Saturday, September 28, 2024
Hurricanes, Maggie and Faulty Electrics
I just took that picture out the back door, after letting Olga out in the garden. The skies are clear this morning and the sun is really lighting up the walls of the apartment buildings behind us. I'm imagining those flats streaming with sunlight. I wonder if their occupants enjoy it, as I would, or if they're cursing so much sun at 7:20 a.m.?
I had a lousy night's sleep. I seem to have come down with the mildest of colds. It's a slightly sore throat and a slightly stuffy nose, but I don't feel feverish or anything like that. I'll probably take a Covid test if we have one lying around. Anyway, I think that's why I didn't sleep. I woke up around 3:30 a.m. and logged in to check on Mary Moon, and was happy to see she'd posted from the strike zone of Hurricane Helene that she and her family were fine.
My brother said a tree fell on his neighbor's house in Jacksonville "and gave our roof a bit of a poke," but he climbed up and found no major damage. His power was still out when he wrote me yesterday, though.
Someone asked in yesterday's comments what my biggest hurricane experience was like. You know, I lived in Central Florida for 33 years, from my birth in 1966 to 2000, except for my two years in the Peace Corps in the early '90s. And during all that time, I never experienced a direct hit from a hurricane. When I was a child, Donna was the storm everyone talked about, but it struck before I was born. (My great-grandmother said afterwards, "I wouldn't name a dog Donna.")
The Tampa area enjoyed a long mostly hurricane-free period in the '60s and '70s. In 1985, Hurricane Elena sat off the coast and caused a lot of flooding, but by a weird stroke of luck I was in Daytona Beach that weekend, on the other side of the state. So I missed that whole thing. And we had some scares in the '90s -- I remember Opal, and battening down the hatches for Georges -- but they weren't direct hits either. Andrew, as far as I know still the most destructive hurricane to hit Florida, struck in 1992 when I was already in Morocco for the Peace Corps -- and it was far to the south of Tampa. And by the crazy summer of 2004, when Central Florida got struck by Charley, Frances, and Jeanne -- two of which pretty much passed over our family home in Pasco County -- I was already living in Manhattan.
So, long story short, I've never been in a hurricane and I hope to keep it that way.
Now, let's talk about Maggie Smith, who died yesterday at 89. I found this photo on Facebook of her as Beatrice in "Much Ado About Nothing" in 1965. It's so different from the Maggie Smith we all think of, the fascistic Miss Jean Brodie or the doddery Dowager Countess of Downton Abbey. She was a remarkable actress and one of the true originals. She somehow became her characters and yet always infused them with a distinctive bit of herself.
I first became aware of her in 1978 when my church youth group leaders took us all to showing of "California Suite." I laugh about this now because they must have been mortified by the movie's references to prostitution, alcohol, pill-popping and homosexuality. I was 12! But I remember how much Maggie Smith made that movie hum. She won an Oscar for it, and it became (and remains) one of my favorite films, largely because of her.
I also loved her as "poor, poor Charlotte" in "A Room With a View" in 1985. And I saw her on stage in London in April 2000, performing in Alan Bennet's "The Lady in the Van." I sat in the third row and couldn't believe I was so close to her. I was star-struck.
As on "Downton Abbey," it seemed like the Dowager Countess would be with us all forever. Smith's precise, clipped delivery and acid humor will be missed.
Finally, at the risk of overstuffing this post, this (above) was going on in the neighbor's flat last night. I wouldn't have even noticed except when I face the television, that window is directly above it over our patio, and I immediately saw all the flashing. I made Dave stand up and look too, and we tried to figure out what the heck was going on.
If teenagers or young people lived there I wouldn't have thought anything of it -- maybe a strobe light or a party or something. But an older woman lives there, and it seemed like this might be some kind of danger, like an electrical short. Would it start a fire? So I went over and knocked on her door, and the people who answered didn't even know it was happening. I guess they were downstairs and hadn't seen the flashing. Anyway, it must have just been a faulty light bulb. They turned it off, and nothing burned down in the night.
Am I a Nosey Nelly or what?
I would say that you are an excellent neighbour, not nosey at all!
ReplyDeleteNice to see the sun today isn't it?
You’re a good neighbor!
ReplyDeleteI think you're lovely. So nice to have someone looking out for others. My parents lived in Palm Harbor. They always said they believed the legend about the Tocobaga tribe protecting the Tampa area from the really bad storms.
ReplyDeleteThe harsh but warming sun into apartments in the morning is a curates egg.
ReplyDeleteLet me assure you, I am not like a destructive hurricane.
It was sad to hear about Dame Maggie. I love the photo, thanks. We were all young and beautiful once...well young.
I can't remember if Downton or Lady in a Van came last, but I loved her in both. Her line in The Importance of Being Ernest, "Found in a basket at Victoria Station", is so vivid for me.
You did the right thing with your neighbour.
Hurricanes are like many things in this world these days. Your chances of being directly impacted are very slim but with our media news cycle, we hash them to death until we think that they are much more common than they actually are. Don't get me wrong, they do impact people and those affected I'm sure never forget, and with global warming they are definitely becoming more frequent and strong, but your chances of seeing a direct impact in a lifetime are much less than many things we don't pay much attention too. According to google, 8100+ people died yesterday in our country, only 44 of those due to Hurricane Helene.
ReplyDeleteWe went through a few hurricanes my short time in Miami, most notably Katrina, which did some damage to our house and which was one impetus in our desire to move away.
ReplyDeleteWe had Matthew here in Camden which threw a neighbors 50-foot tree into our yard and then yesterday Helene scraped by us with high winds, branches down, and no power for most of the day.
It wasn't until later I heard about Maggie Smith; she was a rare treat at every age and will be missed.
I don't think it's possible to overstuff a blog post, as my stunned readers have noticed. You seem to have had a charmed hurricane free life. Up to now..
ReplyDeleteGlad you checked on your neighbors to make sure they were okay. You can't help being helpful, Steve!
ReplyDeleteGood Neighbor, Totoro! There is a lad living next door to us and he is the same sort of good neighbor that you are. We are grateful- BUT that flashing is clearly a code, a signal, that all systems GO for invasion of the body snatchers-, or something similar beware. It begins with a sore throat!
ReplyDeleteYou are not a Nosey Nellie, just a good neighbor! Maggie Smith was a talent that will be missed. I loved her in Downton Abbey.
ReplyDeleteI am so grateful for all the concern of our blogging community. Yes, we are fine. And by the way- I remember Donna quite well although I was very young. It was scary as hell.
ReplyDeleteI have never been in a hurricane 🌀, tornado, fire or flood ... however ... I have been in more earthquakes then I care to think about! Northern and Central California with the San Andreas Fault ... I don't think you ever get used to those damned things!
ReplyDeleteS. Colorado seems a safer bet!
Yes, I would say you are a great neighbor!
was it an LED light bulb? the ones in the bathroom do that, very annoying. I wouldn't call you a nosy nellie, just kind and concerned about the well being of your neighbors. I've been through 6 hurricanes in my lifetime.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't call that nosy, I'd call that a good neighbor. It does look very strange and since you knew an older person lived there, it was very thoughtful of you to check it out. Speaking as one of those older people, I would be thankful to anyone who checked on me.
ReplyDeleteI've been hearing some wonderful tributes to Maggie Smith...well deserved. I loved seeing her in anything she was in. As it happens, my close friend David's mother also passed away on Thursday and her name was Smith too. That minor coincidence struck me when I heard of her passing.
I'm glad your family and friends are safe. I've been hearing some frightening stories coming out of Florida after that storm.
I live in the foothills of western NC and the mountain area was DEVASTATED by Helene. Asheville is only reachable by helicopter. An entire town (that we drove through on our vacation last week) is now gone. Yes, not many deaths, but the devastation is still on a massive scale in the area.
ReplyDeleteThese storms frighten me even though I'm very far away and we never get them here.
ReplyDeleteThat is a gorgeous image of Maggie Smith.
ReplyDeleteI would have checked with neighbours as well, so good on you Steve.
I understand what Ed is saying in his comment, but I bet the folks of Lake Charles Louisiana would disagree with him. They've been affected by a number of hurricanes, including TWO in 2020. I remember the second, Laura, quite well since it remained a Cat.1 hurricane across the entire state of Louisiana and was still a tropical storm when it got to us in Arkansas. It's the only time I've ever seen a tropical storm warning on my weather forecast!
ReplyDeleteI guess that I would disagree with Ed. World wide, these storms are wreaking tremendous havoc and causing much death and destruction.
ReplyDeleteI think that it is good that you went to the neighbor's house. I would have done the same. We had the same thing going on at our new house. Tim could not figure it out, initially. Turned out it was a faulty breaker.
That is a gorgeous picture of Maggie Smith.
Checking in when you see something concerning shows you are a good neighbor. I hope they said: thank you.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear Mary Moon and her family escaped the worse of the storm. Pure luck! These storms are so random when it comes to damages.
The last hurricane in MA was Sandy 2021 and in the middle of the night a 100 ft. tall, 4 feet in diameter White Pine tree came down directly behind my house. Lucky for us, it fell toward the forest and not on my house. The sound of the tree falling was thunderous. Prior to this was the 2015 snow event. 5 ft. of snow with even taller drifts. Both events caused power outages for a few days.
I hope you feel better Steve.
It seems like the deaths and property damage from hurricanes and tornadoes are increasing, in spite of all the safeguards and warnings we have in place. I know that every place has elements of danger/risk: high temperatures, wildfires, earthquakes, volcanoes and storms of various kinds. I couldn't stand the every year inevitability of having destructive storms come through though. I do have an extensive earthquake box and hope I never need it! I was so saddened by the death of Dame Maggie; I loved her in everything she was part of. What a loss!
ReplyDeleteAm I in spam?
ReplyDeleteI'm so jealous that you saw Maggie Smith on stage! How thrilling! You are a kind and thoughtful neighbor. What if you didn't say anything and something horrible happened to the people there? Hurricane Andrew remains the most catastrophic storm to hit Florida, although Irma and Ian were horrible, and now Helene has caused a lot of damage in some areas. Some people in Jacksonville still don't have power.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
Maggie Smith didn’t watch Downton Abbey and that I think is a mark of an intellectual. (I watched it so there…)
ReplyDeleteNo, you're not a Nosy Nellie. You're a caring neighbor who was worried. I always wanted to be in a hurricane, ever since first seeing "Key Largo", one of my favorite films. But I've never been in the "right" area for one. And Maggie, dear Maggie, how lucky you were to "nearly" share a stage with her. She will definitely be missed.
ReplyDeleteMaggie Smith was a treasure, a truly remarkable human. Thanks for sharing that photo of her, and I have to agree with you on her character in "California Suite". She inhabited that role as she did with all of them she played. You did the right thing with the flashing lights in your neighbor's flat.
ReplyDeleteThat flashing light looks ominous. Wonder what it is, was it accompanied by scary zzzzzzzz sounds? It's good that you went over.
ReplyDeleteSometimes it's the Nosey Nellie's that save lives by noticing things like that. I've noticed those weird spiral light bulbs sometimes flash right before they die.
ReplyDeleteI was sad to hear about Maggie Smith dying, she seemed like she would just go on forever.
No you are not a Nosey Nelly - you are a Suspicious Steve.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad your family was safe. That storm -- wretched and cruel. And Maggie Smith. Wow. You saw her in the third row? Yes, star struck. What a resume she built up and seemed rather humble about it, happy to not be recognized (till Harry Potter and Downton!) I'm glad you checked on the neighbors. It could have been something awful.
ReplyDeleteYou were a good neighbor to check. I'm glad JM and family are safe and have minimal damage. All those years and you escaped being in a hurricane? You have lived a charmed life. Maggie Smith was one of a kind. The blanket of car stickers may be hiding a rust hole...reminds me of the stickers on the car of a certain college kid I use to know...
ReplyDelete