In great shear environments there was enough for a few worthy storms. A big time bow echo developed briefly, along with areas of rotation. This caused 60-72MPH wind gusts across areas east of the lakes with some damage. A brief tornado in Pembroke KY also occurred. A supercell in the line did some wind damage, and produced quarter sized hail from Clarksville to Guthrie. There was siginficant damage to one business, and some damage to homes in the Bible Hill area, into the northern outskirts of Parsons TN that will probably be surveyed. Also at least some wind damage, with funnels in the area (possibly a weak tornado) in the Eastern Sumner/Western Macon County TN area. I will update everyone with any surveys.
Some things to learn:
- High Risk events are not guarantees for severe weather, but it does mean that the setup for a high end tornado event and, or, a big time derecho is there. If everything falls in line as expected a historic event can occur. That if everything falls in line as expected is a key word. Sometimes we don't know how the storms will form, or act even 6 hours before the event. Still if a MDT, and HIGH risk is issued expect at least the potential for some nasty severe storms. In many High Risk areas there is a small portion of it that doesn't quite the severe weather as expected,but usually in the SE US someone gets something significant. this was the case with this one, it doesn't mean the whole thing went bust so if you are in the High Risk in the future beware.
- Heavy Rain before the event can tamper with the instability. It lowers how unstable the atmosphere is, and that limits the amount of inflow a storm can get, which influences how big it becomes, and how long it lasts.
- Sometimes HIGH SHEAR/LOW CAPE events can produce sig. events. Parsons area tornado of this event was an example, so was the Super Tuesday outbreak. As I found out though the further you get into spring the more instability it does take to get severe weather though. A 500CAPE may work in Feb. but not in May.
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Please pray for the MS people. As a devastating tornado did hit throughout the central part of the state. Keep them in your thoughts throughout the day and week to come. Sadly that can be a result of a high risk day.
3 comments:
I was in Pembroke KY, as the reported tornado occurred. I have not seen anything about the NWS confirming this tornado. Do you know if they have done a damage survey? I am a storm chaser from MI and we did not see a tornado. There was a large curtain of wet RFD that wrapped right around into the circulation and obscured any visibility of any type of tornado. So I question the report because I was right under the circulation as it was occurring. If you have any information please email me at kurthulst21athotmaildotcom
I was able to verify that this tornado was confirmed.
THE FOLLOWING IS THE PRELIMINARY DAMAGE ASSESSMENT FOR APRIL 24
EVENT # 2 FOR CHRISTIAN AND TODD COUNTIES.
* EVENT DATE - SATURDAY APRIL 24 2010
* EVENT TIME - 4:23 PM CDT UNTIL 4:27 PM
* EVENT TYPE - EF0 TORNADO
* EVENT LOCATION - 2 MILES SOUTHEAST OF PEMBROKE, KY TO PEMBROKE,
KY
* PEAK WIND - 75 MPH
* AVERAGE PATH WIDTH - 40 YARDS
* PATH LENGTH - 2 MILES
* INJURIES - NONE
* FATALITIES - NONE
* DISCUSSION/DAMAGE - SEVERAL TREES OR TREE LIMBS WERE BLOWN DOWN
ALONG WITH MINOR DAMAGE TO A HOME (GUTTERS). THE TORNADO TRACK
WAS MOSTLY ACROSS FIELDS. THE TORNADO WAS PHOTOGRAPHED NEAR THE
INITIAL TOUCHDOWN ABOUT 2 MILES SOUTHWEST OF PEMBROKE, AND WAS
ALSO OBSERVED ON THE GROUND LESS THAN 1 MILE FROM PEMBROKE.
As Kurt said a EF-0 Tornado did occur along with a microburst in Christian and Todd County. I am about to post shortly thanks for the updates.
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