Let’s talk about the monsoon! Technically, Vietnam has a tropical monsoon
climate. Apparently, this means there
are two seasons – the southwest monsoon (April to September) and the northeast
monsoon (October to March). The
southwest monsoon brings warm and wet weather.
The northeast monsoon brings cool and not so wet weather. At this point in time, I can only speak to the
southwest monsoon.
I expected this monsoon to be torrential downpours for days
on end. If it did let up, and the sun came
out, it would be hot, bright and sweltering.
I’ve found this to be only partly true.
It has not rained every day since I arrived, but there have been some
amazing downpours. When the sun comes
out, it does dry up (faster than you can sing “Eency Weency Spider”) and it is
sweltering and bright.
There was no outdoor recess the first day I had students –
due to the torrential downpour. By lunch
time everything was fine and everyone went out (we were nuzzled down for our
incredibly calm and peaceful Quiet Time – all students soundly asleep).
I’ve enjoyed floating in the swimming pool as the cool rain
pelts me. It doesn’t really matter
whether I’m in the pool or not, right?
The point is to get cool by getting wet.
The hard part is the splatter of water that sprays into my eyes.
During the staff Scavenger Hunt back before students
arrived, we were told – “it is monsoon season, plan on getting wet.” My team had barely moved when the sky opened
up and rain poured down, people ducked under awnings and passed out umbrellas
and ponchos. By the time I figured out how
to get the poncho on and over my day bag, the rain had stopped. As my team finished up and went to the
restaurant for the final step in the hunt, someone let the cork out. Torrential doesn’t begin to describe it (and
finding words that I can substitute for torrential are becoming harder to find
as I write this). A colleague and I
missed crossing the street with our team.
The time it takes for one stoplight cycle was the difference between dry
and sopping wet. My spouse (on the secondary
hunt) was still “on the hunt” when the skies let loose. He said when he got to the restaurant, he
walked straight to the bathroom, stripped all his clothes off and wrung
everything out (3 times).
The response of the motorbike riders when the rain starts is
interesting. Some decide to just ride it
out (“I’m almost there”). Others pull
off the road, open up their seat, pull out the poncho, maneuver it in place, adjust
it over the passenger(s) and motor on. Still
others, park the bike in some sheltered area and wait it out. This can make it difficult for others to move
around during the rain, if the motorbikes are parked on the sidewalks or in the
street.
Yesterday, we were downtown shopping. We could tell it was on the verge of
raining. The plan was to continue doing
the shopping until the rain started.
Then we could have some lunch and play some cribbage, while we waited it
out.
We were headed to the post office, moseying by the
interesting shops (it is a high tourist area).
An Art gallery caught our eye.
The woman working inside said, “c’mon in, wait out the rain.” Two doors down, I could see the curtain of
water moving toward us. How did she know
the weather would change that quickly? With
little time to spare, we ended up ducking into a shop no bigger than our master
bathroom, with 3 other people. There was
barely room to move around, as we looked at EVERYTHING in the shop to avoid
going out in the deluge. I bought 3
postcards and then we stood at the door, noting it had let up a little
bit. The woman working in the shop
kindly offered, “the shop next door is much bigger.” It was as if everyone has a monsoon plan.
We ended up across the street, on the steps of some office building,
enjoying the cool weather, marveling at how others were handling the rain. There were 4 people shuffling under one
umbrella, others were skipping along enjoying the coolness (Western tourists), and
some had 50 cent ponchos that probably last one monsoon deluge.
I’ve enjoyed watching the rains from our 7th
floor balcony. The sound of all that
rain hitting the banana tree leaves in the field behind us is distinct. I woke last night to the bathroom door
banging – it was because of the raging storm outside, with the open bathroom
window. I walked into the living room to
look outside and the blur of the night was notable. Today, I’ve seen the same thing, several
times, as the strength of the rain prevents the buildings in the distance from
even being visible.
I do find myself wondering what that other monsoon season is
going to be like.
This photo allows you to see motorbike traffic - you can use your imagination as to what it looks like when the rain comes down ....
How soon till you have a motorbike?
ReplyDeleteOh my god. How can they maneuver like that. All I see are bumps and bruises and muffler burns. Yikes.
ReplyDeleteThis is nothing! There will be more photos of motorbikes - but probably not from the back of one!
ReplyDelete