><p>I
looked back outside. It was now extremely dark. Wild-looking clouds
were quickly coming closer and the wind was coming up fast. Harder. <span class="unmark" id="misspell-0">Unbelievably</span>, there I was on the front porch yelling &quot;Lorna!&#160; Lorna!&quot; - I felt like I was in the Wizard of Oz. And of course, I had no idea what
circumstances Drake and his Dad were in at the pasture.</p><p>Finally
I saw Lorna, running towards the house against the wind. By the time we
both got into the house it&#160; the wind was making the house creak <span class="unmark" id="misspell-1">ominously</span>. At this point, I thought we might lose the house. We
hunkered down in the basement.</p><p>The storm damage was widespread,
but thankfully limited to downed trees and powerlines. Drake and his
Dad had ridden out the storm in Jim&#39;s truck - which they knew was not
the best place to be in case of a tornado - but they really didn&#39;t have
any other options. 
</p><p>
That night, we ate out of cans and played cards by <span class="unmark" id="misspell-3">candlelight</span>. It was a
day and a half before we got power back. On the farm, that means no
water either. But Jim, a volunteer fire fighter, had a new generator he
wanted to &quot;test&quot; at the fire station. So the next day we all took
generator-powered showers.
</p><p>
Jim and Lorna still talk about that storm. In all their years on the farm, they had never seen anything come up that fast. </p>
        
    
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