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Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Climes Curiouser 'n' Curiouser

A’s for the Aurorae. Loom there two: the first’s Australis,
whose plum plumes illumine views down south. The second’s Borealis.
Its heighted lights ignite bright nights in thermospheres up north.
My God! Bipolar pairs! (No third Aurora? Nor no fourth?)

B is for the Belt of Venus: atmo- [species] -spheric [genus].
Pinkish tints mint hints o' ‘she’ness. Yellowness? A bit. Less greenness.
Note its horizontal leanness. (Watch out, weatherwonk! You’ve seen us
eye such skies: obscene’s your meanness: rum attempts to come between us.
Cease! Desist, you cyst, you…penis! (Finis! Amen! Amen! Finis!)

Letter C? ‘Tis for Chinook, Grant's wayward wind which waxes warm
whene'er it's blowing true to form – or so pronounces Nixon’s book.
Dick’s tome’s a tell-all Tricky took from off some freshmen in his dorm,
although such nicking’s not Dick’s norm: swears Milhous, “I am not a crook!”

Letter D? ‘Tis for Derechos, squalls whose palls give sheiks the shakes.
Like diesel trains -- huge trains, not HOs, D's tow wind shears in their wakes.
To flee, as Holden Caulfield chose, wise Waco folks do all it takes
to pull up stakes, release the brakes…then run like hell, for heaven’s sakes!

E’s for Elephanta, winds one can’t connect with Cannes,
with Santa Ana or Atlanta, Timbuktu or Kazakhstan,
but can with India, where Fanta’s set aside the Gold Spot brand.
(What damage lesser breezes can’t accomplish, elephantas can.)

F’s for Firn, a sort of snow. (It’s not spelt ‘fern’ – that much I know.)
As schoolboys learn, the Eskimo, empair'd, adjourn from Noolaaghe Doh,
and, one with quern and one with hoe, contrive to churn each glacier so,
to turn such firn as lurks below. (Shall both re-turn? I’ll not say no.)

G is for Graupel, a rime, hail'd as “small hail” some most of the time.
Graupel grows in a supercool’d clime and makes snow moguls so-o-o-o hard to climb.
(Note my punning? My internal rhyme? Him who limns feels his hymn’s quite sublime.
To those readers who don’t, I say, “I’m…sure my puns fit this victimless crime.”

Letter H is for Haboobs, whose dusts, of sepia and ruby,
roil and boil – like surfer’s tubes – to buffet both: big-brain'd and boobie.
Whether you an Okie Reuben or a Rubik’s-Cubein’ Sioux be,
blows from ‘boobs will bruise your pubes: ‘boobs fell both fakes and “-lievers (true be-)”

I’s for Injun Summer when thermometers again
achieve their August levels. Bummer, ‘cuz such warming waxes. When?
When we’ve already weather’d frosts. Such freaking flux is uncontroll’d.
Forget McCutcheon! With our luck, we’re sure to catch our death of cold.
(Great-grandad, later, sued for reprints; long and loud did Grampie scold.
The Tribune’s claim (“The damn thing’s incorrect”) appear'd below the fold.
Nostalgi’ns ‘cross the USA, when they’ve been subsequently poll’d,
extoll: “We love John’s piece to pieces.” But, although the Trib’s cajol'd,
‘tis all for naught. Chicago's daily is (eventually) sold.
Now John’s cartoon lives on the web, while my lampoons are showing mould.

J is for Jet streams. Don’t fret: they’re not wet dreams.
Think fast! Blink! They’ve pass’d -- like no biker you’ve met. Seems
they’ve, lest we forget, quite a character set.
Loom they lofty? You bet! Like my hued minaret,
Or your blued clarinet. Or her rude cigarette,
Or his nude statuette. What you see’s what you get…
[Please attend how I sweat. Help me end this vignette.
I’d be so-o-o-o in your debt. Send for gents and a net!]

K’s for Kat- (they howl down mountains, mesas, heaps and hills) -abatic Winds.
For Kat- (as with Jill’s hill, at bottom, something spills) -abatic Winds.
Such winds do not perform well ev’ry time: they're some erratic ones.
What are they (Karabatics) most like? Semiautomatic guns.

L is for Levanters, winds that rock around Gibralter.
Their keening’s kin to cantors’ kvells. Still, seldom do they falter.
Were Levanters Corybants, sir, Keenan Wynn would haunt their altar.
But as years pass, fears grow scanter, and folks’ scorn Wynn’s sworn to alter.

M is for the Monsoon Wind, a monsterous affair.
In this, our “mondo de monsoon” -- mon Dieu! – we've monsoons everywhere.
Out in Mongolia, Montana, Montenegro monsoons blow.
(Were she in Mon, they’d nick the frickin’ frock off Marilyn Monroe.)

N’s for Noctilucent Clouds. They’re high. They’re dry. Their guise ain’t dowdy.
Noctilucents shine at night when, otherwise, dark skies ain't cloudy.
Ties have they to climate change? Guys – Yung et al. – have so avow’d. He
leads that loud and rowdy crowd who, framing “nocts,” exclaims, “Boy howdy!”

O’s for Oobleck, that climatological goo
sent by Seuss, Dr. Seuss (who’s Ted Geisel to you),
to Bartholomew Cubbins with mucho ado,
to help wring from Bart’s king an ”I’m sorry.” ('Tis true.)

The letter P’s for Palouser, pronounc’d, folks fancy, “pal-uh-SAIRE.”
I Googled it and found its lair. They said, “Pronounce it “PAL-uh-saire,”
which nail'd it not (a lot they care). One kill'd my cow (which just ain’t fair)…
unless it was that solar flare. (At base, they’re but vast blasts of air
which fuss – and muss not just your hair.)

Q’s for Quasi-stationary Front, the front that tends to tarry.
Squatting on an air-mass barrier, it’s temps tend not to vary –
out at sea where floats the ferry; inland, o’er the western prairie.
(QSFs, though not too scary, are, in fact, liquescent. Very!

R’s for Raining Cats and Dogs. It pours! It sogs! No “pitter-pats.”
Our streets aren’t clogg’d with fungo bats but fat – nine meter! – cedar logs.
It floods our flats -- turn'd cranb’erry bogs! For togs, wear Wellies; lose your spats.
Some call it “non-non-aqueous”: (We’ve not the foggiest what that’s.)

S is for St. Elmo’s Fire’s fluorescent blue or purpl’y glow. Be
Pequod’s mate, one Starbuck, spotting plasma’d gas in Melvelle’s Moby
Dick? Yes, as does Shakespeare’s Ariel, who’s charg’d by Prospero
to stir the tempest in the drama called The Tempest, don’cha know.

T is for Tsuname. (‘Tis as well for Tidal Wave.)
“They follow earthquakes,” swann’d our swami, “and the harm they do's most grave.
When one looms, alert your Mommie. She, with me, shall shout, ‘Be brave!’”
(One did; Sri collar’d his salami and hightailed it for his cave.)

U is for Uncinus – cloud de la crook –
thusly call’d, in the Latin, to designate ‘hook.’
They’re, god knows, spare as nose hairs on Alaistair Cook,
and de trop in the troposphere, realm of the rook.
Seen in pairs, they’re term’d ‘mares tails’ – a phrase best forsook –
and adhere to the cirrus. See, here: take a look!
What precip they let rip most elect not to brook.
And, what’s worse: like this verse, they’re terse gobbledygook.

V’s for the Virga, which hails from on high –
not as hail but as ice crystals. Down, down they fly,
and then, all of a sudden, they sublimate. Why?
Because air pressure’s hot. Such occurs where it’s dry.
She who’s witness’d, come sunset, a Virga-gilt sky
sighs as salmon-soak'd streamershine brightens her eye.
(NASA’s Phoenix saw Virga on Mars in July
of ’08, when their JPL lander dropp’d by.)

“W’s for Williwaw. It’s katabatic, cold and raw –
a wintry blast best held in awe. ‘Twill freeze your knees…with tooth and claw.
When ‘Waw’s are due, you’d best withdraw; no move may prove your tragic flaw.
Don’t hem! Don’t haw! Don’t set your jaw: You’ll ne’er play “Willies” to a draw.”
With this – and more – Quick caution’d Shaw as sat they down to tailgate slaw.
“Haw-haw-dee-haw, Quick Draw McGraw. No way you’re layin’ down no law.
Your caveats stick in my craw. You’re nowt if not petit bourgeoise.
P-s-s-s-s-s-s-shaw,” said Shaw with gruff guffaw. Then, chaw in jaw, again: ‘Haw-haw!’”
When last I saw ol’ G. B. Shaw, ‘twas as he pitch’d through roll and yaw.
Then, looking like a man of straw, he wafted high and waved his paw.
“Bid ‘sayonara’ to my Maw and ‘hasta pronto’ to my squaw!”
(I trust this ain’t his last hurrah: We’ll forge for George when dawns Spring’s thaw.)

X is not for Hunger Moon, who fails to fill my empty spoon.
X is not for Lenten Moon, who hails my fasting from the prune.
X is not for Planting Moon, who warns, “Your weeds remain unhewn.”
X is not for Flower Moon, whose thorns en rose effuse come June.
X is not for Thunder Moon, who stalks the ruinous monsoon.
X is not for Green Corn Moon, whose candlepow’r can’t shine too soon.
X is not for Harvest Moon, of whom ersatz Bing Crosbys croon.
X is not for Hunter’s Moon, whose glow was known to Daniel Boone.
X is not for Beaver Moon – nor Moon Baboon, nor Moon Racoon.
X is not for Long Night Moon, whose beams, it seems, are seen at noon.
X is not for Bony Moon, who proves, to Cherokees, a boon.
X is not for Barley Moon, who figures in the wiccan’s tune.
X is not for Mourning Moon, who rises of an afternoon (!)
X is not for Goodnight Moon (though now my po’m proves picayune).
X might be for Yellow Moon. (“But ‘Yellow’ boasts no ‘X,’ you loon.”)
Then let X be for Xanthin Moon: it’s yellow-like. (How opportune!)

Y’s for Yellow Snow. It isn’t what you think.
“Three kinds of yellow snow are seen,” say snow men...with a wink.
“The first is air pollution. Yeah, our planet’s on the brink.
Another? Pollen turns snow gold. But, no: it doesn’t stink.
The third is sand. Sometimes, sand turns snow black or brown… or pink.
(The yellow snow kids’ bladders sow you don’t want near your rink.)"

The last letter’s Z. It’s for Zephyr,
a breath mild – prized by child, pup and heifer.
Currents? Hush’d: those who’re “shush!”ed grow no deafer.
Loved by “-Titi” – arch queen known as “Nefer-.”

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