PORTLAND. Ore. — We are being swept up in something I never knew existed.
The TV weathermen and women here are referring to something called an “atmospheric river.” You might ask, “What the bleep is that?”
I have deduced it describes a long band of rain clouds that is tracking over a region. We are RV-parked along the Columbia River in Portland. It’s been raining like the dickens almost since the day of our arrival. Weather conditions are producing more of it, which is welcome around here, given the Eagle Creek fire that incinerated much of the forest land around the Columbia Gorge.
But I am amused/bemused at this new meteorological term of art: atmospheric river.
The last time I heard weather people glom on to a particular term I guess was that “polar vortex.” I laughed when I heard that one.
Whenever I hear the term “vortex,” I flash back to 1970. They had a music festival here then. It took place at McIver State Park near Estacada, which is southeast of Portland in the foothills of the Cascade Range. I recall it was meant to protest the Vietnam War.
They called it “Vortex.” The most interesting part of it was how then-Gov. Tom McCall decriminalized marijuana use during the run of the festival. I believe the late governor wanted to give those rascally kids a pass on getting stoned while they “protested” whatever it was they were protesting. No need to hassle them and assign lots of cops to round ’em up, McCall thought.
Just so you know: I didn’t attend Vortex.
I digress.
“Atmospheric river” is a descriptive term used to define a lot of rain. That “river” has become a rapids.
And aren’t you just relieved that climate change is just a giant, cooked-up “hoax”?