#27 Postby azskyman » Sun Jul 18, 2004 8:23 am
Growing up in the Midwest, I was fascinated by the variety of weather that the 4 seasons could bring. It is my dad, however, who I credit with my early interest in weather. He taught me to watch the sky, appreciate the clouds, and when a storm hit, we'd jump in the car and find a vantage point from which to watch it and then the flooded street corners through which to drive. In the winter, we'd head out with tire chains into the snowstorms, park the car in the black of night, shut it off, and listen to the silence of the heavy snow.
I pursued as much meteorology as I could in college. My best friend's father there taught meteorology. I took both of his courses and got great grades...took more in climatology and statistics and whatever else I could find.
A year before college graduation, I witnessed the F4 tornado of April 21,1967, and watched it rip through my hometown killing 24 persons and injuring more than 450.
Drafted and sent to Vietnam, I was fascinated by its tropical weather and went through a couple of typhoons while living less than a mile from the South China Sea.
And when I returned to Illinois, I hooked up with the NWS as a Skywarn Spotter (and still am one here in Phoenix), got to be friends with the local NWS people, and assisted them with taking obs and broadcasting NOAA radio (back when rules were lax and opportunity was there).
Started my own backyard weather station in 1974 and continued it for 23 consecutive years. Wrote dozens of articles for the local newspaper on weather and became the local weatherman (a label that I still have when I go back).
I was cofounder of the Association of American Weather Observers, a vibrant group of thousands who I encouraged and brought out of the closet from 1983 through 1997 as editor of the American Weather Observer. During that time I was elected Counselor of the National Weather Association and spoke before hundreds of teachers in Silver Spring, Maryland, as a member of the AMS committee on School and Popular Oceanographic and Meteorological Education.
My love of weather brought interviews from TV Guide, The Wall Street Journal, and I've done live radio interviews as far away as BBC in the UK.
Over the years, my passion for weather has only been outdone by my passion for people who enjoy weather....like those here at Storm2k.
While I have received awards and certificates from the NWS and other weather entities and list among weather friends such folks as Jim Cantore, Tom Skilling, Dick Goddard, Fred Ostby, Jack Borden, Jack Williams, and many more, there is nothing I value more in my life's work in weather than a simple exchange of emails among those who understand and enjoy the sky as much as I do.
...and it all started when my dad simply said look up and enjoy the sky right outside your window.
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