Page 1 of 2 [ 20 posts ]  Go to page 1, 2  Next

NewTime
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 14 Apr 2015
Posts: 1,901

23 Jul 2020, 11:57 am

Are you scared of tornadoes?



dragonsanddemons
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 19 Mar 2011
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 6,637
Location: The Labyrinth of Leviathan

23 Jul 2020, 7:42 pm

I live in Kansas. As a kid I’d freak out every time the tornado sirens went off, but now I know that even that doesn’t often mean we’re that likely to get hit. I still take the dog, cat, flashlight, and weather radio down to the basement until we’re given the all-clear, but I don’t freak out like I used to. I would probably still be afraid if I actually saw a tornado, though. I saw a wall cloud forming off to our side on a semi-long-distance trip once, and that was unnerving but not terrifying for me (my mom, who was with me at the time, didn’t think that’s what it was, but when we got home we saw that weather stations had confirmed a wall cloud in that area). So I guess my answer is, it depends what the situation is.


_________________
Yet in my new wildness and freedom I almost welcome the bitterness of alienage. For although nepenthe has calmed me, I know always that I am an outsider; a stranger in this century and among those who are still men.
-H. P. Lovecraft, "The Outsider"


Edna3362
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 29 Oct 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 10,655
Location: ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜔

23 Jul 2020, 7:44 pm

Never seen one before. I'd want to see one.


_________________
Gained Number Post Count (1).
Lose Time (n).


Pepe
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 11 Jun 2013
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 26,635
Location: Australia

23 Jul 2020, 9:20 pm

There you go. :wink:

Edna3362 wrote:
Never seen one before. I'd want to see one.


_________________
Laughter is the best medicine.
"A stranger is a friend gang-stalker you haven't met yet."
Truth may be inconvenient but it is never politically incorrect...The Oracle of Truth has spoken...8)
Glory to Ukraine.


Fireblossom
Veteran
Veteran

Joined: 18 Jan 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 3,538

24 Jul 2020, 1:11 am

We don't really have them here so no, but if I lived somewhere where they were an actual problem then I'm pretty sure I would be scared of them.



Edna3362
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 29 Oct 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 10,655
Location: ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜔

24 Jul 2020, 6:53 am

Pepe wrote:
There you go. :wink:

Edna3362 wrote:
Never seen one before. I'd want to see one.

I meant IRL! I wanna see one IRL. :lol:


_________________
Gained Number Post Count (1).
Lose Time (n).


CarlM
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Oct 2019
Age: 65
Gender: Male
Posts: 796
Location: Long Island, NY

24 Jul 2020, 7:36 am

Probably not enough but probably much more than other people living in an area where they are very rare. I was driving on route 95 in CT once and I start getting tornado warnings on my phone and I was shocked that no one seemed to be taking the slightest precaution. I kept driving at first but in a short while I'm on an elevated highway in a urban area, the wind is rapidly increasing and increasing large tree branches are blowing across the road from distant trees. It is evening rush hour and people are leaving work are getting on the highway oblivious to the stormy weather. It all seemed like contagious stupidity to me. They must thinking "everyone else is ignoring the danger, so I will too". I got off and got under a bridge. The only other vehicle doing the same under that bridge was a minibus. Later I read there were confirmed tornadoes in CT but not in an urban area. The damage was only to houses and trees.


_________________
ND: 123/200, NT: 93/200, Aspie/NT results, AQ: 34
-------------------------------------------------------------
Fight Climate Change Now - Think Globally, Act locally.


Pepe
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 11 Jun 2013
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 26,635
Location: Australia

24 Jul 2020, 7:48 am

Edna3362 wrote:
Pepe wrote:
There you go. :wink:

Edna3362 wrote:
Never seen one before. I'd want to see one.

I meant IRL! I wanna see one IRL. :lol:


Are you nutzo??? :huh: :skull: :mrgreen:
Or perhaps your name is Dorothy? :scratch:

Next, you will be telling us you have a dog named Toto! 8O

Image


_________________
Laughter is the best medicine.
"A stranger is a friend gang-stalker you haven't met yet."
Truth may be inconvenient but it is never politically incorrect...The Oracle of Truth has spoken...8)
Glory to Ukraine.


Pepe
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 11 Jun 2013
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 26,635
Location: Australia

24 Jul 2020, 7:51 am

CarlM wrote:
Probably not enough but probably much more than other people living in an area where they are very rare. I was driving on route 95 in CT once and I start getting tornado warnings on my phone and I was shocked that no one seemed to be taking the slightest precaution. I kept driving at first but in a short while I'm on an elevated highway in a urban area, the wind is rapidly increasing and increasing large tree branches are blowing across the road from distant trees. It is evening rush hour and people are leaving work are getting on the highway oblivious to the stormy weather. It all seemed like contagious stupidity to me. They must thinking "everyone else is ignoring the danger, so I will too". I got off and got under a bridge. The only other vehicle doing the same under that bridge was a minibus. Later I read there were confirmed tornadoes in CT but not in an urban area. The damage was only to houses and trees.


My instincts would be to drive away from a tornado, rather than sit in one spot and wait for it. 8O


_________________
Laughter is the best medicine.
"A stranger is a friend gang-stalker you haven't met yet."
Truth may be inconvenient but it is never politically incorrect...The Oracle of Truth has spoken...8)
Glory to Ukraine.


Edna3362
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 29 Oct 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 10,655
Location: ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜔

24 Jul 2020, 8:04 am

Pepe wrote:
Edna3362 wrote:
Pepe wrote:
There you go. :wink:

Edna3362 wrote:
Never seen one before. I'd want to see one.

I meant IRL! I wanna see one IRL. :lol:


Are you nutzo??? :huh: :skull: :mrgreen:
Or perhaps your name is Dorothy? :scratch:

Next, you will be telling us you have a dog named Toto! 8O

Image

Short answer: No. :lol:

Long answer: I just want to witness stuff. :twisted:
The safest would be seeing it on the middle of the sea or some mountain or forest. Which is more likely to happen here...
Not to mention relatively less severe -- twisters more like it, not full blown tornadoes. The latter seems super rare here.

And no. :P


_________________
Gained Number Post Count (1).
Lose Time (n).


naturalplastic
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Aug 2010
Age: 68
Gender: Male
Posts: 31,626
Location: temperate zone

24 Jul 2020, 9:27 am

if you mean "if I saw one coming at me would I be scared?" then the answer is "yes".

If you mean "do you lie awake at nights worried about tornadoes?" then the answer is "no".

During most of my lifetime tornadoes were unheard of our area, but with climate change we now do do get the occasional tornado within an hours drive of where I live. Usually a modest one that might tear up a Home Depot, but one time we had a town get rather badly torn up with fatalities.

Oddly enough my Dad, who grew up in central Kansas in the Thirties, never talked about tornadoes much.

So I asked if they ever had one. He said they had a bad thunderstorm one time, and a tool shed in his uncle's back yard disappeared, and reappeared in a neighbor's back yard. So they all figured that it must have been a small tornado within the storm that no one saw that must have transported it. But that's about it.



Jakki
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Sep 2019
Gender: Female
Posts: 8,961
Location: Outter Quadrant

24 Jul 2020, 9:48 am

Best ask. People livin in Joplin Missouri about. Tornadoes , one year not too long ago , abig portion of that city
Got. Wiped off the face of the earth . A serious situation caused the local. Hospital to get wiped out too .
That was something Am never hope to see or hear of again.

I don’t think we are in Kansas anymore Toto.


_________________
Diagnosed hfa
Loves velcro,
Quote:
where ever you go ,there you are


dragonsanddemons
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 19 Mar 2011
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 6,637
Location: The Labyrinth of Leviathan

24 Jul 2020, 11:58 am

CarlM wrote:
Probably not enough but probably much more than other people living in an area where they are very rare. I was driving on route 95 in CT once and I start getting tornado warnings on my phone and I was shocked that no one seemed to be taking the slightest precaution. I kept driving at first but in a short while I'm on an elevated highway in a urban area, the wind is rapidly increasing and increasing large tree branches are blowing across the road from distant trees. It is evening rush hour and people are leaving work are getting on the highway oblivious to the stormy weather. It all seemed like contagious stupidity to me. They must thinking "everyone else is ignoring the danger, so I will too". I got off and got under a bridge. The only other vehicle doing the same under that bridge was a minibus. Later I read there were confirmed tornadoes in CT but not in an urban area. The damage was only to houses and trees.


When we were on vacation in Colorado, I think it was, the tornado sirens went off while we were visiting the zoo. Everybody was ignoring them, so we assumed it must be testing day, but later we found out a wall cloud had been spotted in the area. I know the sirens are more to be better safe than sorry, but I at least do take precautions when I hear them, and it astonishes me how many people don’t.


_________________
Yet in my new wildness and freedom I almost welcome the bitterness of alienage. For although nepenthe has calmed me, I know always that I am an outsider; a stranger in this century and among those who are still men.
-H. P. Lovecraft, "The Outsider"


usagibryan
Toucan
Toucan

User avatar

Joined: 13 Jul 2020
Gender: Male
Posts: 273

24 Jul 2020, 2:09 pm

Edna3362 wrote:
Never seen one before. I'd want to see one.


Me too, preferably from a safe distance. We get warnings sometimes in Florida but I've never actually seen one.


_________________
"The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the deadly light into the peace and safety of a new dark age"


naturalplastic
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Aug 2010
Age: 68
Gender: Male
Posts: 31,626
Location: temperate zone

24 Jul 2020, 2:35 pm

A friend and I were driving down 95 to Lauderdale. A lightening bolt struck the shoulder of the very road we were driving. And then in distance we could see the the main storm approaching. The clouds were darker than dark, and even had an ominous purplish look. I suggested to my friend that that could be a tornado coming. She dismissed the idea by saying "they dont have tornoado in Florida". Later we heard on the radio that there was funnel cloud that touched down briefly in that general area.



Jakki
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Sep 2019
Gender: Female
Posts: 8,961
Location: Outter Quadrant

24 Jul 2020, 6:21 pm

interesting fact , from a old dear friend .. if the sky starts to turn green.. get under cover quickly.
Immediately .


_________________
Diagnosed hfa
Loves velcro,
Quote:
where ever you go ,there you are