
The night before I wrote this, I couldn’t sleep. There was a halfmoon beaming into my face through the windows, thrown open to diffuse the 90-degree heat that had collected like smoke in the eaves of my bedroom. There was my restlessness from poring through notes for a feature that I was trying and failing to write. But it wasn’t either of those things. I couldn’t sleep because I was counting.
Every few minutes, the windows burned bright, then flared out: Lightning. In May. In Portland, Oregon. That NEVER happens.
One-one-thousand, two-one-thousand, three-one-thousand, four-one-thousand, five … RRRRUMMMBLLE.
Flasher-flash-flicker-flash. One-one-thousand, two-one-thousand, three… BOOOOM.
My mom is the one who first taught me that the number of seconds between bolt and thunder tells you how distant lightning is: Five seconds for each mile. Collect counts for a number of strikes, and the series of data points will tell you whether the storm is approaching or sweeping away. It’s been a good rule to live by. For safety, working and playing above treeline in the mountains. And for wonder, to remember to pause, open up my eyes and ears and let the world roar in.
My mom – Peggy LeMone – is really good at that sort of thing. She and my dad used to drive us out on the plains east of my hometown in Colorado to watch storms roll through from the safety of our car, which was, she pointed out, a Faraday cage. This wasn’t just a hobby, though. It was her life’s work. She chose to study the weather at a time when there were almost no women in the field, for the simple reason that it fascinated her. She went on to be the first female senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, and just a few years ago, the third female president of the American Meteorological Society. And through all that, she’s accumulated some pretty good stories, which helped shape my expectations of what kind of life I might be able to have, both as a woman and as a kid who never quite fit in. So I called her up the day after my sleepless night and asked her to share some of them with you during LWON’s week of moms.
Sarah G.: What kind of kid were you growing up, in Columbia, Missouri?
Peggy LeMone: I loved to go outside, and I loved art, loved to draw. I loved science and I had an older brother Charlie who was into making radios and television sets and stuff, and I loved to hang around and watch. Then when I was in third grade, lightning struck our house. It was the loudest noise I had ever heard in my life. It blew a hole in the roof 5 feet across, and the wood of the beams into splinters two inches long, along the grain. It exploded the chimney, and bricks fell off and tore up some of the deck chairs. So I took some bricks and some pieces of chair and some splinters of wood to show and tell the next day. It was my first weather talk.
Until then, I had wanted to be a fireman. But after that, the weather seemed more exciting. There was a crazy summer of severe weather in 1956 or 1957 – hail, 80 mile an hour winds – and I started keeping weather records in notebooks. The high and the low temperature, the barometric pressure. I was always into clouds, so I would draw the clouds, and draw weather maps of the United States, with weather fronts on them.
I was considered kind of weird, probably. Continue reading