Been watching the Weather channel. I feel so bad for my home state. Was just in Kentucky watching Beechwood play Mayfield in the State playoffs Met several lovely people from Mayfield. My heart aches for them
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Cold air from the northwest meeting warm air from the Gulf can happen in any month. Some of the worst tornadoes ever were winter tornadoes. They are more common in the spring but they're not limited to.Boy this thread turned deadly serious all of a sudden, Gov Beshear saying at least 50 dead in Ky, but probably will be more like 70-100. Many were in a candle factory in Mayfield. Unbelievable. Isn't it highly unusual to get tornadoes in December? I woke up this morning to a thunderstorm . . . on December 11?
I lived in Hopkinsville then and remember that tornado. I lived in Givens Addition so the tornado touched down on the other side of town. I was on the back covered patio with my dad. The wind even where we were was amazing.In the late 70’s in Hopkinsville. I was 6 or 7. Loved storms and I was on my knees on the couch looking over the back of the couch out our window. Watched the tree in our front yard be uproot and fall on the front of our house. The town was pretty torn up. Didn’t scare me then. They do now.
That same day I saw the tornado that killed 4 people in Laurel County. It looked weak before the rain obscured it. Ended up being an EF2. Talk about being scared. Me and my buddy were chasing it, like idiots. Only time I was more scared was when we were being shelled in Afghanistan.March 2, 2012 an EF-3 destroyed West Liberty and much of Salyersville. It continued on into Johnson County and did a lot of damage, destroyed many homes as it followed a valley near me, luckily it went around us someway, but the sound was terrible. We all went to an inside bathroom with no windows, but we had no damage.
It touch down again a few miles down the road and caused more damage. There was two killed that I know of. Never dreamed a tornado of that strength would kit Eastern Kentucky.
If you guys get a good charity in the area to donate to, please post. I'd rather give to a local group that will take care of people than spend 80% on salary.
+1 When the scoreboards and TVs hanging from the roof starts dancing, and you're in the bottom row of the stands that sit on the football field, and you have the stands getting ready to down towards you, that will make you think for a minute, "Is this how it ends?"Yes in a way... I was inside the Georgia Dome for SEC Touney when the Tornado hit. I had always heard a tornado sound like a train coming when it hits and it does!
We have donated but sure as hell not to the Salvation Army, they made the boycott listWKYT's listed a variety of different options.
WKYT: Ways to help western KY after devastating tornadoes
I worked in the same department with a woman who lost her house in that one. She lived on Mays Rd if I recall correctly, on a hill just west of AA highway. Still does I guess. Her husband was a carpenter and rebuilt.I drove through this right before it touched down. I live in Campbell. My wife was home pregnant with our first kid. I was coming from Northern Cinci near Kings Island and had to take i275 to get home due to rush hour traffic.
There was debris flying across interstate lanes, sirens blaring, etc.
Fortunately for us it hit about 10 miles southeast of us.
Was definitely scary. Closest I've been to one.
EF3: Mar. 02, 2012 16:46 PM EST
Thunderstorms developed during the afternoon in a high wind shear environment ahead of a strengthening low pressure system. Many of these storms became severe, with large hail, damaging thunderstorm winds, and tornadoes all being the main threats.
The tornado initially touched down in south central Campbell County at 1639 EST near Peach Grove Road and crossed Fisher Road northwest of Peach Grove. The tornado then crossed into Pendleton County at 1641 EST after producing high end EF3 damage along Reid Ridge Road near the Campbell and Pendleton County line. The tornado then moved across Mays Road producing significant and widespread EF2 to low end EF3 damage. The tornado then crossed AA highway and eventually the Ohio River, after crossing Kentucky Highway 8. Based on the damage surveyed, the maximum wind speed of the tornado was estimated to be 160 miles per hour in Campbell County and 140 miles per hour in Pendleton County. The tornado traveled a total of 2.68 miles in Campbell County, and 4 miles in Pendleton County. The tornado then moved into Clermont County Ohio at 1646 EST, where it hit the town of Moscow, causing EF3 damage. The tornado continued on the ground across Clermont County, crossing into Brown County at 1658 EST. The tornado then lifted south of Hamersville in western Brown County at 1702 EST. This tornado caused extensive damage to structures and trees along its entire path on both sides of the Ohio River. Numerous homes were very heavily damaged or destroyed. Many homes lost their roofs, having complete exterior wall failure. Some modular homes were completely removed from their foundations, lifted, and thrown in excess of 100 yards where they were destroyed. The damage in Ohio from this tornado was consistent with maximum winds estimated at 160 miles per hour in Clermont County, and 100 miles per hour in Brown County. The tornado traveled a total of 11.04 miles in Clermont County, and 2.69 miles in Brown County.
this is from McCLean and Muhlenberg. That means it just left Hopkins.