Lots of pictures of the devastating damage here:
Judge and boy, 3, are identified as victims of Kentucky tornadoes | Daily Mail Online
94 people confirmed dead
so far

I just wasn't expecting that. It's just beyond awful
Last edited:
Lots of pictures of the devastating damage here:
Judge and boy, 3, are identified as victims of Kentucky tornadoes | Daily Mail Online
Update on the candle factory in Mayfield. The death toll is apparently looking to tally 16 or less.
8 workers dead, 8 missing after factory hit by tornado in Mayfield
The 8 missing is a little concerning though. Looking at all that heaped up damage, IMO there could be more bodies in there.I'm comforted by this news, but the total so far in KY at 94 just leaves me stunned
The 8 missing is a little concerning though. Looking at all that heaped up damage, IMO there could be more bodies in there.
Update on the candle factory in Mayfield. The death toll is apparently looking to tally 16 or less.
So sad!!
8 workers dead, 8 missing after factory hit by tornado in Mayfield
I’ve learned a lot reading your tornado stories here - wow. I see the photos of the damage, and I’m amazed anyone survived. Do most people have storm cellars as far north as Kentucky? I didn’t even know tornados touched down there.
It looks like it will take so long to recover from this. So heartbreaking.
I’ve learned a lot reading your tornado stories here - wow. I see the photos of the damage, and I’m amazed anyone survived. Do most people have storm cellars as far north as Kentucky? I didn’t even know tornados touched down there.
It looks like it will take so long to recover from this. So heartbreaking.
Every home I've lived in in Kentucky (rural and large city) has had either a large crawlspace or basement. But, it seems many businesses do not have safe areas strong enough to withstand such monstrous storms. The storm that hit Mayfield was truly monstrous - and I dare not think what the death toll would be if that storm had hit a more populated area/city.
jmo
Still looking like a strong F3 or weak F4 from the pictures. But since I am not there and they still haven't came out with an EF rating on the Mayfield tornado I could be wrong. But in my experience an F5 would have taken that candle factory down to bare concrete. Also no signs of grass being torn from the ground and the strong structures like the courthouse have mostly top/roof damage. Just my observation though since I am not a meteorologist.Mayfield sounds like F5. There is a huge scar right through town. Buildings taken down to cement.
I know for a fact photographs are being found 160 miles away from some of the towns hit.
I agree they are shifting east. Of course being old I remember some really bad tornados. But we haven't had many here in Oklahoma since the one in El Reno in 2013. I think it has to do with the earth shifting on it's axis during that huge earthquake in Sri Lanka. I think they said it shifted 4 degrees or about 40 miles. Tornados mostly travel the jet stream. If a cold or usually warm front comes in it stalls at the jet stream and if conditions are right, moisture, humidity, heat ect then a tornado will likely occur. Like I said the Doppler and TORCON system needs to be put in place further east now. Saying here "If the TORCON is high, watch the sky."Kentucky IS used to tornadoes. I lived most of my adult life there. The notion that tornado alley is just through the great plains is outdated. (Scientists want us to quit using the term because it makes people outside of that area feel too safe.)
The frequently hit areas have been shifting east for some time and the deep south gets hit more often and worse than states like Oklahoma now. While Kentucky is not in the deep south, it is solidly within the current map for frequent tornadoes.
Study: Tornado Alley Shifting East