THE RAIN WILL COME

 

 

The Rain Will Come

 

 

 

One day, years ago it was raining so hard I could hardly see them out on the sidewalk. One toddler ran by, laughing, the feet of his soggy sleepers slapping the pavement. Little brother came into sight; his drenched diaper, laden with rainwater, dragging behind.  Big sister in pink pajamas led the parade of upturned, wet faces squealing with the joy at the rain that had finally come.

That year, in the late l950s’, the residents here in the valley had waited months for relief from the drought. When my children ran outside barefooted the pavement was scalding. The dry grass stubble was prickly and so were tempers. Respite came sometime in July.

We have always had years of drought and years of unbelievable rains. That summer, before the rains came, the huge dust storms, the weathermen now call them Haboobs, left an inch layer of dirt on the bottom of everyone’s pool.  The kids begged to swim, so I became an expert at pool vacuuming…every single morning!

The thunderstorms that sometimes come tearing thru the valley create havoc, but just manage to give everyone’s grass a good soaking. It’s hard to believe, but sometimes we do get too much precipitation.

Years ago, when I was eleven, the rain finally came and drenched the parched ground, but didn’t stop. The Cave Creek Dam finally broke. The railroad tracks along Nineteenth Ave dammed the water. The residential area around the Arizona State Capitol building had heavy flooding. We kids, in the blissful ignorance of childhood,  just enjoyed riding our bikes through the knee high water flowing curb to curb in the streets. We didn’t realize that most of the businesses were sandbagged and the Capitol basement had flooded.

We were even treated to our first look at an U. S. Army amphibious vehicle. The Seventeenth Avenue underpass was flooded too and the kids all watched in awe as a group of soldiers came down the street and drove right through the deep water.

I’ll never forget my dad returning from hiking alone on South Mountain. He was caught in a downpour so hard that he said, “I couldn’t see or breathe. I was really beginning to panic!”

I remember a neighbor at that time telling my folks, “Back in l938, the Salt River really overflowed its banks. The Central Avenue Bridge was holding the water back and all of central Phoenix was in danger of being flooded. Just as they were ready to light the fuse to dynamite the bridge, the water started to subside.”

One other summer, when my kids were in their teens, we lived in a different neighborhood and the rains were again unrelenting. The ground was saturated and one Saturday morning police drove through the area shouting on loud speakers, “Attention, Prepare to evacuate!” Arizona Canal above us was starting to overflow its banks.

This year, I can’t wait to sit on my balcony and watch neighborhood children playing in the rain; the mist rising as I listen to the drumbeat of another approaching torrent.

The rains this summer won’t end the drought, only heavy winter snows do that; but as always, they nourish our spirits.

Meanwhile, the scent of wet creosote bushes on the mountain behind me mixed with the pungent smell of fresh cut grass below will be like heaven as I watch the neighborhood children turn their faces up to the rain that is sure to come soon!

3 thoughts on “THE RAIN WILL COME

  1. Gerry, I hope this column inspires the rain somehow , we sure need it ,I might go play in the rain at my age haha

  2. Children love the rain. It is fun to run and play with them. I do remember the floods. I remember one that cut Scottsdale road from Tempe. My kids climbed a mountain close to the river to watch it flow. When I was in Georgia I went hiking with my daughter and we were caught in a cloud burst on the trail up the mountain. We laughed as we both got soaked.

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