It’s not nice to fool with Mother Nature.
Well, it’s not wise to frig with Squig either.
Over the last month, Mother Nature has been toying with the Squigman. And Squiggy don’t like that.
We’ve been blessed with some gorgeous weather of late. I’ve been at softball games basking in the warm glow of the sun and the annoying swarm of black flies. Yet, on my days off, when I’ve needed similar weather to paint my deck, Mother Nature has dictated otherwise. It rained on SquigNation.
Painting my deck isn’t exactly a thrill I’ve been longing for. Frankly, I almost could care less. So what if the stain is faded and wearing off and needs repainting? When you have an ocean view, I’m not looking at the floor boards on the deck. However, being a responsible owner (that’s almost as funny to say as boasting that I have a minor in Biblical Studies), I have to keep up appearances, especially since I’m renting the place to pay the bills.
Don’t want people to arrive and be disgusted and exclaim “My goodness, the deck needs painting! Edward, let’s go. We’re leaving. We want our money back!”
Facing the inevitable, I did all the scraping and bought the paint over a month ago. That very day, we had bright sunny skies and warm temperatures. My brother and I had even entertained tackling the job that afternoon and getting it over with. After reading the directions, something I shouldn’t have done, it suggested having temperatures above 50 degrees for 48 hours straight. This was during a week where the daytime’s warm temperatures were plummeting faster than George Bush’s approval numbers. So I waited. Besides, putting off work is my strength.
Late April, the temps were still too chilly. The first May weekend it rained. It wasn’t supposed to. The weather forecasters said Saturday would be decent but Sunday would be rainy. I hoped maybe I could get the preliminary cleaning work done. The weather was horrible both days and the weekend was a complete washout. It was a waste of time even going down there with the hopes of getting work done.
Then came last weekend. Weather guessers predicted doom. Rain Saturday, more rain Monday. The good news was the chances of doing a softball game Monday were slim, but so we’re the chances of getting any painting done. Then the prognosticators began to waver, like they were plucking the leaves off daisies. It’s going to rain. It’s not going to rain.
I left for Owls Head with a slight hope of getting something done. Sunday was going to be nice. Worse case was that I’d at least get the cleaning done, but I knew Mother Nature might yank my chain once again. I was already contemplating giving up on the painting for now and breaking out the deck furniture (which was all stored inside the house).
When I awoke Saturday morning, I did errands in town waiting for Mother Nature to show her hand. Upon my return, the weather was decent enough but could go either way. I hastily got down to cleaning the deck out front and did the same to the back. After washing both down thoroughly, I broke for lunch. The hope was that the wood might dry and decent afternoon weather would open the door for painting in the afternoon. I anxiously anticipated the chance to paint. No, really, I did.
The noon weather report said there would be possible showers but otherwise, it would be clearing as the day progressed. I had sunny skies and all looked good. I put in a Metallica CD and got ready to slop it on.
I can't remember the last time I painted something. It was likely the last time the Gorham house was painted, before my parents realized they were running out of kids and had siding put on. I used to get as much paint on myself as I did whatever I was painting.
With that impressive painting resume, I tackled the front deck first. With each plank completed, the deck looked a little grayer. So did the skies. It remained cloudy and a threat of showers persisted. I contemplated trying to do the back deck first instead, not wanting to ruin the front if it rained. I decided to gamble. I rolled the dice and kept painting out front. Good thing I didn’t recall that when I usually gamble, I lose money.
By mid afternoon, I got the front deck done - with all the paint on the wood and none on me. All I had to do was wait and see if Mother Nature had anything to say about it. I waited anxiously. I watched the clock. Eight hours of drying would be between 8 and 10. Would Mother Nature actually cut Squiggy a break?
The radar on the 6 p.m. news showed no signs of showers approaching. I was in the clear.
Or so I thought. Rain was no long a concern, but I didn’t like the look of one of my pet sea gulls. I have two that linger around my beach. This one was sitting on the big rock that begins a series of ledges that extends from the front yard. At first, I thought it was just admiring my work. Then it dawned on me that it might be looking at the pristine, newly painted surface and tempted to make its own mark on the deck. Not like it hasn’t done it before. Then I feared maybe a raccoon would come out looking to sniff paint fumes and put little paw prints all across the deck. Not like they haven’t done that before either.
I was on guard to protect my fortress, but the sea gull was only interested in the bird seed on the ground. Raccoons never appeared. Looks like I made it. Word must have gotten around about my achievement. Sandpipers stopped by the rock where the pet sea gulls hang out. Chipmunks came to visit. A red cardinal even flew in for a viewing.
The following day Mother Nature made Mother’s Day warm and beautiful. I finished the back deck and was already plotting setting up the front deck Monday morning - before doing the softball game I had thought would surely get rained out. What was supposed to be another washout weekend turned out to be just what I needed. I even got a few precious moments to sit on the deck and bask in the sun and remember why I do all the work I do at that place.
I didn’t fool with Mother Nature, and she didn’t mess with me. It was a good weekend all around.
Now Mother Nature and I are in negotiations regarding my vacation weeks.