In Like a Lion, Out like A….
Been reading via the ABQJournal that April has been a rather windy month for my Fair New Mexico.
Or as my NM friend Natalie so eloquently put it on Twitter: “Life’s glitter just fell off…it’s so damned windy, dusty, smoky here!”
Indeed. The glitter not only fell off, it was sandblasted away.
In an article today regarding education cuts in New Mexico, Leslie Linthicum says:
“I’ve been thinking about the wind lately. And by thinking about the wind, I mean hating it…”
Leslie posits that the wind makes everyone a little bit nutty:
“In addition to picking up tons of grit and garbage from the Arizona state line and moving it over to the Texas state line and then moving it all back again, the wind makes people nuts.
Yes, it will loosen your screws and knock you off your rocker. It will drive your train off the track and turn you dippy, loony and screwy.
Did I mention cuckoo? The wind will gladly make you that, too, just as soon as it finishes blowing some bats into your belfry and the cheese clear off your cracker.”
Ah, home sweet gritty home.
It’s been rather windy here in the Bay Area, too. I mean, we get a good wind up off the water and often it’s that coastal wind that drives the fog inland. But whenever I hear my fellow Bay Arean complain of the wind, I just smile.
These people don’t know from wind.
New Mexico knows.
I used to work at Sandia Labs in a building just off the Eubank entrance to Kirtland Air Force Base.
Our huge parking lot was uniquely located to catch the full blast of wind that channeled through the gap where the Sandias end and the Manzanos begin. That wind would come hurtling through the gap like a runaway freight train, picking up speed as it hit the valley floor.
Wind that brutal made walking to my car in order to drive home at the end of the day a unique and not enjoyable experience. More than once, I was physically knocked to the ground by that Spring wind. I once just simply crawled the rest of the way to my car, sand filling my teeth and eyes and ears. Oh, and my nose. Oh the nose. *honk, honk*
Freeloading on all that wind is millions upon millions of particles of pollen, all ready to provide itches, hives and sneezing so hard I’d see stars in front of my eyes.
My best friend’s dad spent some time in Amarillo where I’m convinced the wind never stops blowing. He likes to say that the best way to tell the force of the wind is to attach a logging chain to a sturdy post. If the wind blows so hard the chain is standing straight out, well, that’s pretty darn windy.
It’s when it’s gusting so hard that links are snapping off the end that you might wanna get yourself inside.
I feel for you, My Fair New Mexico, suffering through an April that came in like a lion is going out like a really, really pissed off lion.
Photo by Lize Rixt and used royalty free from stock.xchng.