I’ve head the same story at least a dozen times in the
last few weeks.
“I just (called/texted/e-mailed) my (friend, relative,
co-worker) who lives in (Boston/Albany/Glacial Acres, New Hampshire) who
told me they had (6 inches, a foot, 20 feet) of snow overnight and the
temperature is (5 degrees, 15 below zero, colder than a polar bear’s toenails).
“I told him/her it was 85 degrees in L.A. and we were
attired in (shorts/Speedos/bikinis/absolutely nothing). They told me we were (lucky,
boorish, insensitive).”
Call it Southland Schadenfreude, the latter being a term which means taking pleasure in the
misfortune of others. It was coined by --- who else? ---the Germans.
We’ve all indulged in it.
Some years ago when my wife’s family lived in western Pennsylvania, I would
call my brother-in-law in the middle of January to tell him I had just walked
off the golf course and that I was bummed because I got dirt on my shorts.
He was good natured about
it, although he was probably making a mental note to slip finely ground glass in my martini
next time we visited.
Even the ultra-provincial
New York Times was forced to admit, “Among the pleasures of living in Southern
California, none may be as wonderful as the climate, and the ability of
residents to use it as a meteorological bat against the collective heads of
their fellow Americans.”
It’s all true. We often
behave badly when it comes to weather-shaming. It’s almost as if we’re covering
up for an inferiority complex although I can’t imagine why.
We are second to none when
it comes to majestic mountains, roaring rivers, spectacular deserts, forests,
fields and streams.
We have sparkling cities,
world class wine, great universities, movie stars and championship sports teams.
We have In N Out Burgers, the juices from which drip down our shirt-sleeved
arms.
They have stifling humidity,
thunderstorms, tornadoes, hurricanes, basketball-sized hailstones, the polar
vortex, white outs, ice storms and blizzards. And White Castle burgers.
I sincerely believe if the European explorers
would have made landfall in, say, Newport Beach, everything east Palm Springs would
be largely unpopulated to this day.
The rest of the country
knows this. They can talk about enjoying the changing of the seasons, fireflies
on a summer night, white Christmases, fall foliage.
Bunk. They’d dump it all
faster than you can say “pass me a margarita” for a chance to live in
California. Schenectady or Santa Barbara? Are you kidding?
But there’s an inherent
danger in our boasting. If you persist in e-mailing Aunt Mary and Uncle Joe in
Boston pictures of your tan lines, they may just show up on your doorstep for
an extended stay with their hyperactive kids who have been housebound for two
months.
They may be followed by a
thousand other Marys and Joes who have decided to exchange the Ice Belt for a spot on the 405
freeway each day.
Worse, the reason we are
enjoying these balmy winters is that we’re in the middle of a severe drought. While
we may enjoy poking fun at our snowbound Eastern brethren, we will pay a steep
price for our endless summer.
According to one report, California,
for the second year in a row, saw its warmest December-January, with a
monthly average temperature 5.1°F higher than its 20th century average. With
that heat having continued into February, it’s almost certain to be the warmest
winter on record in California, surpassing the previous record set just last
year.
Two storm events, one in
December and one at the beginning of February, have brought some moisture to
California and parts of Oregon and Washington. But snowpack is California’s
main source of drinking water, and the tropical origins of the storms,
called atmospheric rivers, meant that winter rain fell instead of snow,
the report said.
One forecaster characterized
it as “being down by nine touchdowns in the 4th quarter of a football game.
It’s not a score you’re likely to catch up to.”
The result of all this is
that we may have more severe water rationing come this summer. We’re not
talking reduced lawn watering. It could be real life-style altering stuff.
The Metropolitan Water
District put it this way: “Southland consumers have responded to the water
conservation challenge this past year. We all, however, need to be prepared to
take water saving to another level this summer if water supply
conditions don’t improve.”
When that happens, get ready
for an onslaught of texts and e-mails from the folks back east asking if they
will be replacing the bear on the state flag with a camel. And other
drought-related insults.
Payback can be painful.
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