I had never heard of him until Tuesday evening when we had a humdinger of a storm that included a red tornado warning blaring over our phones.
one of Connor's fb photos from Tuesday
somewhere during this storm chase
somewhere during this storm chase
Danica was wondering where exactly the tornado was spotted, bit the notifications was probably just informing us that the conditions were right. Indeed, our town was mentioned as being in the storm path, and we found that Connor had been out chasing it "For the first time in my entire chasing career, I can say that was the first time I was terrified of how strong the lightning was. Driving down Dwyer Hill towards HWY 7 from Kinburn was easily the craziest lightning drive I have ever experienced, I seriously thought my car was going to get struck. The cloud to ground bolts were so incredibly intense. I'll never forget it."
This is one of his clip from his chase.
He arrived here in Carleton Place where he ended his chase.
I am surprised to learn that "Ontario averages 18 tornadoes a year and they usually occur between May and September. That number, over the 30-year average, has earned Ontario the crown as the tornado capital of the country."
Some stats from the American Tornado Alley (from AI and/or Wikipedia)
Kansas averages 81 tornadoes per year, 2nd only to Texas who averages 135 per year. Average annual number of tornadoes per 10,000 square miles per state between 2004 and 2023. Kansas averages 10 tornadoes per 10,000 square miles per year, which is tied for 3rd place with Iowa and Illinois
The states with the highest number of F5 and EF5 rated tornadoes since data was available in 1950 are Alabama and Oklahoma, each with seven tornadoes. Iowa, Kansas, and Texas each are tied for second-most with six The state with the highest number of F5 and EF5 tornadoes per square mile, however, was Iowa. Since 1950, the state with the most violent (EF4/F4+) tornadoes is Oklahoma with 68.I was once out in a tornado, or very close to where it hit in Canada's Tornado Alley by Windsor and Sarnia. It was at a field day event at my high school. The event had to be cancelled in progress, and we soon discovered that nearby houses had been flattened. This included the house of two sisters that I taught. One sister was home at the time and was just dragged into the cellar by her brother seconds before the house was levelled above them. I know this because she wrote a composition about the event in the English class that I taught.
PS: Shauna reports that Connor Mockett has chased the region in the USA Tornado Alley, but he is a new contact for me.
I'm a storm hider...I hide from storms as I've been in a house during a tornado and in 2007 one of the worst weather events ever around here where we had 19 inches of rain and high winds that uprooted 300 trees in our forest. Several of those trees landed inches from our house and vehicles.
ReplyDeleteCool to watch others chase storms though!
It is not something that draws me. "Oh look, there's a tornado, let's drive into it."
DeleteI had no idea! I'm with Val, I'd hide.
ReplyDeleteTerrifying! When I played the first video, Mari jumped. She doesn't like big weather either!
ReplyDeleteI would be running for the basement rather than my car.
ReplyDeleteI would not chase a storm. The images are frightening 🫣
ReplyDeleteStorm chasers are a breed apart. I'm more of a 'hide under a blanket' sort.
ReplyDeleteBorn and raised in Windsor, and, yes, we had them. I remember one I saw from the kitchen window. Luckily it missed our house. I have seen them in Ottawa as well, at cloud level, not touching down.
ReplyDeleteGreat lightning shot. And, yeah, it was doozie.
I never knew you had tornados up there. We have had a few rare tornado warnings in our area and one touched down two miles from us and tore off the fronts of town homes. As for the storm chasers, if they are collecting data for scientific study, I can see that, chasing them otherwise, more power to them but not for me. Glad you were all okay.
ReplyDeleteI have chills head to toe looking at those pictures. WOW! How lucky your student's brother got her to safety, how scary that must have been. I've been through some pretty nasty storms, but nothing like that. Spotted you in a mutual friends blog and thought I'd pop in for a visit. It's always fun meeting new bloggers.
ReplyDeleteSandy's Space
I've been in a tornado that tore off the chimney roof to ground next door. I was already in the basement before I knew about it. And another house we lived in was hit by lightning, that was exciting. My dad narrowly missed being hit by a meteorite which dug right into the ground in front of him. I hope I'm now exempt from weather.
ReplyDelete