Tornado Safety Tips

Think you know everything there is to know about tornado
safety? Know the difference between a tornado watch and a
tornado warning? The following tornado safety tips may make the
difference between you getting seriously injured in the next
tornado, or making it through the storm alive.
Tornado Facts and Safety
Author: Glenda Mills
Tornado Season is fast approaching us here in Kansas as well
as other parts of the US. Here are some Tornado facts and tips
to help you and your loved ones stay safe and informed.
Tornadoes have no trouble at all forming, especially when
the conditions are right. "Tornado season" is usually during
the
months of March through August, although they may also occur at
different times of the year. They also tend to occur in the
afternoons or in the evenings, one year a tornado went right
over our house 5 minutes after midnight. Wind velocity will
average much above 40mph and can reach more than 300mph. A
tornado normally lasts about five minutes (although some
last
longer), but it can touch down several times in different
areas. It can leave a path of destruction that can be as wide
as 400 yards or more. The strongest ones can leave a swath as
wide as a mile.
When there is a storm, turn your TV or radio on to a weather
station. Authorities try to prepare people by issuing a tornado
watch and a tornado warning. A tornado watch is issued when
there is a possibility of a tornado. A warning is issued if
there is an actual tornado. If you are in a tornado-prone area,
make sure you have an emergency stock of water, food, clothing
and medicine. If there is time: Shut off power and gas. Don't
forget a flashlight, never light a candle if your home has been
damaged by the tornado!
Heed the warning. Don't try to stick around during a tornado
to film it and try to send it to the Most Amazing Videos
program or your local news station, it's simply not worth the
risk.
Don't waste time. If you live in a mobile home, get to a
shelter right away. Plan ahead on where you will go to seek
shelter instead of waiting until one actually hits. The tornado
won't wait for you to decide what to do and where you are going
to go. Sometimes you only have minutes, even seconds, to
spare.
If you are inside the house, go to the lowest part, away
from ground surface, like the basement or cellar. The bath tub
or a closet in the innermost part of the house will do if you
have no basement. Cover yourself with a blanket or mattress. If
you are outside, find a culvert or an open ditch. Tornados
usually pick up anything that is above ground, including cars.
If you are inside a vehicle, don't think you can use it to get
away. Get out and find a culvert or ditch.
The best way to survive a tornado is to try to remain calm
so that you can think very clearly. Also use your common sense
and heed the warnings!
Tornado Myth/Fact
Myth: Areas near
rivers, lakes, and mountains are safe from tornadoes.
Fact: No place
is safe from tornadoes. In the late 1980's, a tornado swept
through Yellowstone National Park leaving a path
of destruction up and down a 10,000 ft. mountain.
Myth: The low
pressure with a tornado causes buildings to "explode" as the
tornado passes overhead.
Fact: Violent
winds and debris slamming into buildings cause most structural
damage.
Myth: Windows
should be opened before a tornado approaches to equalize
pressure and minimize damage.
Fact: Opening
windows allows damaging winds to enter the structure. Leave the
windows alone; instead, immediately go to a
safe place.
Myth: Highway
overpasses are a safe place to shelter if you are on the road
when you see a tornado coming.
Fact: The truth
is, any time you deliberately put yourself above ground level
during a tornado, you are putting yourself in harms way. The
best place is to lie flat in a ditch.
Myth: Tornadoes
never strike big cities.
Fact: The
downtown areas of "big cities" have had tornadoes on occasion.
This past spring, a tornado passed through Miami before it
moved out to sea, disproving the idea that they can't form in
cities. Also, Salt Lake City had a tornado run through the
downtown causing thousands of dollars in damage.
Myth: The
southwest corner of a basement is the safest location during
passage of a tornado.
Fact: The truth
is that the part of the home towards the approaching tornado
(often, but not always, the southwest) is the least safe part
of the basement, not the safest. Homes that are attacked from
the southwest tend to shift to the northeast. The unsupported
part of the house may then collapse into the basement or pull
over part of the foundation, or both. Tornado Safety Tips Recap
In a home or building, move to a pre-designated shelter, such
as a basement.
Remember
- If an underground shelter is not available, move to an
interior room or hallway on the lowest floor and get under
a sturdy piece of furniture.
- Stay away from windows.
- Get out of automobiles.
- Do not try to outrun a tornado in your car; instead,
leave it immediately.
- Mobile homes, even if tied down, offer little
protection from tornadoes and should be abandoned.
- Occasionally, tornadoes develop so rapidly that advance
warning is not possible. Remain alert for signs of an
approaching tornado. Flying debris from tornadoes causes
the most deaths and injuries.
About the author:
Glenda Lives in Kansas and is the owner of
http://www.appleberrymarket.com
http://www.thefurryfriendfactory.com This
article may be freely
reprinted only in its entirety and as long as all authors
bio
and links are included and active.
Synonyms: Ornado, otrnado, ttornado, trnado, tronado,
toornado, tonado, tonrado, torrnado, torado, torando, tornnado,
torndo, torndao, tornaado, tornao, tornaod, tornaddo, tornad,
and tornadoo are typos for "tornado."
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