Wednesday, June 17, 2009

The Wind of 120 Days



The wind of 120 days that usually blow northwest from June to September started early this year in Mid May.  The winds are not continuous but can be quite fierce and resilient - a little like the Afghan people the wind blows upon...Cloud patterns are tremendous and ever changing.  When the wind settles, dust devils rise 1000 meters reaching for the sky.  The subarctic winds from the north converge with a divergent fringe from south Pakistan creating this wind tunnel across the fertile Shomali plains which is where Bagram Air Base presently sits.  The wind are accompanied by varying degrees of heat, wind, low to mid humidity causing fine particles to find their way through any cracks and crevices and leave a light coating of light brown silty dust on everything.  Not only on, it gets in every orifice so I find myself mining in my ears and nose every few days wondering what monster has grown in there.  Today was an especially windy day - I was out on the airfield and the windsock was blowing full, confirming what I knew, the wind coming from the northwest...The sun at this altitude, combined with this wind condition hardens the skin like leather.

These winds blow across the Bagram plain - as they have for 1000s of years.  To the northeast is the mouth of the Panjsir, the strikingly steep mountain valley where Ahmed Shah Massoud held his ground against both the Soviets and the Taliban until his assassination on 09 Sep 2001.  Massoud remains a hero and is known locally as the Lion of Panjsir. 

The wind here takes many forms and has a character different than that in the states.  Perhaps this is due to the landscape and the terrain it must pass over.  sometimes violent lightning storms light the sky that create eerie glows when the flash of light reflects off the silica particles in the air.

I have a sudden craving for a cold beer...


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