This is the hourly weather forecast for Cocoa Beach. Methinks I'm not going to the lap pool this morning.
@WordsmithFL that can be scary. when we had the back 40 logged, i insisted they cut all the pines along the pasture fenceline & the ones within 75' of the house, because every storm one or more played lightning rod (if hit just right, pines explode & send shrapnel up to 50' away). there's still a few i think are too close, but they're on my neighbor's property
@redenigma A few years ago, we had a lightning strike split an oak tree in the back yard. I thought a bomb had gone off. After that, I had all the oak trees removed from the property (except one, which my wife insisted we keep for the squirrels).
The neighbor had lightning strike his house a couple years ago. His son was at the keyboard and felt electricity go up his arm.
Such is life in Florida.
@WordsmithFL the closest trees to the house now are sugar maples & American chestnuts (and those are still pretty small, under 10 foot).
mostly, in the past 7 or 8 years, storms have hit the ridge northwest of us & split all the storms to the north & south. it's an interesting but unsettling change in weather patterns
@redenigma Whereabouts are you?
East-central Florida gets more lightning strikes than anywhere else in the U.S., although sometimes we swap that honor with a place near Tampa. Part of life in the Sunshine State.
@redenigma Our house has a small enclosed patio where we can watch the light show -- until there's a strike in the neighborhood like we had this morning.