We had quite a storm blow through yesterday evening. Not unexpected at all, in fact, it hit just about the exact time the meteorologists had been predicting for two days. So we were ready for it.
As dinner was cooking in the oven (Husband's Delight, I'll put the recipe at the bottom of this post), I ran out to the barn and put evening feed in the horse's stalls, anticipating that I would need to bring them in a little early.
Ran back to the house as the timer on the oven was just finishing up. DH and I sat down to salad and Husband's Delight, me keeping an eye on the darkening sky to the south.
I gulped down the last few bites on my plate, then jumped up and headed out to the barn. Just as I got there, my phone went off in a tornado warning alert. Of course it said to seek shelter immediately, to which I replied (yes, out loud) "I will, just as soon as I get horses in." Because that's how it works when you have a farm. Livestock first, then yourself.
I was to the mares' pasture gate (as the Poetess is always the first horse to come in--alpha mare that she is), where both mares were standing to meet me, when I heard the storm sirens in the village (6+ miles away) go off. And then the wind kicked up. Oh boy, here we go!
DH met me part of the way to the barn and took the Poetess from me so I could run back and get the LBM. By the time I got to the same spot with her, he met me again with both of the geldings' halters. I went to the their pasture, and quickly haltered one, pulled him through the gate and DH was back again, ready to receive the lead rope. The last horse was anxious to get in by then, looking worriedly off to the south and waiting practically smashed at the gate for me to come in and grab him.
We got all the horses in their stalls and the barn shut up tight, then speed walked into the wind back to the house. I had just pulled my muck boots off in the garage and decided (fool that I am for a good storm), to head out onto the front porch in my stocking feet to watch the front roll in, when it hit.
And man, did it hit good! Straight line winds right out of the south and driving rain coming completely sideways. Forget going on the front porch, it was like walking into a firehose! So I went into the house instead, just in time to see (through the kitchen windows) the little side table go scooting across the entire length of the front porch (about 30') driven by the wind.
Looking out the other windows, you couldn't see hardly anything the rain and wind were coming so hard. I did notice that we were missing the little plastic toddler sized playset that sits in the backyard closest to the house. It had been in the yard a few minutes ago, when DH and I entered the garage, but now it was missing.
The electricity blinked off and back on twice, then went off for good. As of this writing (over 17 hours later), it is still off.
About fifteen minutes after it hit, the leading edge of the storm had passed and the wind let up enough that we could see through the rain, I located that playset. In pieces, starting out near the chicken coop and ending towards the field, about 50 yards from where it had originally sat.
playset pieces scattered from the backyard to the shop
Later, once the wind had died off and the rain slowed to a drizzle, DH and I went out to check on the horses and chickens (stubborn chickens had not wanted to go into their coop before the storm), and to assess damages.
Horses, horse barn and fencing: Fine.
Chickens and coop: Fine (all chickens huddled on their roost by then, LOL).
DH's shop: lots of water inside because the south facing door had been damaged by the wind hitting it full force. South door has a huge dent and was raised about 10" by the force, and the east facing door is bent outward from the pressure inside the building. We're going to have to put in our first ever claim on our homeowner's insurance.

House: lost a long piece of fascia of the peak of the South gable. Also several pieces of soffit partially ripped off on the front porch and the piece of soffit closest the door that goes from the garage to the front porch is all mangled and punched up into the garage attic (again, extreme air pressure). A window screen ripped off a living room window is bent up and seems to have a piece of the window edging itself still attached. Add that to the insurance claim. A wooden chair that lives on the front porch was thrown up against the railing by the wind so hard that the backrest broke off. All other porch/deck/patio furniture moved around, some flipped, but nothing else damaged.
Shed and garden/grape arbor: Fine
Trees: all the trees around the house and yard look fine, including the dead one leaning towards the utility pole that the electric company was supposed to have their contractor remove last Fall. In the northeast corner of the field, near the entrance to the 'north road' in our woods, a very large, tall, tree has the top completely broken out of it. We'll have to examine it close up to determine if we need to take the entire tree down or let it be and see if it recovers.
This morning, the temperature is almost 40 degrees cooler than it was yesterday, with winds now coming from the north. We have the generator on at the house so DH can have internet to work from home, and we have heat, lights, water, and the fridges and freezers can stay cool. We'll run the generator all day (or until the power is restored) then shut it off at bedtime to save fuel and have quiet for sleeping.
There's no power in the barn though, so I strapped on my handy headlamp and cleaned stalls by its meager light.
selfie with headlamp
not the greatest stall cleaning light, but it does the job
(note shadow from my phone while taking the picture!)
HUSBAND'S DELIGHT
(recipe originally found in a magazine by my aunt in the early 1980's)
1 pound ground beef
6 ounces sour cream
3 ounces cream cheese
1/4 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 Tbsp sugar
15 ounce can tomato sauce
1/2 cup chopped onion
10 ounces wide egg noodles
1 cup shredded mozzarella cheese
1. Set cream cheese out in a small bowl to soften for an hour (or soften on warm setting of microwave)
2. Cook ground beef and onion until meat is browned. Meanwhile, cook the egg noodles until tender.
3. To the meat and onion, add seasonings and tomato sauce.
4. Drain noodles.
5. Add sour cream to the softened cream cheese and mix well.
6. In a greased 9" x 13" baking dish, layer half the noodles, then half the meat sauce, then half the cream sauce. Then layer remaining meat sauce, remaining cream sauce, and remaining noodles. Top with the shredded mozzarella.
7. Cover dish with foil and bake in a 350 degree oven for 30 minutes.