Microburst!

Summerville, SC(Zone 8a)

Late this afternoon as I was sitting reading I noticed that the leaves on my tree out front were showing their backs .. something made me get up decide to get up and go close up the greenhouse which was wide open. As I was closing it up, the wind was picking up and I heard thunder in the distance. I went inside the house to check the radar and saw this horrible purple blot almost on top of me. With a deafeningly loud crack of lightning, I shut down the computer and it started. The wind was gusting 30 to 40 mph and the rain was coming down so hard that it looked like a blizzard. The huge pine trees on the edge of my property were laying almost sideways the wind was blowing so hard. The rain was blowing sideways to the right .. then to the left. I heard hail .. thankfully it was sporatic and not very large and then power went out .. the lightning and thunder was on top of my neighborhood and for the first time in my life, I felt scared of a storm. The horrible thing about it was that it went on and on and on for about 20 minutes. It finally abated and I started opening windows because it was getting hot and stuffy inside .. I noticed at the end of my property a large branch had been sheared off .. I went outside to check it out. Thankfully it didn't hit anything. some of my lawn furniture and plants had been knocked over. I went to the greenhouse and opened it back up and noted everything was in place. I saw a bucket just to the left of the greenhouseI knew was empty before all this started and I measured 5 and 1/2 inches of water in it! It was then I looked around me and saw my next door neighbors tree had been snapped in two! I stood there stunned. I went out to the front yard and saw another neighbors car with tree limbs all over it and branches laying everywhere in the street and neighbors yards.

Personally I was extremely lucky since all the damage I had was a sheared limb. We needed rain, but not a weeks worth in 20 minutes!

X

Thumbnail by Xeramtheum
Summerville, SC(Zone 8a)

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Thumbnail by Xeramtheum
Summerville, SC(Zone 8a)

With this branch gone, I will have to watch what the sun does in the next few days as it will no longer be deep shade!

This message was edited Aug 8, 2006 8:56 PM

Thumbnail by Xeramtheum
So. Puget Sound, WA(Zone 8b)

What a nightmare! Spooky.

Aurora, CO(Zone 5a)

Oh, yeah. I've got to see to getting that dead tree limb over my roof removed. You've just reminded me of what denial can do.

Jacksonville, FL(Zone 9a)

Oh X, that is always so devastating to watch and sit through. We sure have some whopper storms don't we? It was dark and stormy here yesterday and I could hear the thunder in the distance; I knew someone was really getting it and I am so sorry it was you.

We had a micro burst go through last Friday and we are still picking up the trees (no major damage at my home) but we only got 1.2" of rain; I envy you your 5".

Years ago, in Quail Arbor, I can remember dragging a heavy table to the hall and sitting under it with my then very young children during a storm like that. We could still see out a window and my little boy kept asking me how the pine trees could bend over and touch the ground. It is sort of amazing and scary.

Summerville, SC(Zone 8a)

When I went to work this morning I saw the rest of the damage .. the truly amazing thing is that it was confined to 3 streets in the neighborhood!!! We all made the 11 o'clock news. 2 other huge trees had come down as well on other streets. The weather guys said it was not a tornado and called it a downburst. I haven't heard of that one before .. what happens is that a huge amount of water comes down extremely fast which causes the shearing winds and trees and branches to snap. I'm thinking we got most of the 5.5 inches during the whiteout. I really can't describe what it's like to see so much rain coming down so fast. Standing in my kitchen I could not see more than 1 foot in front of me, it was that thick the best word that describes it is waterfall.

X

Jacksonville, FL(Zone 9a)

One of my neighbors is a pilot who keeps close track of the weather and when I asked him about the wind speed last Friday he mentioned he was so shocked by the height (?)of the storm he forgot to check. It seems the storm went 75,000 feet up into the sky. Normally bad storms are at 40,000 to 50,000 ft.

Well, as long as those "named storms" ( I won't say the H word) stay away, I'm OK with these weird ones. :-))))))

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