November Quake
Yesterday,
as I took the dogs out for a walk in the hills at my parents' house, I started
thinking about how hard it is to characterize these first few weeks of
November. It's kind of still football season, and it's kind of basketball
season. Halloween is over, and you can't really drag Thanksgiving out into a
multi-week holiday. It feels ridiculous to put up Christmas lights already, and
yet I get so excited when I see the Christmas displays at department
stores. Maybe that's why there are so many November memes -- we're all trying to figure out what the month is all
about.
Recent
weather patterns here in Kentucky certainly have added to November's identity
crisis. It was sweater weather as my beau and I left Rupp Arena Monday night;
by the end of the week, I heard talk of tee times. Now, we all know that
Kentucky weather is unpredictable -- if you don't like it, stick around a day or two and it'll change. But, this is one crazy-assed Indian summer, even by
Kentucky standards.
Just when
I thought it couldn't get any weirder around here, November decided to throw me
for a loop. I was already a little on edge today. Deer season started this
morning and I awoke to shotgun blasts reverberating throughout the holler.
Then, around noon, I was standing in my parents' kitchen making lunch when I
felt a weird rumble. A ripple of vibration made its way
across the walls of the dining room and kitchen. The china cabinet groaned and
tinkled. At first, we weren't quite sure
what had happened. My dad swore he hadn't felt anything. My mom thought it was
just her imagination. But, soon enough, we confirmed it on our very favorite
news source -- Facebook.
Now, it
wasn't anything like the kind of quake they experience on the West Coast. It
was a 4.3 magnitude earthquake in Whitesburg, which is about 45 miles away from
my parents' house. There's no significant damage to be found. Around here, my
aunt suffered a few cracks in her walls. The KSP post for Southeastern Kentucky
told the Herald-Leader that they'd received reports of "people's pictures being knocked off the wall, and ceramic figurines being broken." Nothing devastating, but certainly a
memorable flourish on a pretty late autumn day.
I guess
November just wanted to be taken a little more seriously.