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Tony Hake

Denver Weather Examiner
Tony Hake’s fascination with weather started as a sixth grader when an F2 tornado struck Thornton about 4 miles from his house and did $10 million damage and injured 42 people. Now he is an amateur meteorologist keeping an eye on the sky.

  

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Showing entries for Category: memorial-day


Memorial Day Forecast - And a Reminder About the Holiday

May 24, 2:19 PM
 
 
Memorial Day 2008After all of the drama earlier in the week, this Memorial Day weekend is shaping up to be pretty nice. Saturday there is a slight chance for thunderstorms in the afternoon along the Front Range but the threat is relatively minimal and we should reach a high of 73. Sunday looks to be the best day with sunny skies and a high of 77. Monday and into Tuesday though a passing low pressure system will result in an increased chance of showers and thunderstorms on both days. Those that are headed to the high country for some camping should be prepared for potentially cold conditions at night.

I wish everyone a happy and safe Memorial Day.  I also wish to remind everyone of the reason for this holiday.  Many of you may not know but I am chairman of the Thornton Veterans Memorial Foundation, a group dedicated to funding, constructing and maintaining a veterans memorial in the north area of Denver. 

Of all the patriotic related messages I write for the efforts of the memorial, the ones I write for Memorial Day are always the hardest.  It is the one and only holiday celebrated in our country that is specifically set aside to honor the dead.  It honors the men and women who have not only made the ultimate sacrifice but those that have done so in service to our nation.  No single sacrifice can ever come close to equaling that which is made in defense of others, in defense of an entire country.

The soldiers, sailors, Marines, airmen and Coast Guardsmen that have given their lives did not ask for nor did they expect to be one of the over one million who are on the nation’s honor roll.  In another reality they might have been among the majority of Americans who live long, relatively uneventful lives.  They would have 9 – 5 jobs, a loving spouse and family, a couple of children and a pet dog.  Perhaps in an ideal world, all in this world would live like that.

We do not however live in that ideal setting, nor will we in our lifetimes.  Instead we thank God that there are those who sacrificed the perfect life for something more, that they were willing to surrender their dreams to preserve our nation and our way of life.  That they were able to see beyond the simple pleasures and understand there are some things worth dying for. 

These men and women didn’t work that air conditioned office job.  They chose combat boots instead of dress shoes.  Uniforms instead of suits.  24 hour shifts in places that seemed closer to Hell than anything else on Earth.  Months on end spent away from their families and loved ones. 

That loving spouse?  If they were lucky enough to have one, they most likely wrote a “just in case” letter to them in the days before they left for duty overseas.  Many of us did and thankfully many are never opened or see the light of day.  Mine is still tucked away – maybe someday I will share it with my wife and children.  For others though, that letter did get opened by their wife or husband or mom or dad.  “Be proud of me, I’ll miss you, and I love you” have been written and read all too many times as tears fell on the paper. 

And the children.  Oh, the children.  To have to tell a child that, “Daddy’s not coming home” or “Mommy’s in heaven with God.”  To be that husband or wife, dealing with the incredible grief and yet to have to be strong for the kids.  Then comes the day when you shake at the sound of the 21 guns, to reach out your hands to accept the flag and watch your child so bravely stand and salute the casket as a bugler mournfully plays Taps. 

No, they were not your typical Americans by any stretch of the imagination nor are those they have left behind.  They loved life and they loved their families but they felt a calling to something even greater.  Without hesitation they stood bravely and answered the call.  Their sacrifice will never be forgotten as long as we ensure their flame burns eternally at memorials across this nation, in our nation’s consciousness and indeed, in the very souls of all Americans. 

Should they be mourned?  Absolutely.  But they should also be celebrated.  As General George Patton once said, “In my mind we came here to thank God that men like these lived rather than regret that they died.”  On this Memorial Day we shed a tear for them but we also say “thank you” and smile at their memory for without their sacrifice, we would not be free to enjoy this day and the days to come.

Memorial Day 2008So to all who have made the ultimate sacrifice I say this prayer: 

Fair winds and following seas, shipmates.  May God grant you the peace in passing that you did not enjoy in life and please know that we will never forget your sacrifice.  Thank you for your service and thank you to your family as their sacrifice is second only to your own.

May God bless you and God bless America!

     Tony


Topics: may weather , forecast , memorial day
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