Big Storms Coming To Plains And Midwest

The Weather Channel storm map showing serious storms over the Midwest.

Severe storms are rolling into the Plains and the Midwest again this week.

Heads Up

Another round of storms will be over the Plains and the Midwest Wednesday through Friday, May 22-24, 2013, and I don’t think anyone needs a reminder to take these storms seriously. On Monday, Kansas had at least one tornado on the ground, and this is setting the scene for more to follow.

Faster Forming Tornadoes

A picture of a perfectly formed tornado from a storm spotter in Kansas, May 2013.

Picture perfect tornado in Kansas May 2013 – youtube

Climate change, solar storms, polar shifts, and all-around “global warming” have changed how violent storms are forming today.

Tornadoes these days are forming quicker, and are much larger and more powerful than most tornadoes a decade ago – and they are grabbing a lot more real estate once on the ground.

This week’s storm system is a very large system covering many states from Texas to Wisconsin.

Be Prepared

Remember that Nature is just doing what “Nature does.”  No one should fear Nature or big storms, but we all should respect their power and abilities. Realizing that Nature can change in an instant is our best reminder to be prepared – I mean really be prepared.

With enough warning, and with properly constructed buildings and safe shelters within everyone’s reach, large populations in the path of severe storms can better ride them out.

Our local municipalities are finally figuring out that building codes should trump developer profits, and in the future, all new communities should be built with higher quality and frugal planning to sustain increasing Earth changes.

Keep your NOAA weather radio and the Weather Channel on (as long as you have electricity, that is) – these are your eyes and ears during severe storms. Keep some bottled water in the basement and grab a long leash for the dog.

Stay Safe!

 

Tornadoes Rip Through Moore, Oklahoma

An EF5 tornado barreled through the suburbs west of Oklahoma City, Monday, May 20, 2013. Moore, Oklahoma was leveled, and amazingly only 24 people were killed at the hands of a mile-wide twister that stayed on the ground for over 20 miles packing 166+ mile per hour winds.

Tornadoes Are Forming Quicker Today

Another EF5 tornado destroyed the town of Moore in 1999, but when this tornado formed, it took much longer to build in size and intensity. Unlike tornadoes in the past, tornadoes today are forming much quicker, and much stronger.

Global climate change, solar intensity, an increase in volcanic eruptions, the shifting of the poles, and man-made pollutants, such as burning fossil fuels and spraying Chemtrails, are altering our planet’s global wind patterns. As these events continue to affect our weather, we will continue to witness marked changes in how tornadoes form. And, it is to our disadvantage because there is less time to prepare.

No Time In Texas

Wednesday, May 15, 2013, fatal tornadoes outside Dallas, Texas came as a big surprise. Large storms were predicted, but the tornado index was low, and no one expected an EF4 to suddenly form. The twister hit in the towns of Granbury and Cleburne, Texas killing several people.

This tornado spun up out of the blue – fast and furious – with little warning.

A picture of the EF5 tornado in Joplin, Mo 2011.

EF5 Tornado in Joplin, Mo 2011 – NOAA.

Joplin, Mo

On May 22, 2011, I was watching the Weather  Channel’s Tornado Hunt, and I clearly remember the storm spotters saying that strong storms were all around, but no tornado activity was on the Doppler Radar. Suddenly out of the blue, an EF5 tornado formed within minutes, and leveled the town of Joplin, merely 40 miles east of the storm spotters.

Another surprise tornado.

As Earth changes continue to increase today, tornados are forming more quickly and with less warning. This will certainly keep NOAA and storm spotters on their toes.

YOU need to be more aware, too. And take the warnings seriously!

 

Deadly Tornadoes Hit Texas And Kansas

A picture of a perfectly formed tornado from a storm spotter in Kansas, May 2013.

Picture perfect tornado in Kansas May 2103 – youtube

Fatal tornados swept through my neck of the woods in North Texas on Wednesday, May 15, 2013, and they came as a surprise. Big storms were predicted, but the tornado index was low, and standard storm warnings were updating on my NOAA weather radio.

Because large tornadoes caught North Texans by surprise, several people were killed southeast of Ft. Worth, and over 100 were injured when the first tornado whipped through two housing subdivisions in the town of Granbury. Then another twister hit about 40 miles west of Ft. Worth in the town of Millsap, damaging buildings.

Tornadoes In A Blender

A storm spotter photo of Saturday's tornado in Kansas.

Storm spotter photo of Saturday’s tornado in Kansas.

Three days later, warnings were out for the midwest on Saturday, May 18, 2103 when some of the most perfectly-formed tornadoes raced through Kansas. The storm spotters took some incredible pictures of the tornadoes, and this makes it easy to see how a tornado is like an atmospheric “drain” – the water vapor in the upper atmosphere spirals down to the ground with extreme force and spins like a blender when the conditions are just right.

What are the perfect ingredients that make a picture-book tornado?

  • a warm, dry ground surface to the south-southwest
  • a warm, humid air flow from the southeast
  • cold air coming from the north-northwest
  • a torrent Jet Stream overhead that switches on the “blender”

Making History

There is no doubt that today’s climate and extreme weather changes are making history. To date, Des Moines, Iowa has not seen a tornado in over 1-year. It’s coming, though, but not in the traditional fashion like years ago. Climate change brings storm change …

On May 3, 1999, 74 tornadoes were spawned in Kansas and Oklahoma, including a F5 tornado which struck the suburbs of Oklahoma City. The number of tornado outbreaks seems to be decreasing, yet the power of tornadoes today appears stronger and more unpredictable.

Keep Your Eye To The Sky

As today’s weather makes history, keep your eye to the sky and go buy a NOAA weather radio…