This morning's thunderstorm, or rather thunderstorms, brought record-setting amounts of rain to the San Antonio area. The 1942 record of rainfall within a 24-hour period was broken when the San Antonio airport received 5.42 inches.
Our house in Cibolo, right next door to Schertz, did not escape from the torrent. I didn't sleep very well, what with the incredibly loud thunderclaps, and when I did sleep, I dreamt of the roof leaking. Which it started to do again. I got up a couple of times and checked, and finally at 6:00 I found the water dripping steadily into the sunroom from the light fixture onto the dining table. I checked all over the rest of the house, put a saucepan on the table to catch the water, and went back to bed. I can't get the roof fixed until the end of the week at the earliest.
Bexar County, which contains the San Antonio metro, and Guadalupe County, where we live, are under a flash flood watch until this evening, as our several other surrounding counties. This part of Texas, near the Balcones Escarpment, is renowned for massive amounts of rainfall and subsequent flooding.
I thought with the amount of rain we had overnight that the swimming pool would have overflowed. But that hasn't happened yet, as you can see. With the next batch of storms on the way this afternoon, it will.

At least our flowering plants are blooming again.
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That post I wrote earlier today, about the rain hopefully ending the drought in south Texas? Possibly going to be part of a series?
Well, a few minutes ago, I sashayed through my sunroom to look out in the yard and watch the downpour and I heard a strange "plink." I whirled around and saw a puddle of water on the table. There's not supposed to be a puddle of water on the table.
My roof is leaking! Aargh!
And this just two sunny days after my rental property had a horrible broken pipe upstairs that sent water cascading all over the hall and down into the kitchen and living room. My carpet cleaning guy took some fans over and is trying to dry it out, and I asked the tenants to turn down the A/C to dehumidify the house. Torrential rains don't help. I thought about that this morning when I heard it start.
I was willing to overlook that, though, but my roof leaking? No way!--I have HAD it with this rain!
Trite, but true! The weather in Texas doesn't do anything by halves. It suddenly started raining again early this morning, and has been raining pretty heavily for the last couple of hours. The forecast calls for more showers for the next few days. Hurrah! I never thought I'd be so happy to see rain, after 6 years in England.
We still need lots of rain to recharge the Edwards Aquifer and dispell the drought. Here is what the drought monitor map looks like after the San Antonio area averaged 5.5 inches of rain earlier this month.

Compare it to August 25's map, showing the worst of it. This is when temperatures averaged 105, too. The forecast demurely says the temperature today will be "not as warm."
Where I live, in Guadalupe County northeast of San Antonio, we tend to get more rain than Bexar County. This is because it's on the east side of the fault line that is the eastern boundary of the Hill Country from San Antonio to Austin. More on that in a future post.
The biggest drawback to the welcome rain will be the flash floods that typically occur here because of the combination of heavy downpours that quickly saturate limestone/clay soils. And of course, the inevitable car wrecks from people driving as if it were dry and sunny.
As I write this, the sun is coming out and it is starting to steam outside. But we are making progress!
My husband's friend Andrea came to visit us from Italy recently. We went down to the River Walk one afternoon, as everyone should do, and after walking around for a while, we got thirsty and stopped for a drink at one of the many restaurants.

Andrea was amazed at the Texas-sized serving of beer he received.
Martin's cocktail was not too shabby either (although I don't remember what it was).
You don't need an excuse to celebrate on the River Walk. People there are already in a great mood, and the generous size of the drinks may be just one reason why!
Some recent posts:
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Miles the cat ignores the hummingbirds, wasps, and bees that congregate around the covered patio, but he is always on the lookout for lizards. They hang out on the deck outside the sunroom, and there was probably one near the clematis when I took this photo of it. Or maybe there wasn't. Miles also has a vivid imagination.
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