After a storm in Albion; for perspective, that's a bulk petroleum plant lit up in the distance. |
SLIGHTLY OFF THE MARK
I’ve been
complaining about winter weather in a lot of my columns, so I thought maybe it
was time to complain about something else:
Spring
weather.
Yes, spring
will arrive this year, or so they tell me. March is the traditional Hoosier
changeover time (yeah, it’s April now, let it go), which is another way of
saying we can have a snowstorm one day, a flood the next, grass fires the day
after that, and an ice storm during basketball playoffs. I suppose it comes as
no surprise that the Governor declared March 16th through 22nd
to be Severe Weather Preparedness Week, which I’d have done myself if security
hadn’t kicked me out of his office.
I waited to
put this column out until after that week, so if something horrible happened it
wouldn’t seem like I was going for ironic.
As part of
the celebration … er … observation, the State of Indiana wants to educate everyone,
conduct alert system tests, and otherwise try to keep people from getting
killed. Honestly, nothing brings down a wonderful spring day like death. The plan
was for you to hear the media alerts and tornado sirens being tested on March
20th … if weather permits.
Officials
often try to make people understand what watch and warning levels and storm
terms are, so I thought I’d help out a bit:
A Watch
means you should stay at your cookout, gaze at the blue sky and make fun of the
weatherman right up until the first wind gust blows away your “kiss the cook”
hat.
A Warning
means that if you haven’t sought shelter, you
will die.
A Funnel
Cloud should not be mistaken for a funnel cake, which generally kills
only one person at a time. Funnel clouds are just tornadoes that haven’t
touched the ground; maybe they will, maybe they won’t. If you want to gamble,
go to Vegas. Just to make it more fun, sometimes tornadoes reach the ground and
start tearing things up even though the bottom part is still invisible. You
could be looking at a “funnel cloud” right up until the moment your mobile home
changes zip codes.
A Tornado
is really, really bad.
Straight
Line Winds can cause as much damage as tornadoes, but aren’t associated
with rotation. You can often tell the damage path of these winds by finding
people who are standing in the debris, insisting it was a tornado.
A Squall
Line is what happens when I forget my wedding anniversary.
Thunderstorms
are storms that produce thunder. See what I did, there?
Lighting
kills a lot more people than tornados, but of course tornadoes are more fun …
um … attention grabbing. Tornadoes are like people who get drunk and try to
jump motorcycles over sheds using homemade ramps: They’re senseless,
spectacular, injury rates are high, and in the end nothing good comes from them
except to remind people they’re bad.
Just the
same, lightning’s also no fun, and can strike miles away from where you think
the storm is. Of people struck by lightning, 70% suffered serious long term
effects, 10% are permanently killed, and 20% don’t admit being hurt, or didn’t
hear the question.
The
material I received from the National Weather Service also had tips for heat
stroke and heat exhaustion, which I’m sure will be a big deal in a few months.
But right now the thought of being warm is almost as funny as the thought of a
tornado is not.
The average
forward speed of a tornado is 30 mph … but then, the average high temperature in
northern Indiana the day I wrote this was 50 degrees, and it didn’t get
anywhere close to that. They can go up to 70 mph … or remain motionless, which
would be really unfortunate if you happen to be under one at the time.
The average
width of the funnel on the ground is about 100 yards. Think about that. And,
like a flatulent Godzilla, that doesn’t include the wind damage around it. Some
can get over a mile wide. (Tornadoes, I mean, not gassy Godzilla’s. Wow.) If
you think about it, trying to outrun a 70 mph mile wide tornado in a car is
about as smart as trying to jump a shed from a homemade ramp after your tenth
beer.
Tornadoes
are most likely from April to June, which means pretty much nothing these days.
The last time I took an airplane flight it was delayed by a tornado—in
November. In fact, in November of last year 28 tornadoes hit Indiana, the third
highest number in a single day ever for our state.
So, when do you need to prepare for
severe weather? Anytime. Remember, no matter what the season, it only takes a
few beers to start building a ramp.
Sunset after a storm over Albion last summer. |
Good advice, Mark! I especially like the parts about a flatulent Godzilla and the killer funnel cake!
ReplyDeleteReally, you don't want either of those mentioned in your obituary.
DeleteTornadoes do tend to aim for little girls who sing too much... and Cary Elwes.
ReplyDeleteThat's why I teach my kids not to sing in the springtime ...
DeleteWe had a "warning" in the UK this week. Apparently the Sahara desert had decided to relocate to London. That was bad enough but it's good that we don't get the kind of things you mentioned over here, although we do but on a much smaller scale.People here are so pompous and lazy that we'd have to see our rooves flying off into the next county before we'd even believe it.
ReplyDeleteI recall a tornado did touch down in the general London area a few years ago, but generally your weather is a bit milder than ours. But you've had your Sahara visits, volcanic clouds, hurricane-like storms, and the occasional Viking! I don't recall that there's ever been a Viking attack in Indiana.
DeleteI remember those warnings when I lived in Ohio. Here, they tend to come after the weather event.
ReplyDeleteWe have a pretty good warning system around here ... but Mother Nature is a very sneaky lady.
DeleteI laughed all the way through this (I realise it’s not a funny subject!) I loved the fact that 10% are permanently killed, is there any other way?
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like you might need to start building that ramp any time soon and don’t forget to get the beers in.
Sometimes it's a good idea to make a serious subject funny ... of course, that depends on who you ask.
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