We did have one very memorable day with weather at Tenacatita. It was near the end of January we were watching the semimfinals of NFL 2004 Football season, and the Steelers were losing this game to the Patriots, a final game for the Steelers before the Superbowl. It was playing out on a TV outside of Walter and Haazel's rig about 30 feet from ours, by his Star Choice satellite feed. While watching, out of the corners of everyone's eye, across the Bahia six or eight miles, we had been seeing lightening flashing. When the game was in its final series of plays, things seems to change for a monment around us, when sounds got hushed, a bit of a breeze hit and a wave of warmth replaced that, and in just a second or two, the wind came up with a blast- a quick call to action, and I ran to get the awning back up. I was only a few steps away but the wind hit with such heavy force, Marguerite had rushed out and was holding the awning but losing her grasp, and with my help we still couldn't get it rolling, finally lost it to a large tear. The rain was still coming at us in buckets, my glasses seemed submerged and I cut my foot on a broken glass candle holder. Al and George, my brother, came to help us, got the awning hardware down off and stowed and the three of us moved on to help others. Eugene, from western Montana, already had help but needed more and even our crew of four could barely hang on to the awning while he went onto the roof to remove a tarp so it would roll up. Farther towards the end of the beach a couple had had trouble with the wind too, their truck and slide-in camper had received a long gouge in it, but their awning was okay. It was two weeks before we had our awning working again, aand we had suffered some by it beingstuck under the motor home! A very nice materieal, better than the original, was found in Manzanillo. But the seller had sewn it wrong, by not using the original rubber back - They had only been used to sewing coverings to use on stands used on the beaches. We undid the stiching and took the rubber string to another man closer, in Melaque. had to get him early, as he reserved the rest of the day to hit the bars. From that day on, when ever somebody saw lightening, they put out a call along the beach so that campers knew to put their vulnerable items under cover, and have their awnings up. But we never had a similar blow during the next five winters there.