Hope Springs Eternal
It's been about a year and a half since we moved into our new home. Everything was going really well. My gardens were blooming and were the envy of the block--I got so many compliments from my neighbors. We were working on getting the guest room fixed up and purchasing some furniture that we needed. My uncle and his wife from Texas are coming for a visit at the end of this month and we were so excited to show them the new house for the first time.
The hail storm begins... |
But around 1:00 in the morning this past Wednesday, the heavens opened up and rained down hell on us. For about an hour it was just thunder and lightening. I was laying in bed trying to comfort my dogs and then I heard the knock of hail on the roof. I jumped out of bed and ran downstairs. I wheeled my lily pot in as far back to the door as possible then grabbed my potted geranium. I didn't even have time to grab the saucer it sits in before I got hit with a quarter-sized hailstone on the inside of my arm. It left a nice bruise. Next I ran and got the potted daylily just outside the back door--it's my sister's and I just couldn't let that go either. Then I went back inside to get out of harm's way. For nearly an hour, my mom and I watched as a deluge of rain and hail came down, the hailstones getting bigger each minute. We watched as hail punched holes in our porch railing. We watched as my beautiful gardens got destroyed.
We moved about the house, checking things, watching. Listening to the sounds of large hail pounding the house like millions of baseballs falling from the sky. It was then that I heard the creak of weak glass coming from the master bedroom. I ran in and looked for the source. I found it just as the glass in a window of the master bathroom shattered. I quickly closed the door to the the bathroom and the master bedroom. The power was already out and I didn't want to be picking glass out of my two dogs' paws in the dark.
The broken window in the scrapbooking loft taken from inside the night of the storm. |
The pile of hail in the corner of our driveway that was just over a foot deep. |
Just some of the damage to our porch railing. |
The largest hailstone I could find that night measured 2 and a quarter inches. There were reports of hailstones over 3 inches in diameter--in other words, baseball-sized hail. |
My poor hosta that was so large and beautiful now pulverized. Broken solar lights were strewn amongst the wreckage of my garden. |
Photos don't show the actual damage as much as seeing it in person, but the whole side of the house was pocked with holes in the vinyl siding. |
The model homes next-door to us and the model home's fence. We think this house got hit worse than ours, but not by much. |
The broken window in the scrap loft from outside later that morning. |
The broken window in the master bathroom later that morning. |
Piles of unmelted hail filled with roof shingle grit surrounds one of our beat-up down spout extenders. |
The bucket of glass and box of vinyl debris picked up outside. |
My poor garden in the backyard. Caitlin and Alex's dog, Dante, was there for emotional support. |
The two blooms I found that morning |
Our phone box on the side of the house got hit so badly the cover was torn off and the wiring inside was shredded, causing our land line to go out. |
Our 1-month-old fence with chunks taken out of it. |
The next day, Thursday, was much the same, except without cleanup. Just more people coming to the door wanting to do business with us. The phone company came out and fixed our phone line. Then the landline was ringing off the hook. By the end of the day, I was sick and tired of people in general. I just wanted some peace and quiet. And Friday was the same after that, though it had slowed some. Saturday was slower as well. Many of my neighbors had already signed contracts and had signs in their yard. But as we were talking to two workers from one company, I watched as a small prop plane flew over the neighborhood with a large banner proclaiming hail damage repair. Let me repeat that: A plane flew over our house with a banner about hail damage repair. It was so obtrusive. So cold. Luckily, the workers we were speaking to outside were not from that company. Later, my mom tore up and threw away the flyer from the company that flew the plane over our neighborhood.
It is now Saturday evening as I write this. The doorbell has mercifully stopped ringing and so have all our phones. We are still waiting to see our insurance adjuster. My mom thinks she may have decided on a repair company to contract with. I'm dreaming about what my gardens would have looked like if this hadn't happened.
My front yard garden bed, also mostly destroyed. Even the grass got beat up badly. |
Our outdoor tile table. These are just a few of the cracks and chips. There is also denting around the metal frame. |
My hanging potted plants that were destroyed. The hummingbird feeder made it through with minimal damage. |
I know that it could have been worse. We don't have a large hole in our roof and our cars are safe. We are safe. But the emotional devastation for us is huge. This was our fresh start. And now we are having to start over yet again in many aspects.
Earlier today, I noticed the rosebush gave me two more blooms. Thank you, Opa. Hope springs eternal.
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