One thing that always seems to add to the enjoyment of a ballet or a paddling trip is to read some advance reviews and dig into a little background. By ten days before the planned December 3 canoe/kayak outing to the Cypress Wonderland, the critics at the National Weather Service (NWS), Intellicast, and Weather Underground were already saying that we might be in for a memorable performance. By Wednesday, the NWS reviews were still somewhat uncertain, but the overall message was becoming increasingly clear:
“A cool and wet weekend is in store for Southeast Texas given the approach of both a strong upper level storm system from the west and a coastal surface trough from the southwest. There are some indications that locally heavy rains will be possible…but will be highly dependent on the track of the coastal trough. Stay tuned!”
So, following a scouting expedition to the Cypress Wonderland on Thursday (reviewed in a separate article posted at https://thcc.clubexpress.com/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=496051&module_id=243001 ) and one more look through the various forecasts, I made the decision to call off our planned trip to the swamp and sit back to watch Saturday’s performance of the “Ballet du Marais” unfold on the computer screen at home.
By about 4:30 on Saturday morning, sneak previews of the show were already becoming decidedly more florid:
“DISCUSSION...
Heavy rain event underway and will continue through the weekend.
Warm front/coastal trough poised near the coast and showing some efforts of moving into the Matagorda Bay area...dewpoints of 73-75 aimed at the coast there with more northeasterly flow in place along/up the coast from there. Tides are elevated and a Coastal Flood Warning was issued earlier...see marine section below for more on that. So far the LLJ [Low Level Jet] 35-45 knots has been focusing most of the rainfall near the coast around Galveston but that should shift eastward somewhat and with that the widespread rain with embedded and elevated heavy showers and thunderstorms will expand out of the Hill country and develop overhead in the inland areas of SETX. Rainfall rates may not be as high but the thunderstorms that form will still be capable of 2+" per hour rates. Expecting two areas of heavier rainfall through the afternoon hours.”
As the curtain went up on the ballet at 9:00, the character Température de l’air, who was dressed in an elegant gray, overcast gown, stepped to the center of the stage where she remained nearly motionless, in the 50s, throughout the performance. To the right, Pluie soared by 2.8 inches in a series of leaps, followed by Niveau de l’eau, who rose more smoothly, but even higher, by 4.9 inches. Mirroring their motions to the left, Température de l’eau floated slowly down by half a degree as Salinité plunged by 0.013 parts per thousand, almost in a single bound.
It’s hard to say which seats were the best. Intellicast offered up a fine view from the mezzanine, and Weather Underground showed us what it looked like from the orchestra (in Mont Belvieu). In any event, I was happy to be watching this from the warm and cozy comfort of home. When the final curtain came down on the performance at 4:00, I poured myself another cup of hot herb tea and reached for a book of poetry. Still thinking of what conditions must be like out on Interstate 10, I decided to go with Robert Frost’s classic, “The Road Not Taken.”
By Tom Douglas