The Clouds: Waiting out the storm
- wwsmith6410
- Jan 30
- 3 min read
Updated: Feb 1
(First appeared in The Baldwin Times/Gulf Coast Media, 1-16-26)
Editor’s note: This column is part 2 of 2
“Let the wind carry you homeBlackbird, fly awayMay you never be broken again …”— “Blackbird,” Alter Bridge
A couple of nights before Dorinda came home for hospice care, a rainbow appeared outside her hospital window — a moment I’ve written about before, and one I have carried with me ever since.
I lost my wife two weeks later.
So when another rainbow appeared — briefly — after a January storm at the Gulf State Pier, it stopped me. As I wrote in last week’s column about seeing a “D” in the sky, clouds matter, too.
Those clouds — including the storm, the rainbow, and the beach days that followed — formed Part 2 of this column.
Let’s start with the storm.
That first Saturday of the new year, I drove to the pier even though the morning was dark and stormy. As soon as I parked, buckets of rain started falling. I waited in my car for a few minutes until it eased, then made my way onto the pier stretching out over the Gulf. It was around 6:30 a.m.
I waited.
I took dozens of photos. An hour later, the sun finally broke through the clouds. By then, I wasn’t alone. A few others had arrived looking for the sunrise. Some were fishing. There were birds overhead and on the pier. And then, for just a moment, a rainbow. Just as quickly as I noticed it, the rainbow faded away.
But it paid to wait out the storm that morning.
A couple of evenings later, I was back at Gulf State Park again — this time for sunset. The clouds and sky didn’t disappoint, whether framing two palm trees at the end of another boardwalk, the dunes, or the Gulf's rolling waves. I know Dorinda would have smiled at those images.
The next day, a Gulf Shores beach welcomed me with something different altogether — 74 degrees, clear skies, no clouds.
Several others were there, too, basking in the rays alongside me. It was a good day in the sun. An emotional one, too. I know it’s what Dorinda would have wanted to do this January afternoon. I listened to the waves as they splashed into the shore. I read some, which she no doubt would have done. I sat.
A nap would have been ideal — something my Bear would have absolutely enjoyed. I didn’t sleep this time. There was too much on my mind.
And of course, I took more pictures. It’s a new favorite pastime of mine. Later, looking back through the photos, I discovered I had caught a bird frozen mid-flight against the sun in one of them.
You know, I’ve noticed the beach always seems to provide you with a different photographic canvas to work with, colors added to the palette.
You never know what you’re going to get.
Looking ahead to 2026, I know the difficult days – the storms – will remain. But I look forward to the times when the clouds lift, or when they make for another spectacular sunset.
Excelsior, I remind myself - keep looking up.
I look forward to spending some sunny days at the beach with our children and grandchildren, maybe with others. Or even alone, like I did the morning of Jan. 3, sticking around to see what the day would bring.
It paid to wait.







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