|
Aneirin -> RE: Thunderstorms (6/20/2011 7:33:57 PM)
|
UK weather is pants compared to some of the extremes that the US experience, but I just love a good old storm and especially an electrical storm, which we don't seem to experience down here much. Back where I was born, three hundred miles north, our house got hit by a fireball twice in one summer, the one I saw, rose out of the tv set to a height of about four feet in the corner fizzing and flashing before falling slowly back down and that was the end of the tv set. The other one I did not see, but my sisters reported it passing through their bedroom wall, just like the last on. My experiences of electrical storms are mostly on mountains, the kind that makes the air go deathly silent, ( all the wildlife hiding ?) and a low hum in the air and all the hairs on the back of the neck and arms rising and the skin tingly and that was the clue to keep away from water, don't be holding metal objects and get to low ground asap. The trouble is with mountains, rock climbing one has a lot of metal on them and in the winter, no one is not going to have that ice axe at the ready, odd to feel the metal shaft lightly vibrating on its own. Often we wouldn't even get the thunder and lightning to dispel the charge in the air, but the effect would slowly dissipate as we lost altitude. But now living five minutes walk from the sea, a storm at whatever time of the night or day, I often head for the beach to experience it's majesty. I have just got a waterproof cover for my DSLR, so some storm photography I hope to be doing, but during the day, Bass fishing from the beach is good in storms.
|
|
|
|