Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Tag: weather

    • Comfort(unst)able

      Posted at 3:07 pm by kayewer, on February 21, 2026

      This week seems to be a repeat of a month ago, as we prepare for another winter weather assault which may be a record-setting blizzard. If you recall, at the end of January, we had a major storm event. The piles of snow lingered until just this past week, when temperatures climbed high enough to melt much (but not all) of it and reveal lawns for many residents. Today has been mild and quiet except in groceries throughout as the milk/bread/eggs/toilet paper crowd descends to stock up in case two or three days go by without the ability to go anywhere.

      Fortunately I had bread and milk, and being a member of a bulk buy club, I have TP enough to last until the spring. I did buy eggs and produce today. Now all that’s left is to hunker down all day Sunday and pray hard for no turbulence.

      Many people wonder if this wild weather is the result of climate change, and that idea is definitely not far-fetched. The more mess we make on our planet, the more Mother Nature needs to do to keep up with it. When we used to have grocery stores the size of the average CVS today, and packaging which degraded in a landfill, extreme weather didn’t seem to be as common. Now we are in an age of huge mega-stores with the most bizarre products sold in indestructible plastics, and landfills brimming with junk for whom nobody wants to take responsibility.

      It’s estimated that a little more than every 15 hours, we fill the AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TX (home to the Dallas Cowboys) with plastic trash. In my county, we only recycle type 1 and type 2 plastics. Sometimes there are no designations on the container, so the general guideline is “When in doubt, throw it out.” This means anything other than type 1 or 2 goes heaven knows where. This is why I have been conscious of takeout containers and how I dispose of them. Fortunately a few of my favorites are now composed of plant-based materials guaranteed to compost by itself, or paper which will turn to pulp.

      If we start counting on the bottomless oceans to accept what we don’t want to handle (as in repurpose or destroy), eventually we will run out of space, and it would take more than an episode of a show such as Hoarders to fix the problem.

      What this all means is that our waste generates a challenge to natural events. Gasses and runoff poison our planet, and precipitation is part of the way the Earth is cleansed. There must be a correlation somewhere. Our record-breaking storms have all seemed to come in the modern era. The biggest recorded storm was in 1888 with some 50 inches of white stuff burying everything, but we’ve had a few since the 1970s to be as inconvenient as that epic disaster.

      Anyway, this second part of the wrath of nature 2026 again threatens to affect millions of people, and so we must come together and hope for a reasonably good outcome and begin digging out from the snowdrifts come Monday into Tuesday. Again. Deja vu.

      Yet another storm front is being watched for the start of March.

      Those of you who love snow, better you than me. I’ll be staying inside where (I hope) I can stay warm.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged nature, snow, travel, weather, winter
    • The Cold Hard Truth

      Posted at 6:19 pm by kayewer, on January 24, 2026

      As I’m posting this, a large portion of the United States is about to experience an extreme weather event. Temperatures are expected to drop to well below freezing and stay there for the next eight days. On Sunday (January 25), snow and sleet will move across many states and affect millions of residents. I wonder why the anticipation of bad weather has not been made less scary by now, when we could have been fixing things before they become concerns.

      Our world, for all its modern technology, has not turned within to make life safer, choosing the development of AI over basic ecology to protect the planet we use that AI upon. Right now, millions of us are holding devices in our hands and hoping we can keep them charged without the power going out. I’m using mine to post this, so I’m equally guilty, but my purpose in calling attention to this is twofold.

      First, our electric supply system has gone solar in many places, but we still rely on above-ground power lines connecting power to homes and which can be affected by extreme temperatures and high winds, not to mention rain, ice and snow. In summer, power outages mean the inconveniences of excessive heat in some areas of the country, but in winter those outages place lives at risk. This means not only residents freezing in their homes, but repair crews who are tasked with climbing poles in dangerous conditions to restore power.

      So, we have people at home with no power, heart and breathing conditions compromised, women and small children turning into ice pops, and men and women slipping on poles yards above an uncompromising icy wasteland trying to save them and not endanger themselves. Those residents who try home remedies such as heaters, fireplaces or generators may succumb to fume poisoning. Carbon monoxide indoors in winter is as silent a killer as low temperatures.

      It’s uncertain whether the mysterious disappearance of our trash into the oceans is partly to blame for our extreme weather, but it may well be contributing to it. We are so fast to cast anything aside without a care about what happens to it afterward; I suspect we are paying off disposal companies to “make it go away” and then turning a blind eye to what they do with it. I have had nightmares about people in 2069 seeing trash from 1999 appearing in the tides as the sea gives up its unwanted waste. We aren’t burning it, and places such as India are living among piles of e-debris nobody wants to salvage. We’re a throwaway race of humans in a world which can’t accept what we are discarding in such huge quantities. The seas grow warmer, and nature fights back with extreme cold. It’s a paradox that is making our seasons challenges to our existence.

      If we don’t corral these discrepancies, our winters and summers will become worse. If Disney can have all their power works underground, we can certainly come up with a way to preserve 24/7 power for the rest of us. If we can make trash, we should also be able to unmake it. A philosophy in Frank Herbert’s Dune mentioned that whoever can destroy something has control over it. Why would we make plastics nobody wants to process once it’s used and instead toss them into landfills or feed them to our marine life? These extremes in weather may mean that our planet is fighting back, so our best defense is to give it no reason to.

      But that is a bigger question that needs a much larger answer than this short blog post.

      So, what was the second reason?

      This event, as I said before, may change lives. I don’t know what will happen during this next week. There is an actual probability of catastrophe. People may die this coming week. Your best bet is to stay where you are. Don’t drive in icy conditions and need somebody else to come after you. Layer up. Hunker down and hope for the best. That’s what I will be doing.

      Here’s hoping for the best in the worst possible conditions.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged nature, snow, travel, weather, winter
    • The Horrible Cleansing

      Posted at 1:21 pm by kayewer, on February 23, 2025

      (Originally Published August 05, 2018)

      Many people dread rain, particularly storms of the kind we have been experiencing recently. Rivers crest well past their usual flood stage, storm drains are taxed, and we often find water outside their appointed containment zones. However, the natural world seems to have an idea of what to do when things get out of hand, and the elements of fire and water often purge and cleanse in ways we may never understand.

      This doesn’t mean that I support massive flooding or wildfires, nor the casualties they cause, but we must also realize that we don’t belong everywhere that a house rises, just because somebody builds it there. People have lived in toxic waste areas and at the feet of potential volcanoes and floods for ages, though, and we’re not likely to build our lives upward, but simply continue to spread outward. With that spread comes the chance of disaster. We have seen it happen in the East, and right now Hawai’i is being reshaped by the fiery lava from a volcano.

      In the aftermath of fire often comes rebirth as the first fir trees sprout from the ashes. It is as if nature pushes for a fast recovery. Water, on the other hand, does not consume but simply piles its carried waste along until it lands someplace and has to be dealt with. A museum has on display the findings collected from the Johnstown Flood of 1889, showing how the devastation took over 2,200 lives and destroyed the town. If one were asked which is worse–fire or flood–many would be hard-pressed to choose.

      At the end of rain, though, does come a cleansing; a washing away of all the filth that we have created on the ground. I feel safer walking on sidewalks after a rain, because I like to think that whatever spit people planted on the pavements is gone for a short while, but really it is a chance to see a clean space. Something we don’t see very much anymore.

      Some places still embrace sweeping the sidewalks early in the morning, in case nature doesn’t do it for them. If it didn’t see so ludicrous or hopeless, I would walk around with a broom and do it myself. At least until we all stop making such a mess between storms.

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      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged bible, faith, flood, nature, weather
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