It was odd because with the rain, I figured the atmosphere had stabilized some. It’s in your carport." Apparently, a non-severe storm hit the area and a medium sized tree hit my house.įrustrated, I jumped in my car and headed home. Around 10:45 am, my neighbor of few words sent a text that read "hey, bubba-tree on your bedroom. I was well aware of threat of the storms going into the night. We were blessed and spared that day.įast forward almost 9 years, I was visiting a friend's house for an Easter cookout. We remember 2x4s flying high up in the sky like helicopter propellers. My mother and aunt saw insulation and siding scattered in our yard. I say these names because it’s forever etched in my mind. I prayed that night he and my neighbor Mrs. I also found coloring assignments from an elementary school somewhere I didn’t recognize. Later that night, I found mail in my yard from Cullman, Alabama. I worked at a hardware store and although we weren't directly hit, 2 inch PVC pipe was sucked from outdoor racks and shot 14 inches into a neighboring yard. My teacher said, "class, I don't think we are in Kansas anymore." It touched down less than a mile from us.Īpwas a sad and horrific day for the southeast. I actually stopped the lesson and told the teacher that the sky was turning an ugly, almost evil, green color. I sat by a wall in my classroom that was mostly glass windows and there was some communication between classrooms that our county was under warning, but we never went into the hallway. In the 8th grade, a tornado hit our small town and killed one man. Anyway, I began to study and learn as much about severe weather as I could. For me, the sound of the nuclear plant sirens being used as tornado sirens was the scariest. My mamaw and great grandmother were both horrified of storms, probably an undiagnosed case of lilapsophobia or astraphobia. I grew up both a little frightened and excited by storms and tornadoes. Adam Taylor, Cleveland TN, April 12 (Easter), 2020 PLEASE note that we have permission to print your story online and let us know the town and state and the month and year of the event. If you survived a tornado or know someone who did, share your story and help save lives. Greg Foltz, a NOAA Oceanographer.This page offers stories submitted by tornado and hail storm survivors. “It really does something that we haven’t been able to do before,” said Dr. He says there is still a lot to learn from tropical systems and, “any kind of data you can collect in that ‘right at the surface’ environment is really helpful in terms of just understanding in what the storm is doing and how it’s going to evolve.” Michael Brennan, a hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center. “What you’re getting from the Saildrone is data – not just the atmosphere but the ocean underneath,” said Dr. Saildrones collect data from just above, just below and right at the ocean’s surface before, during and after a storm passes through. They sail into the path of a storm and let the storm move over top of the them. They are powered by wind and solar energy meaning they can stay out on missions for months at a time on their own. They are fully autonomous traveling through the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. Scientists also hope this research will help predict when a tropical system will rapidly intensify. Saildrones collect all kinds of data and are studying how a hurricane draws its energy from the sea. For the first time, technology has evolved so much that a new floating drone can venture right into the middle of the storm, all on its own. (WFLA) - Atmospheric scientists are always looking for new ways to study tropical storms and hurricanes.
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