Eveleivibe
Ex-Bluelighter
Well????
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Please discuss your best experience thunder n lightening storms here!
Evey
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Please discuss your best experience thunder n lightening storms here!
Evey
Coming back from dinner last night I thought I saw lightning in the sky. However, it wasn't like normal lightning, so much so that I let L convince me I was wrong and it must be some rave on a beach just up from our hotel. On an island where we are the only occupants. And one that doesn't do drugs.
Two hours later and I'm dragging L down to the sea to see what is becoming a spectacular electrical storm. The boats at anchor and a ferry moored out at sea are now being regularly lit up by sheet lightning. It's everywhere, to the left and the right, in front and behind us. But there's still no thunder or rain. It's eerie. The hornbills think so too and are suitably freaked to start crying out and flying from tree to tree in the sporadically lit-up blackness. Suddenly the ceiling of the sky above us is illuminated just as if someone had walked in a room and flicked a light switch. And at last there is a crack of thunder. A very big crack of thunder.
More thunder comes, but between the cracks it remains strangely silent, even the birds shutting up out of fear most likely.
And still there is no rain. We watch for about another half hour and then, for no reason, and without even a look to each other, we walk the fifty or so yards back to our hotel. The timing is uncanny. No sooner do we step onto our balcony, which is covered by a corrugated roof, than the heavens are split apart, the light show intensifies (that's some rave) and millions upon millions of litres of rain start to drop from the sky.
I have never seen such a storm in all my life. It continues for hours with flashes of lightning so bright they could blind. At the storm's height these flashes are going off at many per second. At midnight, despite our room being safely buried at ground level beneath two nearly touching rooves the bed is still being regularly lit by white light through the windows. And the rain hitting the roof is deafening.
It was an easy and beautiful way to fall asleep.