THE SMOKE THAT SEVERAL DAYS OF A HEAVY RAIN COULD NOT QUENCH:
There is a palm tree in a farmland in front of my apartment cut to the base many years ago. I came and lived there newly. So, i gathered the waste plastics and polythene in the house at the base and set fire to burn it.
The fire completely burnt the plastics to smoke. So, I left it.
It rained heavily, cat and dog that evening for six hours.
Surprisingly, when I worked up the next morning, I still saw the smoke like someone had just put another fire there, just smoke but no fire.
I asked my neighbors if they had put fire there again. They said no, that that's how putting fire on where a palm tree was would be.
Several more days of same heavy rain came, same observation, till the smoke finally was no more.
Still trying to use science to explain it but can't, though the leaves of peer tree partially covers that portion a bit, but that's not enough for the smoke to survive such heavy down pour.
There is a palm tree in a farmland in front of my apartment cut to the base many years ago. I came and lived there newly. So, i gathered the waste plastics and polythene in the house at the base and set fire to burn it.
The fire completely burnt the plastics to smoke. So, I left it.
It rained heavily, cat and dog that evening for six hours.
Surprisingly, when I worked up the next morning, I still saw the smoke like someone had just put another fire there, just smoke but no fire.
I asked my neighbors if they had put fire there again. They said no, that that's how putting fire on where a palm tree was would be.
Several more days of same heavy rain came, same observation, till the smoke finally was no more.
Still trying to use science to explain it but can't, though the leaves of peer tree partially covers that portion a bit, but that's not enough for the smoke to survive such heavy down pour.