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#1
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So I was at our airport commission meeting tonight when the tornado
sirens went off. We had noticed the skies becoming black, but were all too wrapped up in talk of paving taxiways to pay much heed. The meeting abruptly adjourned with the sirens, and everyone tried to find the long-rumored basement in the terminal building. The second floor conference room, with its two-story windows overlooking the ramp (and facing West), just didn't seem like a good place to be, and we all ended up down in the boiler room. After a while we felt silly, and went up to the weather room, where we watched the storm developing on radar. When it looked like the worst was past, I called Mary and made a mad dash for the convertible (thank goodness I had put the top up!) through moderate rain. Strangely, she said that if I didn't leave right away, to wait 15 minutes, because the worst was yet to come -- which didn't fit my radar picture at all. Well, apparently the TV station's "Live Doppler Radar" is a better information source than the airport version. Heading toward home, the hail began. Within seconds it sounded like machine-gun fire, and I quickly drove underneath a gas station's canopy with a few other hapless motorists. For the next ten minutes, we watched as ping-pong-ball-sized hail bombarded Iowa City. The flags were straight out, the wind was howling, and the temperature was almost hot. It was very weird, and I flipped on a local AM radio station that was interviewing a guy maybe a mile away from me, talking to them on his cell phone. Suddenly, the flag in front of me dropped straight down. The hail continued for a minute, but the wind absolutely died. Then it was just rain -- and then it stopped, too. I was wondering what the hell was going on, when the guy on the radio suddenly said "Oh my God, there's a funnel cloud!" The announcer asked him where he was, and he said "On Benton Street!" I was on Muscatine Dr., maybe 3/4 of a mile away, facing away from it. My concern for hail damage instantly gone, I called Mary, who was down the basement of our home with our kids. I told her I was inbound, and to raise the garage door. I didn't want the power to go out and to be stuck outside with a tornado approaching. Racing toward home, flying down a tree-lined street that offered a limited view to the south, I glanced in the direction of the reported tornado when, in a flash of lighning I saw it. There was no way to judge scale or direction of travel, in that millisecond flash, but it was big. A giant, V-shaped funnel was looming over the city, and it couldn't have been six blocks away! In fact, for me to have been able to see it at all, over those trees, it was either 50 stories tall, or it was right on top of me! Suddenly endowed with the driving prowess of Mario Andretti, I punched the pedal to the floor. I glanced down and saw 70 mph in second gear, and told Mary to get back downstairs. Not wanting to look back, I slid to the last stop sign before my house. Incredibly, with the tornado sirens wailing, hail flying, constant lightning and high winds, and a funnel cloud bringing up the rear, an older woman was dutifully driving 25 mph up our road. I suspect all she saw of me was a candy-apple-red streak... At last down the basement, with a beer and the kids, we watched the Cedar Rapids newscasters going absolutely ballistic over the "severe weather" in nearby Iowa City. Only difference was, this time it was for real. Reports were soon coming in of damage on Riverside Drive -- the road our hotel is on -- and of injuries inside the Menards nearby. (This the Menards I've visited nearly every day since we opened.) When they announced that all off-duty police and firemen were to report for duty, and that the Army National Guard were being called out, I knew we were seeing the real deal. I called my night manager, and got no answer. I then tried his cell phone, but he was busy holding the door to the airport building, which was at that moment trying to be sucked off its hinges. I told him to call me back after he got to safety. A few minutes later, he called. The storm was past, and he was out assessing damage, but the power was out, and everything was inky black. Best he could tell, the only damage was to the fence around our pool, which was down, a roof vent was gone, and a bunch of shingles were off. I told him I'd be right down. That was two hours ago. I took the highway south of town, and was able to get to the hotel fairly quickly, despite the stoplights being out. The hotel grounds are a shambles, with branches, shingles, leaves, and debris of all kinds literally everywhere, but it appears that we got off easy. Although we received wind damage to the roof, and the fence is toast, all of our trees survived, and no windows were blown out. This is almost unbelievable, as just a few blocks away are scenes of utter devastation. Menards is a shambles, and much of their building materials are scattered around town. Our airport commission president's Dodge dealership is gone. His cars are smashed flat, and his showroom is splinters, with the roof laying across part of Riverside Drive. We were at the meeting, huddled in the boiler room together, and now his business is gone. Down the road from us, our favorite Dairy Queen is simply gone. One of the signs is still there, but the store itself is just no longer there. And, being an 85 degree evening, there had to have been a bunch of employees in there when the storm hit. It's possible to draw a line from Menard's to the Dodge dealership, right through the Dairy Queen, and into downtown proper. It missed our hotel by a few hundred yards, at most. Downtown is a weird scene of utter pandemonium, combined with the ambience of an all-night kegger. All the college kids -- 35,000 of them -- are out partying, surveying the changed streetscape. The roof of a gas station was lifted up, moved about six feet toward the street, and then dropped back down, destroying everything inside. Cars are upside down, and one was evidently sucked off the top of a six-story parking ramp, and dropped into the street. It took my son and I an hour to drive the mile from the hotel to the eastern edge of downtown. Dozens of alarms are wailing, set off when hundreds (thousands?) of windows blew out. Rubble and debris are everywhere, with stop lights twisted around light poles, and dumpsters tossed into the road like tumbleweeds. Fire trucks, ambulances, police cars, front end loaders, and National Guard vehicles struggled to get through the devastation and traffic -- and all the while boom boxes were playing and the college kids were out taking pictures and video. Some idiots launched a few bottle rockets, and got the police riled up. Destroyed gas stations are cordoned off, in case of leaks, and they sure didn't need any fireworks setting off a conflagration. Eventually we made it out of the area, and were able to get home. Our garbage -- with six bags of leaves -- is sitting out front, absolutely unmoved. Not a blade of grass is out of place. Nature is amazing, and we were so very lucky. Our hangar and plane are unscathed, the hotel was just nicked a glancing blow, and our home is fine. There's no word on casualties yet, but from the looks of things, there almost had to be some. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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Having *never* seen a storm or twisting winds (never have them in
southern India), a rush of air rustling furiously through the hair always seems like something I want to really see and be in, and enjoy. The very idea of a tornado or hurricane titillates me, yet I must confess your prose makes me think again :\ Glad you came away unscathed, mate. Ramapriya Jay Honeck wrote: So I was at our airport commission meeting tonight when the tornado |
#3
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Wow. You don't have thunderstorms? I know that different climates produce
different weather, but "never have them"??? That's amazing. jf wrote in message oups.com... Having *never* seen a storm or twisting winds (never have them in southern India), a rush of air rustling furiously through the hair always seems like something I want to really see and be in, and enjoy. The very idea of a tornado or hurricane titillates me, yet I must confess your prose makes me think again :\ Glad you came away unscathed, mate. Ramapriya Jay Honeck wrote: So I was at our airport commission meeting tonight when the tornado |
#4
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Geez!!!!
I got within a mile of a tornado once, out in open range and that was once too often! Hope all works out! -- Matt --------------------- Matthew W. Barrow Site-Fill Homes, LLC. Montrose, CO "Jay Honeck" wrote in message oups.com... So I was at our airport commission meeting tonight when the tornado sirens went off. We had noticed the skies becoming black, but were all too wrapped up in talk of paving taxiways to pay much heed. The meeting abruptly adjourned with the sirens, and everyone tried to find the long-rumored basement in the terminal building. The second floor conference room, with its two-story windows overlooking the ramp (and facing West), just didn't seem like a good place to be, and we all ended up down in the boiler room. After a while we felt silly, and went up to the weather room, where we watched the storm developing on radar. When it looked like the worst was past, I called Mary and made a mad dash for the convertible (thank goodness I had put the top up!) through moderate rain. Strangely, she said that if I didn't leave right away, to wait 15 minutes, because the worst was yet to come -- which didn't fit my radar picture at all. Well, apparently the TV station's "Live Doppler Radar" is a better information source than the airport version. Heading toward home, the hail began. Within seconds it sounded like machine-gun fire, and I quickly drove underneath a gas station's canopy with a few other hapless motorists. For the next ten minutes, we watched as ping-pong-ball-sized hail bombarded Iowa City. The flags were straight out, the wind was howling, and the temperature was almost hot. It was very weird, and I flipped on a local AM radio station that was interviewing a guy maybe a mile away from me, talking to them on his cell phone. Suddenly, the flag in front of me dropped straight down. The hail continued for a minute, but the wind absolutely died. Then it was just rain -- and then it stopped, too. I was wondering what the hell was going on, when the guy on the radio suddenly said "Oh my God, there's a funnel cloud!" The announcer asked him where he was, and he said "On Benton Street!" I was on Muscatine Dr., maybe 3/4 of a mile away, facing away from it. My concern for hail damage instantly gone, I called Mary, who was down the basement of our home with our kids. I told her I was inbound, and to raise the garage door. I didn't want the power to go out and to be stuck outside with a tornado approaching. Racing toward home, flying down a tree-lined street that offered a limited view to the south, I glanced in the direction of the reported tornado when, in a flash of lighning I saw it. There was no way to judge scale or direction of travel, in that millisecond flash, but it was big. A giant, V-shaped funnel was looming over the city, and it couldn't have been six blocks away! In fact, for me to have been able to see it at all, over those trees, it was either 50 stories tall, or it was right on top of me! Suddenly endowed with the driving prowess of Mario Andretti, I punched the pedal to the floor. I glanced down and saw 70 mph in second gear, and told Mary to get back downstairs. Not wanting to look back, I slid to the last stop sign before my house. Incredibly, with the tornado sirens wailing, hail flying, constant lightning and high winds, and a funnel cloud bringing up the rear, an older woman was dutifully driving 25 mph up our road. I suspect all she saw of me was a candy-apple-red streak... At last down the basement, with a beer and the kids, we watched the Cedar Rapids newscasters going absolutely ballistic over the "severe weather" in nearby Iowa City. Only difference was, this time it was for real. Reports were soon coming in of damage on Riverside Drive -- the road our hotel is on -- and of injuries inside the Menards nearby. (This the Menards I've visited nearly every day since we opened.) When they announced that all off-duty police and firemen were to report for duty, and that the Army National Guard were being called out, I knew we were seeing the real deal. I called my night manager, and got no answer. I then tried his cell phone, but he was busy holding the door to the airport building, which was at that moment trying to be sucked off its hinges. I told him to call me back after he got to safety. A few minutes later, he called. The storm was past, and he was out assessing damage, but the power was out, and everything was inky black. Best he could tell, the only damage was to the fence around our pool, which was down, a roof vent was gone, and a bunch of shingles were off. I told him I'd be right down. That was two hours ago. I took the highway south of town, and was able to get to the hotel fairly quickly, despite the stoplights being out. The hotel grounds are a shambles, with branches, shingles, leaves, and debris of all kinds literally everywhere, but it appears that we got off easy. Although we received wind damage to the roof, and the fence is toast, all of our trees survived, and no windows were blown out. This is almost unbelievable, as just a few blocks away are scenes of utter devastation. Menards is a shambles, and much of their building materials are scattered around town. Our airport commission president's Dodge dealership is gone. His cars are smashed flat, and his showroom is splinters, with the roof laying across part of Riverside Drive. We were at the meeting, huddled in the boiler room together, and now his business is gone. Down the road from us, our favorite Dairy Queen is simply gone. One of the signs is still there, but the store itself is just no longer there. And, being an 85 degree evening, there had to have been a bunch of employees in there when the storm hit. It's possible to draw a line from Menard's to the Dodge dealership, right through the Dairy Queen, and into downtown proper. It missed our hotel by a few hundred yards, at most. Downtown is a weird scene of utter pandemonium, combined with the ambience of an all-night kegger. All the college kids -- 35,000 of them -- are out partying, surveying the changed streetscape. The roof of a gas station was lifted up, moved about six feet toward the street, and then dropped back down, destroying everything inside. Cars are upside down, and one was evidently sucked off the top of a six-story parking ramp, and dropped into the street. It took my son and I an hour to drive the mile from the hotel to the eastern edge of downtown. Dozens of alarms are wailing, set off when hundreds (thousands?) of windows blew out. Rubble and debris are everywhere, with stop lights twisted around light poles, and dumpsters tossed into the road like tumbleweeds. Fire trucks, ambulances, police cars, front end loaders, and National Guard vehicles struggled to get through the devastation and traffic -- and all the while boom boxes were playing and the college kids were out taking pictures and video. Some idiots launched a few bottle rockets, and got the police riled up. Destroyed gas stations are cordoned off, in case of leaks, and they sure didn't need any fireworks setting off a conflagration. Eventually we made it out of the area, and were able to get home. Our garbage -- with six bags of leaves -- is sitting out front, absolutely unmoved. Not a blade of grass is out of place. Nature is amazing, and we were so very lucky. Our hangar and plane are unscathed, the hotel was just nicked a glancing blow, and our home is fine. There's no word on casualties yet, but from the looks of things, there almost had to be some. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#5
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("Jay Honeck" wrote)
This is almost unbelievable, as just a few blocks away are scenes of utter devastation. Menards is a shambles, and much of their buildingmaterials are scattered around town. Our airport commission president's Dodge dealership is gone. His cars are smashed flat, and his showroom is splinters, with the roof laying across part of Riverside Drive. We were at the meeting, huddled in the boiler room together, and now his business is gone. Down the road from us, our favorite Dairy Queen is simply gone. One of the signs is still there, but the store itself is just no longer there. And, being an 85 degree evening, there had to have been a bunch of employees in there when the storm hit. It's possible to draw a line from Menard's to the Dodge dealership, right through the Dairy Queen, and into downtown proper. It missed our hotel by a few hundred yards, at most. VERY GLAD you and yours didn't get ...HIT! Our scare was last year, hiding out with the cars in/under a local (cement) Park and Ride ramp. Our townhouse garage was full of crap and we wanted to hide the two cars from the anticipated hail. We had just pulled into the two story parking structure, hiding behind a ramp, when it hit. Tornado went north of us by about a half mile. Tornado? WTF? We were listening to the radio.... Destruction (on the light side - roofs, trees, sheds, signs, campers, more trees, etc) along its narrow two mile path, not much damage elswere in the neighborhood. It lifted just north of ANE. We had branches down, that was it. Yours, tonight, sounds like a bad one. CNN has nothing on it yet. Our thoughts and prayers go out to all in the Iowa City area this evening. Montblack If you've never been around an evening tornado - the following day all you hear is 14 hours of chain saws running. |
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You're an amazing story teller, Jay.
Out here in Kah-lee-for-nyuh we don't get much in the way of twisters. I mean, they do happen, but they're not much more than oversized whirlwinds. Some trees down and that's about it. However, I've had two closish calls with them just the same. About 12 years ago one of these "super-whirlwinds" had gone by two blocks from where I lived. Yeah, bad strom blew through, but didn't notice any 'twister' till it was on the news. The other time was at work. I was back in the warehouse staring out the door watching the weather. Suddenly the wind picked up. Then stuff started swirling around in the parking lot. I stepped outside and looked up. The clouds were swirling like mad. I thought it might be a funnel cloud but wasn't sure having never seen one in real life. Wlp, that evening on the news there was a report of a small twister hitting some neighborhood directly down path from where I was. Turned out I was right. You know, I thought to myself the other day after seeing some of the tornado damage in the Midwest, that I think I'd rather deal with the earthquakes here than a bunch of supercells out there. Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Quake "predictions": http://www.skywise711.com/quakes/EQDB/index.html Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Skywise wrote: You're an amazing story teller, Jay. Agreed. I'm also glad to hear that you and yours are safe. Out here in Kah-lee-for-nyuh we don't get much in the way of twisters. I mean, they do happen, but they're not much more than oversized whirlwinds. Some trees down and that's about it. Living out in Sacramento, I'd also agree. the tornadoes here are, compared to the midwest, laughable. Don't get me wrong, they are just as serious for people here, but nothing compared to back in the Midwest. You know, I thought to myself the other day after seeing some of the tornado damage in the Midwest, that I think I'd rather deal with the earthquakes here than a bunch of supercells out there. Jay's story actually has me longing for them again! After going through a number of them in Omaha all of my 20something years, then moving, it actually has me missing those. Outside the fact that everyone out here I've talked to about tornadoes thinks they are just tall tales! If only they knew... BL. - -- Brad Littlejohn | Email: Unix Systems Administrator, | Web + NewsMaster, BOFH.. Smeghead! ![]() PGP: 1024D/E319F0BF 6980 AAD6 7329 E9E6 D569 F620 C819 199A E319 F0BF -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFEP+NiyBkZmuMZ8L8RAhsHAJ9QzwpSUzRh6ZXSlJSPir pH9Z0gygCeOtz1 Aauv6061+TBsqD9Gp2aMgjc= =DmK0 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#8
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
oups.com... So I was at our airport commission meeting tonight when the tornado sirens went off. SNIP Jay (Central), As a former Michigander, I sure remember those occasions when the sky would turn that unique / bizarre blackish-green and how we'd suddenly feel the need to go downstairs and shoot pool when it got "too quiet" outside. Glad to hear that you, Mary and the kids are ok and I'm glad Mother Nature spared the Hotel. I hope the airport is ok too...? Jay (West) |
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Jay, glad you are OK, now let me beat you about the head and shoulders
for going out in your car with a twister dancing across town and you knew it - and a convertible no less - jeez... Anyway, like Jay Beckman, as a lifelong Michigan resident I can see, feel, and smell a tornado before it forms... I have up close and personal experience with being picked up by a twister in 1953... I survived and I'm not emotionally traumatized, but I am wary of those monsters Next time get your butt into a basement and stay there until it is all over... denny... |
#10
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Jay, glad you are OK, now let me beat you about the head and shoulders
for going out in your car with a twister dancing across town and you knew it - and a convertible no less - jeez... Trust me, I felt pretty stupid, especially after Mary told me not to leave because one of several tornadoes were approaching. Trouble was, I seriously thought that I had the superior weather instrument, being in the weather room at the airport. The radar there was showing that the worst of the storm had passed. I won't make that mistake again. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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