
A Hurricane is Coming
By Sam Low
September 16, 2003
Sunday morning at ten –
the air is vapid and the sea is flat off the Steamboat Pier in Oak
Bluffs. It’s hot and muggy. It feels like something has sucked the
energy from the atmosphere. Something big. I’m aware of Isabel, of
course, having followed its festering ball of wind on the internet for
the past week. She’s tracking toward us – a category five storm - with
winds of 160 miles an hour. So the weather on Sunday feels full of
threat. My skiff, at the pier in Harthaven, seems vulnerable. The trees
around my house now appear immense and powerful in their latent energy.
If they fall, well… A hurricane is coming and that awareness changes
everything.
My first memory of the
Vineyard is the 1944 hurricane when many relatives came to our house,
deep in the woods, for refuge. I was two years old. I remember that
hurricane because my parents gave me a flashlight for amusement. I
shined it on the faces of our guests and was amazed at the emotion
there - the first time I saw adults display fear.
In 1954, when I was
twelve, it was hurricane Carol. My father and his friends set anchors
deep in the muck of our harbor and trailed ropes to their boats to hold
them off the piers. All lines were doubled. Everything that moved was
stored indoors. Preparations continued even as the storm spread its
deadly fingers across the island. The men worked on docks now covered
with water and gusts tugged at their southwesters. Here’s my most vivid
memory. My father and I are carrying a Burt skiff to shelter, upside
down. Suddenly a gust plucks the boat from our hands and hurls it
across the road – some forty feet.
In 1960, Donna Called.
My grandparent’s house faced the beach. We watched the approaching
storm from a glassed in porch that began to shiver in the mounting
wind. We retreated and closed the doors to the porch, pushing the
dining room table against them. Minutes later the porch was
disassembled into its component parts and scattered across the lawn.
After one of these
storms, we found an uncle’s boat impaled on a piling at its pier. The
tide had risen six feet and the anchor line keeping it off the pier had
snapped. It was a deep but not a mortal wound. I think Erford Burt
dealt with it.
A hurricane is a grand
expression of nature’s primal force and it focuses us on a latent drama
all around, heretofore hidden. The skins of our homes now seem fragile.
The ocean contains a veiled threat. The beach seems tender and
insubstantial. The songbirds in the bushes – what will become of them?
We welcome this drama with dread. Anticipating a hurricane puts us in
our place in nature’s scheme and that may be the only thing about a
hurricane that we can welcome. |