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Photographer ~ Author ~ Traveler

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Roadtripping With a Raindrop: Moment #4 – The Storm

July 10, 2013 by Gayle Harper 10 Comments

NOTE:   If you’re just joining us, this is the 4th installment in a series of “Moments,” selected at random from the “journey of a raindrop,” the road trip of a lifetime. I’m a travel photographer and writer in love with the Mississippi River, so when I learned that it takes a single drop of water 90 days to travel the entire Mississippi River from its headwaters in Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico, I knew that I would make this journey. For 90 days, I kept pace with my imaginary raindrop, wandering back roads, meeting amazing people and having days filled with crazy, wonderful, serendipitous experiences. As the book of photographs and tales is being produced, I’m sharing these travel moments with you here. I hope you enjoy! 

The Storm

The Mississippi River is still young, agile  and pristine. On this 10th day of the journey, it has traveled 265 miles from its headwaters.

The Mississippi River near Palisade, Minnesota

The Mississippi River near Palisade, Minnesota

My home for a few days is a simple fishermen’s cabin on Lake Waukanabo, near Palisade, Minnesota. The small resort has no other guests and the lake no public access, so it seems to belong to Abby, the resident Golden Retriever, and me.

Last night at dusk we sat on the porch together, her head resting on my foot, and listened to the hauntingly beautiful call of loons echoing across the lake. When we walked this morning, the world was painted in baby pastels.

Lake Waukanabo, Minnesota, just after sunrise

Lake Waukanabo, Minnesota, just after sunrise

On our late afternoon walk, the lake had become a shimmering mirror for a brilliant September sky decorated with perfect, tiny clouds.

Lake Waukanabo in the late afternoon

Lake Waukanabo in the late afternoon

Now, I am on the porch, watching billowing, ominous clouds swallow up what is left of the blue. I’ve watched the lake transform from glassy azure to dull slate to nearly black and dotted with whitecaps. A fisherman is racing for home as fast as his small motor will propel him, the sound of its desperate puttering muffled by the dense clouds. Abby has gone home.

The surging mass of storm cloud has dark underbellies and churning white tops. It swells, then folds in on itself and then bulges out again, heavier and blacker. Goosebumps rise on my arms. I can smell the rain now and see it at the horizon, but the air around me is still and empty, the energy sucked out of it by the power amassing above. I wait – it’s like the moment when the symphony conductor raises the baton and the audience holds its collective breath.

I can hear the wind coming. The first deep rumblings of faraway thunder roll across the lake and the clouds congeal to seal off the last of the sunlight. The wind swoops in suddenly, swirling the trees like a blender. There is a sharp crack of blue lightning and the long, bass drum roll of its thunder. A wall of rain is sweeping across the lake.

The Storm

The Storm

The first huge drop hits the porch and in the next second, the great clouds are unzipped. There is no lake, no sky, no road, nothing but gray torrents of rain. I scoot back against the cabin, but the narrow eaves provide little shelter, so I open the door and set my chair just inside. A bolt of lightning cracks so close and loud that it makes me yelp like a puppy. Immediately, another follows that seems to rise up from the ground, making the cabin tremble and the porch light rattle in its base.  I am spellbound, a captive audience.

It’s cold now, so I wrap myself in a blanket, but I stay in the doorway, awed, entranced by the storm’s fierce majesty, thrilled by its dominion over everything until, finally, it begins to wane.

I am spent. The rain is soft and steady as I get into bed and the sleep that claims me instantly is silky, luxurious and dreamless.

Filed Under: MN - Palisade, Roadtripping With a Raindrop #4: The Storm Tagged With: Minnesota, Mississippi River, Palisade, thunderstorm, weather

Comments

  1. thoaread says

    July 11, 2013 at 8:33 pm

    Thanks for stopping by my blog. I like your journey too. Mississippi River is a mystery to me, I heard a lot stories about this beautiful river and always want to see it. Your journey is so fantastic and your writing is so good that I could imagine I was there with you.

    Reply
    • Gayle Harper says

      July 11, 2013 at 9:16 pm

      Thank you, Thoa! Actually that’s part of why I love the Mississippi River – it always remains a bit mysterious!

      Reply
  2. NORB R BAGLEY says

    July 11, 2013 at 9:45 pm

    Beautiful photos Gail, and poetic verse. You know how to capture  special moments.   Norb

    ________________________________

    Reply
    • Gayle Harper says

      July 11, 2013 at 11:05 pm

      Thank you so much, Norb! Plenty of good material along that river to work with!

      Reply
  3. Pat Dagnon says

    July 11, 2013 at 10:22 pm

    Thanks for sharing our big Miss with everyone

    Reply
    • Gayle Harper says

      July 11, 2013 at 11:06 pm

      My pleasure!! It seems everyone is a “river person” in their own way!

      Reply
  4. Stephen Marshall says

    July 11, 2013 at 11:26 pm

    Captivating and descriptive as usual….I lived the storm while I read.

    Reply
    • Gayle Harper says

      July 12, 2013 at 12:00 am

      Hi Stephen – thank you so much! It’s so great to hear from you again!

      Reply
  5. Maria Canfield says

    July 14, 2013 at 12:45 pm

    Gayle, that was truly fantastic. The pictures were beautiful and the descriptions were so realistic, I could feel the storm!

    Reply
    • Gayle Harper says

      July 14, 2013 at 12:48 pm

      Hi Maria Thank you so much! It’s great to have you here!

      Reply

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