- Joined
- Dec 3, 2017
- Messages
- 22,985
So many families I know are living like that, Mo. My staff and I do the best we can with them during the day. It's crazy what happens in their homelife.
Had to calm down the oldest. She is moving into an RV park tomorrow (until she finds a better place) and they JUST called to inform her that her dog can't be left alone for more than 2 hrs a day. We made the reservations 3 weeks ago! Told her he can stay here until we work something out. Then she called back in tears because her glasses broke. She is blind without them and most of her stuff is here so she doesn't know where her old ones are.
Kids...... I'm going to go back to enjoying the flu now.
Teri, what are you going to do if things get tough?Houston, we have a problem...... I have cough syrup and can't get it open! Stupid child proof lids.
Use a saw and cut the top off.Teri, what are you going to do if things get tough?
I don't know What this means, @Terri9630 but I think it's not good to pass out.
Thanks. The storms went to the north and east of us.Timmie! So glad your safe!
I saw some of the damage on the news. Do you have a storm cellar that you use during tornadoes and other serious storms? It would be my excuse to have an underground shelter and call it a storm cellar.Thanks. The storms went to the north and east of us.
I saw some of the damage on the news. Do you have a storm cellar that you use during tornadoes and other serious storms? It would be my excuse to have an underground shelter and call it a storm cellar.
That is so dangerous! No wonder the death count was so high.The damage on the news footage can seem overwhelming. But the camera doesn’t begin to show the raw power of an EF-4. For starters such storms are in a constant state of change, this storm wasn’t an EF-4 for 50 miles. It might be an EF-4 for a mile, then an EF-3 for 2 miles then an EF-5 for 3 miles…
What the camera doesn’t show is the subtle things I’ve seen… like dry brown pine needles driven with such force they look like darts sticking out of the bark of a red oak tree, unbroken. Or a feed trough made from 1/4 inch steel plate wrapped around a sapling 4 inches in diameter, yet the sapling wasn’t damaged.
When the winds get into the 150mph to 200mph range unbelievable things begin to happen. In ’74 the roof of someone’s house landed in our front yard. We never found out who’s roof it was. Had they lived within 10 miles we’d have known by the shingles and paint color. This roof came from 20 to 30 miles away.
With the big tornadoes it’s debris that kill people, other people’s houses, cars, tractors, machinery or an entire forest. A few thousand broken tree limbs traveling at 200mph… shrapnel!
One thing I’ll never forget about ’74… My dad had a ford work truck painted several different colors. A 2x4 was driven trough the wall of the truck bed, was pulled back out then driven through the door, pulled back out again, then driven through the windshield, dash, steering wheel, seat and into the gas tank. We could tell by the holes and the paint colors on the 2x4.
The EF-4 was almost a mile wide, at times I’m sure it was over a mile wide. Some of the people in this rural area had 6 minutes notice… This is flat land… few have storm cellars.
Obama had rural storm shelters built… the one near me… some folks have to drive 25 miles to get to it. This EF-4 was traveling at 60mph and the people had 6 minutes of warning… do the math!
The only safe place from one of these monsters is cinderblock walls reinforced with re-bar and cement, and pray a bulldozer doesn’t fall out of the sky.
I feel so bad for these folks, most didn’t have a chance!
Enter your email address to join: