This is ridiculous (Weather grumble)
This is a grumble because I'm too uncomfortable to rant.
Something I didn't know previously is that behind hurricanes--to the lee side, so to speak--a huge high pressure dome settles in to balance the low pressure of the hurricane. It was 108 in Austin yesterday at the airport--107 at the old reporting station near us--and pretty nasty in other places in Texas. Gas is high and scarce. For the first time, I actually asked W where we'd live if electricity tripled.
Going outside just exhausts me. Must make it to the grocery, but first I need to fill out that class action article lawsuit paperage...I kept misplacing it, and it must be postmarked by Friday.
Typing around a huge mountain of marmalade cat is quite awkward. And stayed up too late reading, blast it. On the other hand, with help from the sleeping and pain pills, I got five straight hours of sleep. (And the crowd roars!)
Something I didn't know previously is that behind hurricanes--to the lee side, so to speak--a huge high pressure dome settles in to balance the low pressure of the hurricane. It was 108 in Austin yesterday at the airport--107 at the old reporting station near us--and pretty nasty in other places in Texas. Gas is high and scarce. For the first time, I actually asked W where we'd live if electricity tripled.
Going outside just exhausts me. Must make it to the grocery, but first I need to fill out that class action article lawsuit paperage...I kept misplacing it, and it must be postmarked by Friday.
Typing around a huge mountain of marmalade cat is quite awkward. And stayed up too late reading, blast it. On the other hand, with help from the sleeping and pain pills, I got five straight hours of sleep. (And the crowd roars!)

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If we were not intravenously tied to the internet, national news and local weather prognostication, would we even know a hurricane ripped up the coast a scant 200 miles away?
It was sunny, hot and a little breezy. How would we know?
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