18 December 2025 – Just a description, mind you, not a complaint. Compared to weather almost everywhere else in the country, including here in BC, Vancouver’s weather is a walk in the park.
But even so, it is still very windy and very wet!
Just look at the air vents blown horizontal in the sodden construction fence fabric, as I splosh my way along West 10th this morning.

By the combined might of word + weather association, I start thinking about anapest metre.
Why? Because wet weather on 8 December caused me to rewrite a limerick to fit, and that in turn caused me to discover the anapest metre and its (quote-unquote) “galloping rhythm.”
So here I am, in yet more wet & windy weather. To distract myself, I compose a limerick. An ode to the anapest metre.
(More throat-clearing)
The anapest metre is now my best friend,
It offers me rhythm without any end,
I gallop and giggle,
I wobble and wiggle.
It distracts me from rain and that’s a great trend!
Once home… and dry… I look up “anapest metre” online. The Poetry Foundation explains it consists of two unaccented syllables followed by one accented syllable, and then helpfully gives two examples of words that — all by themselves! — are anapestic: “underfoot” and “overcome.”
Yah well, here’s the Canadian example: “Newfoundland.”
From now on, let’s all pronounce it correctly.
Finally! A new year’s resolution we can keep.

