Welcome to the world of a prairie girl. This blog will follow the meanderings of what goes through a girl's head when she's out walking a big goofy dog down a prairie road ... and we're not just talking about spotting moose or counting coyotes here!
Friday, October 20, 2017
Downwind
I've always joked that 'Saskatchewan' was probably the Cree word for 'hang onto your hat!'
This reputation we have for being nothing but flat is misleading as heck - our Cypress Hills, the Qu'Appelle Valley, the Big Muddy Badlands, the Great Sandhills, the North Saskatchewan River, the Moose Mountains, and the forests, lakes and rivers of the top half of the province provide a frame for the tabletop smooth Regina Plains, but if a person never ventures out of that city or off the #1 Highway they are never going to see our hidden treasures.
We are a good-natured people though, we laugh along with the flat jokes and the gap jokes. We wear bunny-hugs and serve jellied salads. We shake our heads at our neighbouring provinces, always tinkering with their clocks to 'save' daylight. We sport T-shirts with the slogan "Saskatchewan: easy to draw, hard to spell". Our devotion to our football team, whether we are actually sports fans or not, is legendary.
We are also a sturdy people. We have to be, or the wind would blow us over.
I have read somewhere the reasons behind this - something about being in the middle of a huge land mass and the way the Jet Stream directs weather systems - but the bottom line is whether it is a light zephyr, a stiff breeze, or a gale force plow wind, our air is almost always on the move. A day when there isn't any wind is spooky for a Saskatchewanite; we tend to call this anomaly 'the calm before the storm'. It's a pretty safe bet that the wind will pick up again, and everything will be back to normal.
As used to the wind as we are, though, every once in a while there is a hum-dinger. Like Tuesday and Wednesday this week: that was a hum-dinger.
There were all the normal warnings from The Weather Network: put the outdoor furniture away, anchor the trampoline - maybe to a tractor or something, batten down the hatches, and make sure the house insurance is all paid up.
Monday the wind started to pick up, but it wasn't too bad. The dog still managed to guilt me into a walk. The main problem that day was that the seed heads on the cat tails had burst open and the air was full of their fluff - it was in my eyes, ears and hair. I didn't dare open my mouth against the wind on the way home. After four days of this the west side of our evergreens look like they are coated in wool and there are shallow 'snow' drifts of fluff across the lawn.
Tuesday afternoon I talked to my sister in Calgary, their day had been very windy. We weren't supposed to get the worst of it until midnight.
Later that evening we came to understand just how bad it was. Time and time again the Emergency Alert System broke into the TV show I was watching to announce evacuation of one town after another in Alberta and on into the western side of our province. Power lines were toppling in the gale, sparking fires that took off at 100 kms per hour - farms, yards, towns, cattle - all in grave danger. My generation grew up hearing stories about the wild prairie fires of the past, but farming and cultivation have relegated these things to history - or so we had thought. We went to bed that night, safe where we were, but in awe of the danger presented when fire marries wind.
The aftermath isn't on the scale of the fires taking thousands of homes and dozens of lives in California but any loss is felt on an individual level by the people mourning who or what they have lost - numbers don't matter at a time like this.
We are sturdy. We are resilient. We are resourceful.
One thing you do see from #1 Highway, off to the south around Gull Lake, is mile after mile of wind turbines along the hill tops (yes, you heard me right - hill tops). This is the people of Saskatchewan virtually harvesting power from thin air; harnessing a simple fact of life in this province and transforming it into a valuable asset.
And to quote another long-standing prairie joke, we need never worry about running out of wind ... because Manitoba sucks and Alberta blows - it always going to be windy in Saskatchewan!
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