Choose a hill country for storms.
There all the business of the weather is carried on
above your horizon and loses its terror in familiarity.
When you come to think about it, the disastrous storms
are on the levels, sea or sand or plains. There
you get only a hint of what is about to happen, the
fume of the gods rising from their meeting place under
the rim of the world; and when it breaks upon you there
is no stay nor shelter. The terrible mewings
and mouthings of a Kansas wind have the added terror
of viewlessness. You are lapped in them like uprooted
grass; suspect them of a personal grudge. But
the storms of hill countries have other business.
They scoop watercourses, manure the pines, twist them
to a finer fibre, fit the firs to be masts and spars,
and, if you keep reasonably out of the track of their
affairs, do you no harm.
They have habits to be learned, appointed
paths, seasons, and warnings, and they leave you in
no doubt about their performances. One who builds
his house on a water scar or the rubble of a steep
slope must take chances. So they did in Overtown
who built in the wash of Argus water, and at Kearsarge
at the foot of a steep, treeless swale. After
twenty years Argus water rose in the wash against
the frail houses, and the piled snows of Kearsarge
slid down at a thunder peal over the cabins and the
camp, but you could conceive that it was the fault
of neither the water nor the snow.
The first effect of cloud study is
a sense of presence and intention in storm processes.
Weather does not happen. It is
the visible manifestation of the Spirit moving itself
in the void. It gathers itself together under
the heavens; rains, snows, yearns mightily in wind,
smiles; and the Weather Bureau, situated advantageously
for that very business, taps the record on his instruments
and going out on the streets denies his God, not having
gathered the sense of what he has seen. Hardly
anybody takes account of the fact that John Muir,
who knows more of mountain storms than any other,
is a devout man.
Of the high Sierras choose the neighborhood
of the splintered peaks about the Kern and King’s
river divide for storm study, or the short, wide-mouthed
cañons opening eastward on high valleys. Days
when the hollows are steeped in a warm, winey flood
the clouds come walking on the floor of heaven, flat
and pearly gray beneath, rounded and pearly white
above. They gather flock-wise, moving on the level
currents that roll about the peaks, lock hands and
settle with the cooler air, drawing a veil about those
places where they do their work. If their meeting
or parting takes place at sunrise or sunset, as it
often does, one gets the splendor of the apocalypse.
There will be cloud pillars miles high, snow-capped,
glorified, and preserving an orderly perspective before
the unbarred door of the sun, or perhaps mere ghosts
of clouds that dance to some pied piper of an unfelt
wind. But be it day or night, once they have
settled to their work, one sees from the valley only
the blank wall of their tents stretched along the
ranges. To get the real effect of a mountain
storm you must be inside.
One who goes often into a hill country
learns not to say: What if it should rain?
It always does rain somewhere among the peaks:
the unusual thing is that one should escape it.
You might suppose that if you took any account of
plant contrivances to save their pollen powder against
showers. Note how many there are deep-throated
and bell-flowered like the pentstemons, how many have
nodding pedicels as the columbine, how many grow in
copse shelters and grow there only. There is keen
delight in the quick showers of summer cañons, with
the added comfort, born of experience, of knowing
that no harm comes of a wetting at high altitudes.
The day is warm; a white cloud spies over the cañon
wall, slips up behind the ridge to cross it by some
windy pass, obscures your sun. Next you hear
the rain drum on the broad-leaved hellebore, and beat
down the mimulus beside the brook. You shelter
on the lee of some strong pine with shut-winged butterflies
and merry, fiddling creatures of the wood. Runnels
of rain water from the glacier-slips swirl through
the pine needles into rivulets; the streams froth
and rise in their banks. The sky is white with
cloud; the sky is gray with rain; the sky is clear.
The summer showers leave no wake.
Such as these follow each other day
by day for weeks in August weather. Sometimes
they chill suddenly into wet snow that packs about
the lake gardens clear to the blossom frills, and
melts away harmlessly. Sometimes one has the
good fortune from a heather—grown headland
to watch a rain-cloud forming in mid-air. Out
over meadow or lake region begins a little darkling
of the sky,—no cloud, no wind, just a smokiness
such as spirits materialize from in witch stories.
It rays out and draws to it some floating
films from secret cañons. Rain begins, “slow
dropping veil of thinnest lawn;” a wind comes
up and drives the formless thing across a meadow,
or a dull lake pitted by the glancing drops, dissolving
as it drives. Such rains relieve like tears.
The same season brings the rains that
have work to do, ploughing storms that alter the face
of things. These come with thunder and the play
of live fire along the rocks. They come with
great winds that try the pines for their work upon
the seas and strike out the unfit. They shake
down avalanches of splinters from sky-line pinnacles
and raise up sudden floods like battle fronts in the
cañons against towns, trees, and boulders. They
would be kind if they could, but have more important
matters. Such storms, called cloud-bursts by the
country folk, are not rain, rather the spillings of
Thor’s cup, jarred by the Thunderer. After
such a one the water that comes up in the village hydrants
miles away is white with forced bubbles from the wind-tormented
streams.
All that storms do to the face of
the earth you may read in the geographies, but not
what they do to our contemporaries. I remember
one night of thunderous rain made unendurably mournful
by the houseless cry of a cougar whose lair, and perhaps
his family, had been buried under a slide of broken
boulders on the slope of Kearsarge. We had heard
the heavy denotation of the slide about the hour of
the alpenglow, a pale rosy interval in a darkling
air, and judged he must have come from hunting to
the ruined cliff and paced the night out before it,
crying a very human woe. I remember, too, in
that same season of storms, a lake made milky white
for days, and crowded out of its bed by clay washed
into it by a fury of rain, with the trout floating
in it belly up, stunned by the shock of the sudden
flood. But there were trout enough for what was
left of the lake next year and the beginning of a meadow
about its upper rim. What taxed me most in the
wreck of one of my favorite cañons by cloudburst was
to see a bobcat mother mouthing her drowned kittens
in the ruined lair built in the wash, far above the
limit of accustomed waters, but not far enough for
the unexpected. After a time you get the point
of view of gods about these things to save you from
being too pitiful.
The great snows that come at the beginning
of winter, before there is yet any snow except the
perpetual high banks, are best worth while to watch.
These come often before the late bloomers are gone
and while the migratory birds are still in the piney
woods. Down in the valley you see little but
the flocking of blackbirds in the streets, or the low
flight of mallards over the tulares, and the gathering
of clouds behind Williamson. First there is a
waiting stillness in the wood; the pine-trees creak
although there is no wind, the sky glowers, the firs
rock by the water borders. The noise of the creek
rises insistently and falls off a full note like a
child abashed by sudden silence in the room.
This changing of the stream-tone following tardily
the changes of the sun on melting snows is most meaningful
of wood notes. After it runs a little trumpeter
wind to cry the wild creatures to their holes.
Sometimes the warning hangs in the air for days with
increasing stillness. Only Clark’s crow
and the strident jays make light of it; only they
can afford to. The cattle get down to the foothills
and ground inhabiting creatures make fast their doors.
It grows chill, blind clouds fumble in the cañons;
there will be a roll of thunder, perhaps, or a flurry
of rain, but mostly the snow is born in the air with
quietness and the sense of strong white pinions softly
stirred. It increases, is wet and clogging, and
makes a white night of midday.
There is seldom any wind with first
snows, more often rain, but later, when there is already
a smooth foot or two over all the slopes, the drifts
begin. The late snows are fine and dry, mere ice
granules at the wind’s will. Keen mornings
after a storm they are blown out in wreaths and banners
from the high ridges sifting into the cañons.
Once in a year or so we have a “big
snow.” The cloud tents are widened out
to shut in the valley and an outlying range or two
and are drawn tight against the sun. Such a storm
begins warm, with a dry white mist that fills and
fills between the ridges, and the air is thick with
formless groaning. Now for days you get no hint
of the neighboring ranges until the snows begin to
lighten and some shouldering peak lifts through a
rent. Mornings after the heavy snows are steely
blue, two-edged with cold, divinely fresh and still,
and these are times to go up to the pine borders.
There you may find floundering in the unstable drifts
“tainted wethers” of the wild sheep, faint
from age and hunger; easy prey. Even the deer
make slow going in the thick fresh snow, and once
we found a wolverine going blind and feebly in the
white glare.
No tree takes the snow stress with
such ease as the silver fir. The star-whorled,
fan-spread branches droop under the soft wreaths—droop
and press flatly to the trunk; presently the point
of overloading is reached, there is a soft sough and
muffled dropping, the boughs recover, and the weighting
goes on until the drifts have reached the midmost
whorls and covered up the branches. When the snows
are particularly wet and heavy they spread over the
young firs in green-ribbed tents wherein harbor winter
loving birds.
All storms of desert hills, except
wind storms, are impotent. East and east of the
Sierras they rise in nearly parallel ranges, desertward,
and no rain breaks over them, except from some far-strayed
cloud or roving wind from the California Gulf, and
these only in winter. In summer the sky travails
with thunderings and the flare of sheet lightnings
to win a few blistering big drops, and once in a lifetime
the chance of a torrent. But you have not known
what force resides in the mindless things until you
have known a desert wind. One expects it at the
turn of the two seasons, wet and dry, with electrified
tense nerves. Along the edge of the mesa where
it drops off to the valley, dust devils begin to rise
white and steady, fanning out at the top like the genii
out of the Fisherman’s bottle. One supposes
the Indians might have learned the use of smoke signals
from these dust pillars as they learn most things
direct from the tutelage of the earth. The air
begins to move fluently, blowing hot and cold between
the ranges. Far south rises a murk of sand against
the sky; it grows, the wind shakes itself, and has
a smell of earth. The cloud of small dust takes
on the color of gold and shuts out the neighborhood,
the push of the wind is unsparing. Only man of
all folk is foolish enough to stir abroad in it.
But being in a house is really much worse; no relief
from the dust, and a great fear of the creaking timbers.
There is no looking ahead in such a wind, and the bite
of the small sharp sand on exposed skin is keener than
any insect sting. One might sleep, for the lapping
of the wind wears one to the point of exhaustion very
soon, but there is dread, in open sand stretches sometimes
justified, of being over blown by the drift. It
is hot, dry, fretful work, but by going along the
ground with the wind behind, one may come upon strange
things in its tumultuous privacy. I like these
truces of wind and heat that the desert makes, otherwise
I do not know how I should come by so many acquaintances
with furtive folk. I like to see hawks sitting
daunted in shallow holes, not daring to spread a feather,
and doves in a row by the prickle bushes, and shut-eyed
cattle, turned tail to the wind in a patient doze.
I like the smother of sand among the dunes, and finding
small coiled snakes in open places, but I never like
to come in a wind upon the silly sheep. The wind
robs them of what wit they had, and they seem never
to have learned the self-induced hypnotic stupor with
which most wild things endure weather stress.
I have never heard that the desert winds brought harm
to any other than the wandering shepherds and their
flocks. Once below Pastaria Little Pete showed
me bones sticking out of the sand where a flock of
two hundred had been smothered in a bygone wind.
In many places the four-foot posts of a cattle fence
had been buried by the wind-blown dunes.
It is enough occupation, when no storm
is brewing, to watch the cloud currents and the chambers
of the sky. From Kearsarge, say, you look over
Inyo and find pink soft cloud masses asleep on the
level desert air; south of you hurries a white troop
late to some gathering of their kind at the back of
Oppapago; nosing the foot of Waban, a woolly mist creeps
south. In the clean, smooth paths of the middle
sky and highest up in air, drift, unshepherded, small
flocks ranging contrarily. You will find the
proper names of these things in the reports of the
Weather Bureau—cirrus, cumulus, and the
like—and charts that will teach by study
when to sow and take up crops. It is astonishing
the trouble men will be at to find out when to plant
potatoes, and gloze over the eternal meaning of the
skies. You have to beat out for yourself many
mornings on the windly headlands the sense of the fact
that you get the same rainbow in the cloud drift over
Waban and the spray of your garden hose. And
not necessarily then do you live up to it.