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Loading... Rains All the Time: A Connoisseur's History of Weather in the Pacific…by David Laskin
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Sir Francis Drake reported “extreame and nipping cold” and “vile, thicke, and stinking fogges.”
Captain James Cook encountered “moderate and mild” weather, but later “blowing in squalls with hail and sleet, and…thick and haze”. Which may explain why Cook managed to miss the entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca, although finding the Northwest Passage was one of the goals of his expedition.
Lewis and Clark had the misfortune to arrive in November, just in time for our wildest weather. They progressed from “Cloudy rainey disagreeable morning” to “tremendious wind”, and finally to my personal favorite, “O! how horriable is the day”. Eventually Clark abbreviated his weather observations to “The rain &c.” or “rained last night as usual” It seems the Corps of Discovery may have suffered from a touch of seasonal affective disorder (SAD).
Pioneer W.S. Gilliam insisted that “Before we reached the Cascade Falls the gates of heaven seemed to have opened and the rain came down in torrents….For days and nights my clothes were never dry.”
Novelist Tom Robbins found that “October lies on the Skagit like a wet rag on a salad”.
H.L. Davis, author of the Pulitzer prize winning Honey in the Horn provides this fictional description: “There were a few weeks in October when the days were warm and still, when leaves browned and grass ripened in the sun and the reflection of light from the sea lasted until long after nightfall…Afterwards the sky blackened and snow fell, and from that time until spring the rain never totally stopped and the light never entirely started.”
But nothing tops Ken Kesey in Sometimes a Great Notion: “Because nothing can be done about the rain except blaming. And if nothing can be done about it, why get yourself in a sweat about it?...falls on the just and unjust alike, falls all day long all winter long every winter every year, and you might just as well give up and admit that’s the way it’s gonna be, and go take a little snooze.”
Unfortunately, Laskin reveals some dirty secrets that Pacific Northwesterners don’t want you to know:
1) Seattle and Portland actually get less precipitation (34 and 38 inches per year, respectively) than most cities east of the Mississippi.
2) The compensation for months of winter drizzle is gorgeous summer weather. The average total precipitation for the months of June, July, and August is 2 inches for Seattle, and 3 inches for Portland.
3) East of the Cascade range (approximately 2/3 of the land mass), Washington and Oregon are high desert.
A four-page bibliography provides a good overview of literary and scientific writing on the weather of the region. (