On May 25th, 2020, the California Air National Guard 129th Rescue Wing performed a flyover the Bay Area and Central California. Southern California had their own flyover as well.
There was a map (shown below) beforehand and I saw that it would be flying right over us. I made sure to be ready to record this. The flyovers began and ended at Moffett Air National Guard Base in Mountain View. The aerial formation included one HC-130J Combat King II aircraft and two HH-60G Pave Hawk rescue helicopters and passed over north and south Bay Area medical facilities. In addition, a single HC-130J Combat King aircraft, also set to begin from Moffett, will perform a flyover and pass over Central and Salinas Valley area. The flyovers were to show gratitude to health care workers during this pandemic. Our house was positioned in between San Rafael Kaiser hospital and Sutter hospital in Novato.
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There wasn't anything normal about 2020. In January, I had been really sick. As I emerged from the illness, I started following this novel virus in the Wunan province and Northern Italy with deep concern, because it was only a matter of time that it would effect us. I nervously attended live music concerts being the only person in my circle that was concerned at the time.
On March 16th, everything shutdown and we were all sheltering-in-place. It seemed that the entire world was in shutdown. There were scenes where the virus hit first where people would go out on their balconies and bang pots and cheer in honor of the health care workers. Marin decided to join in by howling. It started just south of us in Mill Valley, and spread quickly. Every night at 8pm, the howling and banging of pots could be heard. One night on April Fools, I went out to capture it happening in my neighborhood. There was a forum on Facebook devoted to those who howled that seemed to extend to the entire American west and perhaps further. People would howl for loved ones who died or who were sick. Some howled because they lost a job. Many not only howled to honor health care workers, but to connect with each other. It was a way to feel solidarity with neighbors and connect via their voices. There was a little bit or even more than a little bit of cabin fever craziness involved mixed with a little primal yell. The howling was sad, exhilarating, and strange. The howling did not survive the Spring. I imagine there a many reasons for this. There will be a list of things that happened in 2020 that will be difficult to explain to those who were too little during 2020 or came after 2020. Americans decided to collectively forget going through the 1918 pandemic, and it will be interesting to see if we decide again to forget or decide to remember so we can be better next time.
Imagine it is the morning of your 25th wedding anniversary and there is a strange red glow coming from your curtains. You pull back the curtains and everything is imbued with an orange red fog. Even your teenage son, who normally is in a state of being unimpressed by things, was shocked and took a picture of it.
Since the climate change driven extreme wildfires began in 2017, we were accustomed to unhealthy to very unhealthy air from wildfire smoke. While children elsewhere have snow days, kids here have had a smoke day, when the air hit dangerous. The smoke seasons of 2017, 2018, and 2019 did not prepare us for this day of red skies. Fortunately, the smoke was actually far enough up in the atmosphere that it wasn't a health hazard at all. It was just ominous and suggested some dystopia had found us. This video of my native city cemented the comparison to Blade Runner. Earlier, in March someone got drone footage of the City emptied by COVID shelter-in-place that still stirs up emotions and a tear. Even though I moved away from it and live just north over the Golden Gate, it is still my town. Having had a lifetime of memories in this city, my mind still has trouble processing these videos.
The Verge had a great write up about these red skies. The day of red skies will be forever burnt into my memories of 2020, but I also know this could very likely to happen again and perhaps worse. Every fire season gets increasingly worse.
What happened in 2020 all started with a dry electrical storm on August 16th, 2020. It was a hot, dry, and windy Summer. We all held our breath that the electrical storm would not start fires. I remember staying up and heading to the cottage to watch the lightning storm from the windows. It was beautiful but hard to capture on my iphone. So I just took it in knowing there will be plenty of footage of them across the region. Unfortunately, this big and weird lightning storm would create a record wildfire season that created these red skies. |
AuthorLiving in the American West and having thoughts on Politics, Society, History, and Climate/Weather Science. Archives
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