DEPUTYDAWG said:
I'm experienced in earthquakes and wildfires, but hurricanes/tornadoes, nope. So, lemme know when it's time to get the heck outta Dodge, okay?! I will NOT be one to stay behind!
You are safe from hurricanes in central TX Dawg.
Now tornados....a lady at out church lost her sister and her family (husband, twin high school boys) in the Jarrell tornado in 1997--F5 tornado that killed over 30. They lived in the Double Creek Estates subdivision
which was totally destroyed by the F5 which was a mile wide with winds over 200mph. All you could see of the homes were the foundations of some of them.
Here's one account:
The tornado first touched down in Bell County, about a mile west of I-35. It then tracked south-southwest into Williamson County, Texas, where it grazed the northwestern portion of Jarrell, striking Double Creek Estates. ... Williamson County is a county located in the state of Texas. ...
Later analysis of the damage indicated the tornado was a definite F5. It is believed that in the field where the tornado developed, it ripped the corn husks out of the ground by the millions and then impaled the cows in the next field. The tornado lifted the cows and dropped them on the ground multiple times, breaking their legs.
The grass and dirt was ripped up out of the ground to a depth of 18 in (50 cm). When the tornado crossed county roads outside Jarrell, it ripped 500 feet (150m) of asphalt off the roads. After passing through Double Creek Estates, the tornado headed toward a heavily wooded area where the damage abruptly stopped.
Where's my roof?
At one of the early houses struck, the tornado ripped off the roof of a monolithic concrete shelter (approximately 6 inches thick, weighing well over a ton). The shelter's owner looked for his missing roof for a week without success. Apparently it caught into the wind, ripped off the top of the shelter, and flew off like a Frisbee, never to be seen again. The tornado was only at F2 strength at the time.
The first Williamson County Sheriffs Deputy to arrive on the scene was not familiar with that particular area. He saw the path of the tornado by the damaged earth it left behind, but he did not immediately see any typical damaged homes or debris. He called out on the radio that the tornado had not seemed to have produced any damage. He was not aware that the blank land that he was looking at had 10 minutes earlier been the Double Creek neighborhood, it was wiped clean. Houses were vaporized, concrete slabs were pulverized, and sewer & water pipes were sucked up out of the ground.
--------Mother Nature sure can be a 'mother'
