While You Were Doomscrolling, Someone in Hawaii Was Obsessing Over Exactly How Wet Their Rain Gauge Got Yesterday
This is your News You do not Need podcast
I woke up this morning fully prepared to learn something important, like whether the world economy is collapsing, but instead I fell into the internet’s weird side alley and discovered… rainfall trivia from Hawaii. Yes, that’s where my day went. Not surfing, not volcanoes, not hula. Rain reports.
The National Weather Service in Honolulu posts incredibly detailed rainfall summaries, and someone is updating them with the seriousness usually reserved for rocket launches and royal coronations. In the last 24 hours, they’ve carefully measured exactly how much water fell on a very specific patch of planet where, frankly, “it rained” would usually be enough information.
We’re talking stations with names like Manoa Lyon Arboretum and Puu Kukui that sound like vacation destinations but are actually just places where rain gauges sit quietly, living their best damp lives. Somewhere, a meteorologist is passionately announcing, “We got 3.14 inches in the last day,” as if Hawaii has finally achieved the mathematical constant of precipitation: pi, but soggy.
Imagine the job: “What do you do?” “I track how much sky water falls into a metal cup on a remote hillside.” Your office gossip is like, “Big day yesterday, the gauge in the valley overflowed.” The rest of us complain about emails; these people complain about moss growing on the equipment.
These summaries list totals for each island, with all the drama of a box score. Kauai leads with a strong showing of showers, Oahu tries to stay competitive, Maui offers scattered contenders, and the Big Island is like, “I have actual lava, but sure, let’s talk drizzle.” They even break it down by time periods: last 24 hours, last 3 days, month-to-date, wet-season so far. It’s fantasy football, but for clouds.
What’s striking is how wildly different the numbers are over tiny distances. One station gets drenched while another, a short drive away, is basically on a coffee break. Somewhere in Honolulu, someone got soaked walking the dog, while three blocks over, somebody else is wondering why their forecast said “rain” when all they saw was a confused cloud and a disappointed umbrella.
And these rainfall stats are being preserved as if future historians will desperately need to know that, on an otherwise normal weekday, a particular slope on Oahu received an extra half-inch of rain. I like to picture alien archaeologists thousands of years from now: “Their civilization collapsed, but they really cared about how wet it was in Hilo.”
The best part is how un-bingeable this data is. You can’t casually bring it up in conversation. “Hey, did you hear the Hanalei gauge picked up over an inch overnight?” You will have never watched eyes glaze over so fast. This is the kind of information that, if you know it, you immediately realize you did not need to know it, and yet, now it lives rent-free in your brain.
But there’s something endearingly human about it. In a universe of black holes and dark matter, some person is standing in the rain in Hawaii, making sure a little plastic bucket is level, so we can say, with absolute confidence, that yesterday was slightly wetter than the day before in a valley most of us will never visit.
So, while the rest of the world is doomscrolling big headlines, somewhere in the Pacific, a spreadsheet just quietly updated to reflect that the sky dribbled a bit more on one side of a mountain. Is your life better for knowing this? Not even slightly. Will it stop raining because of your indifference? Absolutely not.
But if anyone ever accuses you of not keeping up with the news, you can now confidently say, “Actually, I’m very current on hyper-local Hawaiian precipitation anomalies.” And then enjoy the silence that follows.
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