Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

U.S. & Caribbean Weather Discussions and Severe Weather Events

Moderator: S2k Moderators

Forum rules

The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or STORM2K.

Help Support Storm2K
Message
Author
User avatar
Texas Snowman
Storm2k Moderator
Storm2k Moderator
Posts: 6151
Joined: Fri Jan 25, 2008 11:29 am
Location: Denison, Texas

Re:

#661 Postby Texas Snowman » Fri Apr 29, 2011 10:44 pm

CrazyC83 wrote:I wonder what lessons will be learned? I think the NWS Service Assessment will be a great read. I am sure there will be one, probably out in early 2012.


For one thing, if what I've understood about the Birmingham tornado is true - that people died while sheltering in basements - then the old adage about the only way to survive an EF5 (assuming it is rated that) is apparently only true some of the time.

Another thing that strikes me is that many (me for one) apparently thought - erroneously - that the days of super high tornado death tolls numbering in the hundreds from tornado outbreaks was a thing of the past given today's technology, media, advanced warning, better construction methods, etc.

I should have known better on that one - I used to think that a hurricane death toll above 1,000 was also a thing of the past. Then came Katrina.

Other things come to mind:

* that tornadoes do indeed travel down mountains/steep hills (the Alabama video);

* the power of social media (I followed the outbreak here and on television, but I learned most of my information about what was happening via Twitter);

* and how horrifying watching something like this unfold live on television can be. I will NEVER forget watching James Spann walk people through the Tuscaloosa tornado as it chewed through town or Jeff Morrow talking with Dr. Greg Forbes on TWC as that massive tornado traversed across north Birmingham in the background.
0 likes   
The above post and any post by Texas Snowman is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to NWS products.

User avatar
Texas Snowman
Storm2k Moderator
Storm2k Moderator
Posts: 6151
Joined: Fri Jan 25, 2008 11:29 am
Location: Denison, Texas

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#662 Postby Texas Snowman » Fri Apr 29, 2011 10:49 pm

brunota2003 wrote:Per this image, we had two tri-state tornadoes...though I'm suspicious of the northern one because of the line SE near Madison, Al...

Image



One thing that stands out to me - and I remember one of the TV mets, maybe Dr. Forbes, mentioning this as the tornado approached B/Ham - is the slight northward jog the monster Tri-State twister made.

That jog (which reminds me of the jog that Hurricane Ike made in the last couple of hours before its landfall sparing Galveston proper the right front quadrant storm surge that destroyed the Bolivar Peninsula in SE Texas) saved downtown Birmingham from destruction.
0 likes   
The above post and any post by Texas Snowman is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including storm2k.org. For official information, please refer to NWS products.

User avatar
brunota2003
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9476
Age: 34
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2005 9:56 pm
Location: Stanton, KY...formerly Havelock, NC
Contact:

#663 Postby brunota2003 » Fri Apr 29, 2011 10:59 pm

I was watching the TWC feed...that would of been downright scary watching that tornado if it had gone through downtown live on video. Just seeing what it would do to those skyscrapers...especially if they collapsed.

One thing about basements is you potentially have all that debris falling ontop of you while you are sheltering...that could kill you as easily as the tornado itself could.
0 likes   

HurricaneBill
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 3420
Joined: Sun Apr 11, 2004 5:51 pm
Location: East Longmeadow, MA, USA

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#664 Postby HurricaneBill » Fri Apr 29, 2011 11:08 pm

I think a good name for this outbreak would be the "Dixie" Outbreak.

The region is known as Dixie Alley.
0 likes   

WeatherGuesser
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 2672
Joined: Tue Jun 29, 2010 6:46 am

#665 Postby WeatherGuesser » Fri Apr 29, 2011 11:13 pm

The death toll from Wednesday's storms reached 329 across seven states, including 238 in Alabama, making it the deadliest U.S. tornado outbreak since March 1932, when another Alabama storm killed 332 people. Tornadoes that swept across the South and Midwest in April 1974 left 315 people dead.


http://blog.al.com/wire/2011/04/toll_in ... eadli.html
0 likes   

HurricaneBill
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 3420
Joined: Sun Apr 11, 2004 5:51 pm
Location: East Longmeadow, MA, USA

Re:

#666 Postby HurricaneBill » Fri Apr 29, 2011 11:20 pm

brunota2003 wrote:I was watching the TWC feed...that would of been downright scary watching that tornado if it had gone through downtown live on video. Just seeing what it would do to those skyscrapers...especially if they collapsed.



During the 1970 Lubbock F5 tornado, a skyscraper actually took a direct hit.

From Wikipedia:
The 271-foot (83 m) tall Great Plains Life Building was actually twisted by the tornado, and was damaged so badly, many thought it would collapse; several radio towers on the roof were twisted or broken off. Much of the plaster in the stairwell walls between the 4th and 16th floors had cracked, and 60% of the building's windows were shattered. A foot of permanent deformation damage occurred at the steel frame on the south side, and three of the building's four elevators were damaged with the support rails bent. In spite of the severity of the damage and amid cries to demolish, the owners chose to repair it instead, and it still stands; this building is believed to be the tallest building to survive a direct hit from an F5 tornado.


The building is known as the Metro Tower.

This link is a photo of the SE side of the building.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/dkpixs/4594555898/

The SW side of the building.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/dkpixs/4594557884/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/dkpixs/4594553356/
0 likes   

User avatar
Ntxw
Storm2k Moderator
Storm2k Moderator
Posts: 22731
Joined: Wed Oct 21, 2009 6:34 pm
Location: DFW, Texas

#667 Postby Ntxw » Sat Apr 30, 2011 12:23 am

^ That's some really cool info. Having studied some engineering in college, I think many of downtown structures (highrises and skyscrapers) that are modern would survive an ef5 tornado and be left standing firm. They are designed with this type of wind in mind. It is the older lowrise buildings that pose the biggest threat imo.

However, I would not want to be in a skyscraper when something like that hits because even though they are built to survive, they are also designed to lose the skin/windows of the building. Talk about a dangerous rain of glass shards. Thank goodness this thing didn't take a direct hit to DT B'ham.
0 likes   
The above post and any post by Ntxw is NOT an official forecast and should not be used as such. It is just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. It is NOT endorsed by any professional institution including Storm2k. For official information, please refer to NWS products.

  Help support Storm2K!
Help Support Storm2K

WeatherGuesser
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 2672
Joined: Tue Jun 29, 2010 6:46 am

#668 Postby WeatherGuesser » Sat Apr 30, 2011 2:24 am

Casualties; 340 fatal, injuries in the thousands (from other articles)

TOR count; 211

http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/04/30/severe ... tml?hpt=T2
0 likes   

Brent
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 37990
Age: 36
Joined: Sun May 16, 2004 10:30 pm
Location: Tulsa Oklahoma
Contact:

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#669 Postby Brent » Sat Apr 30, 2011 2:29 am

TORNADO 5...ARGO/SHOAL CREEK/OHATCHEE/FORNEY TORNADO (JEFFERSON/ST.
CLAIR/CALHOUN/ETOWAH/CHEROKEE COUNTIES)

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: LIKELY GREATER THAN EF-3 (FURTHER EVALUATION UNDERWAY)
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): POTENTIALLY UP TO 180
INJURIES/FATALITIES: NUMEROUS FATALITIES AND INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 33.6792/-86.5699 AT 623 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 34.0661/-85.420 AT 747 PM (AT GEORGIA
STATE LINE)
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): 72 MILES
WIDTH: UP TO 1.25 MILES
NOTE: CONTINUED INTO GEORGIA

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED THE DAMAGE PATH
FROM EASTERN JEFFERSON COUNTY NORTHEAST TO CHEROKEE COUNTY. IT HAS
BEEN DETERMINED THAT THE DAMAGE WAS CONSISTENT WITH A VIOLENT
TORNADO. THE TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN NEAR ARGO...BETWEEN DEERFOOT
PARKWAY AND ADVENT ROAD...JUST NORTH OF INTERSTATE 59. THE TORNADO
THEN MOVED EAST ACROSS THE INTERSTATE INTO ST. CLAIR COUNTY. THE
TORNADO CAUSED EF-0 TO EF-1 DAMAGE AS IT TRACKED NEAR MARGARET AND
NORTH OF ODENVILLE. JUST NORTHEAST OF ODENVILLE...THE TORNADO
STRENGTHENED AND WIDENED CONSIDERABLY. THE TORNADO THEN MOVED
EAST-NORTHEAST ALONG COUNTY ROAD 22...THROUGH SHOAL CREEK. DAMAGE
ALL ALONG CR-22 WAS EXTENSIVE. SEVERAL HOMES HAD ALMOST ALL WALLS
BLOWN OUT...AND ONE ROUGHLY 40 YEAR OLD HOME WAS COMPLETELY LEVELED.
THE PATH CONTINUED EAST-NORTHEAST ACROSS NEELY HENRY LAKE INTO
CALHOUN COUNTY. THE GREATEST AMOUNT OF DAMAGE WAS DONE ON THE
EASTERN SHORES OF THE LAKE...JUST NORTH OF OHATCHEE. IN THIS AREA
NUMEROUS HOMES AND MOBILE HOMES WERE COMPLETELY LEVELED...INDICATIVE
OF A VIOLENT TORNADO. AT LEAST ONE WELL BUILT HOME WAS NEARLY SWEPT
CLEAN OF EVERYTHING ABOVE ITS BASEMENT...SAVE FOR A FEW ITEMS OF
FURNITURE. WINDS HERE WERE LIKELY MORE THAN 150 MPH...PERHAPS AS
HIGH AS 180 MPH. THE DAMAGE PATH AT THIS POINT REACHED ITS WIDEST...
AROUND 1.25 MILES.
THE TORNADO CONTINUED TO CAUSE EXTENSIVE DAMAGE
ON AN EAST-NORTHEAST PATH ACROSS NORTHERN CALHOUN COUNTY...JUST
SOUTH OF THE ETOWAH COUNTY LINE. ALL HOMES IN ITS PATH RECEIVED
SIGNIFICANT DAMAGE AND MANY WERE COMPLETELY DESTROYED. A SMALL
CHURCH ON ROCKY HOLLOW ROAD NEAR THE WEBSTER CHAPEL COMMUNITY WAS
COMPLETELY LEVELED.
THE TORNADO BRIEFLY WENT THROUGH SOUTHEAST
ETOWAH COUNTY SOUTHEAST OF REAVES...CLIPPED A SMALL PORTION OF
CALHOUN COUNTY ONE LAST TIME...THEN MOVED INTO CHEROKEE COUNTY.
THERE IT DAMAGED NUMEROUS MORE HOMES AND MOBILE HOMES AS IT MOVED
EAST-NORTHEASTWARD. THE TORNADO APPEARED TO WEAKEN BRIEFLY AS IT
MOVED THROUGH FROG MOUNTAIN...BUT THEN IT WIDENED AND STRENGTHENED
ONCE AGAIN BEFORE IT REACHED COUNTY ROAD 45 NORTH OF ROCK RUN. ON
COUNTY ROAD 29 SOUTH OF FORNEY...AN APPARENTLY WELL BUILT FRAME HOME
WAS COMPLETELY LEVELED TO THE GROUND
BY WINDS THAT MAY HAVE EXCEEDED
150 MPH. THE TORNADO THEN MOVED INTO GEORGIA AT COUNTY ROAD 28.
ALONG THE PATH...HUNDREDS OF STRUCTURES WERE DAMAGED AND
DESTROYED...AND MANY THOUSANDS OF TREES WERE UPROOTED...SNAPPED...
AND REDUCED TO SPIKED STUMPS.

NOTE: THERE WAS NO DAMAGE OBSERVED ON DEERFOOT PARKWAY...JUST WEST
OF THE STARTING COORDINATES ABOVE. THEREFORE...THERE APPEARS TO
BE A SMALL BREAK IN THE DAMAGE BETWEEN THE TUSCALOOSA-BIRMINGHAM
TORNADO AND THIS ONE...AS THE STORM WENT ACROSS THE PINSON AND
CHALKVILLE AREAS. THIS BREAK IN THE DAMAGE MAY NEED FURTHER
INVESTIGATION...TO MAKE SURE THAT IT INDEED DID OCCUR.
0 likes   
#neversummer

HurricaneBill
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 3420
Joined: Sun Apr 11, 2004 5:51 pm
Location: East Longmeadow, MA, USA

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#670 Postby HurricaneBill » Sat Apr 30, 2011 2:32 am

At least the media isn't freaking out over Browns Ferry nuclear power plant.
0 likes   

WeatherGuesser
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 2672
Joined: Tue Jun 29, 2010 6:46 am

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#671 Postby WeatherGuesser » Sat Apr 30, 2011 2:35 am

Texas Snowman wrote:
brunota2003 wrote:Per this image,



One thing that stands out to me -


saved downtown Birmingham from destruction.



Just tossing out for thought. Even with such a fierce storm, could it be possible for the diversion around town to have been caused (at least in part) by the tall buildings? I've seen storms divert or be deflected by fairly small topographical features like hills because of the updraft. Could a group of buildings significantly taller than anything else around have a similar effect?
0 likes   

Brent
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 37990
Age: 36
Joined: Sun May 16, 2004 10:30 pm
Location: Tulsa Oklahoma
Contact:

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#672 Postby Brent » Sat Apr 30, 2011 2:50 am

Total fatalities due to severe weather rises to 252
Clanton – The Alabama Emergency Management Agency has confirmed 252 fatalities in Alabama from
the tornadoes and severe weather on April 27. The fatalities are as follows (listed by county):
• Marshall‐5
• DeKalb‐32
• Cullman‐2
• Jefferson‐19
• Bibb‐1
• Calhoun‐9
• Elmore‐6
• Fayette‐4
• Franklin‐27
• Hale‐4
• Jackson‐8
• Lawrence‐14
• Limestone‐4
• Madison‐7
• Marion‐35
• St. Clair‐13
• Tallapoosa‐3
• Tuscaloosa‐45
• Walker‐14
0 likes   
#neversummer

User avatar
brunota2003
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9476
Age: 34
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2005 9:56 pm
Location: Stanton, KY...formerly Havelock, NC
Contact:

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#673 Postby brunota2003 » Sat Apr 30, 2011 5:54 am

WeatherGuesser wrote:
Texas Snowman wrote:
brunota2003 wrote:Per this image,



One thing that stands out to me -


saved downtown Birmingham from destruction.



Just tossing out for thought. Even with such a fierce storm, could it be possible for the diversion around town to have been caused (at least in part) by the tall buildings? I've seen storms divert or be deflected by fairly small topographical features like hills because of the updraft. Could a group of buildings significantly taller than anything else around have a similar effect?

That's what I was wondering as well...and then right after it passed Birmingham, the tornado appears to have either lifted or weakened greatly before the supercell managed to recycle and keep going. Perhaps the buildings served to disrupt the inflow into the tornado? That would account for it shifting further north, as well as the weakening.
0 likes   

RL3AO
Moderator-Pro Met
Moderator-Pro Met
Posts: 16308
Joined: Thu Jun 14, 2007 10:03 pm
Location: NC

#674 Postby RL3AO » Sat Apr 30, 2011 7:45 am

The inflow was coming from the south (or southeast) right? That means it was going north of downtown well before the point where the inflow would be hitting the buildings (which is when its north of downtown).
0 likes   

User avatar
brunota2003
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9476
Age: 34
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2005 9:56 pm
Location: Stanton, KY...formerly Havelock, NC
Contact:

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#675 Postby brunota2003 » Sat Apr 30, 2011 10:59 am

They posted info on the Tuscaloosa tornado track...thus far EF4:

...PRELIMINARY TUSCALOOSA/BIRMINGHAM TORNADO TRACK...

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: AT LEAST EF-4
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): AT LEAST 165
INJURIES/FATALITIES: AT LEAST 65 FATALITIES. OVER 1000 INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 33.0297/-87.935 AT 443 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 33.6311/-86.7436 AT 614 PM
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): APPROXIMATELY 80.3 MILES
DAMAGE WIDTH: 1.5 MILES CROSSING I-65


NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS HAVE BEGUN SURVEYING THE
MASSIVE DAMAGE ASSOCIATED WITH THIS LONG TRACK TORNADO...BY GROUND
AND AIR. THE START POINT IS BASED ON AERIAL SURVEY...WHILE THE END
LOCATION WAS DETERMINED BY A GROUND CREW. THUS FAR...DETAILED DAMAGE
INSPECTION HAS REVEALED A MAXIMUM OF EF-4 DAMAGE IN THE PLEASANT
GROVE. CASUALTY INFORMATION IS BASED ON THE LATEST OFFICIAL RELEASES
FROM THE ALABAMA EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY. THIS TORNADO WAS
PRODUCED BY A SUPERCELL THUNDERSTORM THAT BEGAN IN NEWTON COUNTY
MISSISSIPPI AT 254 PM CDT...FINALLY DISSIPATING IN MACON COUNTY
NORTH CAROLINA AT APPROXIMATELY 1018 PM CDT. SO...THIS SUPERCELL
EXISTED FOR ABOUT 7 HOURS AND 24 MINUTES...TRAVELING APPROXIMATELY
380 MILES PRODUCING SEVERAL STRONG TO VIOLENT TORNADOES ALONG THE
WAY.
ADDITIONAL EVALUATION OF THE DAMAGE IN TUSCALOOSA AND JEFFERSON
COUNTY WILL CONTINUE TODAY TO DETERMINE IF THE RATING NEEDS TO BE
INCREASED. RESULTS WILL BE UPDATED WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE.
0 likes   

User avatar
brunota2003
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 9476
Age: 34
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2005 9:56 pm
Location: Stanton, KY...formerly Havelock, NC
Contact:

#676 Postby brunota2003 » Sat Apr 30, 2011 11:02 am

The inflow still could of been disrupted up to a couple hundred feet into the air...and west/north of the city is about the time the tornado started weakening before dissipating.
0 likes   

psyclone
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 4745
Joined: Wed Aug 24, 2005 9:04 pm
Location: palm harbor fl

#677 Postby psyclone » Sat Apr 30, 2011 11:45 am

I'm certainly no tornado expert but it's hard to imagine a few tall buildings being significant enough to disrupt a storm of this magnitude, intensity and vertical structure. I envision it as similar to sticking a twig in the muddy bottom of a flowing stream...it's not going to do much.
0 likes   

plasticup

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#678 Postby plasticup » Sat Apr 30, 2011 1:25 pm

Don't know if this has already been posted, but a satellite image gives a perspective I'd never seen before:

Image
0 likes   

Brent
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 37990
Age: 36
Joined: Sun May 16, 2004 10:30 pm
Location: Tulsa Oklahoma
Contact:

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#679 Postby Brent » Sat Apr 30, 2011 1:34 pm

Wow.

Image

259 tornado reports!!!!!!!!!!
0 likes   
#neversummer

User avatar
srainhoutx
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 6919
Age: 67
Joined: Sun Jan 14, 2007 11:34 am
Location: Haywood County, NC
Contact:

Re: Historic Multi Day Tornado/Flooding Event 4/23-28/2011

#680 Postby srainhoutx » Sat Apr 30, 2011 6:12 pm

PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BIRMINGHAM AL
605 PM CDT SAT APR 30 2011

...UPDATED FOR INCREASE IN HACKLEBURG TORNADO RATING TO EF-5...

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS WILL CONTINUE THE ASSESSMENT
OF STORM DAMAGE FROM A TRAGICALLY HISTORIC DAY OF TORNADIC ACTIVITY
AND SEVERE WEATHER ACROSS CENTRAL ALABAMA ON WEDNESDAY APRIL 27TH. A
NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED STORM DAMAGE EXPERT WILL CONTINUE ASSISTING US
IN EXAMINING THE LOCATIONS OF THE MOST EXTREME DAMAGE TO ENSURE WE
PROVIDE THE MOST ACCURATE ASSESSMENT OF THIS EVENT AS POSSIBLE.

...SURVEY RESULTS TO DATE...

...EVENT OVERVIEW...

THERE WERE TWO WAVES OF WIDESPREAD SEVERE WEATHER. THE FIRST MOVED
THROUGH DURING THE EARLY MORNING HOURS ACROSS NORTHERN PORTIONS OF
CENTRAL ALABAMA PRODUCING WIDESPREAD DAMAGING STRAIGHT LINE WINDS
AND ISOLATED TORNADOES. THE SECOND WAVE INVOLVED NUMEROUS SUPERCELL
THUNDERSTORMS AND PRODUCED LONG LIVED...STRONG TO VIOLENT TORNADOES
ACROSS THE NORTHERN TWO-THIRDS OF CENTRAL ALABAMA...WITH WIDESPREAD
AND CATASTROPHIC DAMAGE IN SEVERAL LOCATIONS. AT THIS TIME ALL
RATINGS ARE PRELIMINARY.

TORNADO 1...COALING TORNADO (TUSCALOOSA/JEFFERSON COUNTIES)

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: EF-3 TORNADO
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): UP TO 155
INJURIES/FATALITIES: UNKNOWN.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 33.163/-87.3716 AT 517 AM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 33.296/-87.0594 AT 535 AM
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): 18.3 MILES
DAMAGE WIDTH: 200 YARDS
NOTE: ADDITIONAL DATA WILL BE ADDED AS INFORMATION COMES IN.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED DAMAGE ACROSS
EASTERN TUSCALOOSA AND FAR SOUTHWEST JEFFERSON COUNTIES. IT HAS
BEEN DETERMINED THAT THE DAMAGE WAS CONSISTENT WITH A TORNADO. WINDS
WERE ESTIMATED AROUND 155 MPH. THE TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN JUST
SOUTHWEST OF COALING OFF STAGHORNE DRIVE. TREE DAMAGE WAS NOTED IN
THIS AREA. THE TORNADO THEN MOVED NORTHEAST PARALLEL TO INTERSTATE
20/59 WHERE SEVERAL HOMES SUSTAINED SIGNIFICANT DAMAGE AND A FEW
WERE COMPLETELY DESTROYED. TORNADO DAMAGE HERE WAS CONSISTENT WITH
EF-3 DAMAGE. THE TORNADO CONTINUED NORTHEAST WHERE THE MERCEDES
PLANT SUSTAINED ROOF DAMAGE AND POWER POLES WERE BLOWN DOWN...ALONG
WITH NUMEROUS TREES SNAPPED. THE TORNADO CONTINUED TO SNAP TREES AS
IT MOVED NORTHEAST INTO FAR SOUTHWEST JEFFERSON COUNTY WHERE IT
ENDED AT OLD TUSCALOOSA HIGHWAY AND LOWETOWN ROAD. MAX WINDS WERE
ESTIMATED UP TO 155 MPH AND WAS 200 YARDS AT ITS WIDEST POINT.

TORNADO 2...HACKLEBURG TORNADO (MARION COUNTY)

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: EF-5 TORNADOESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): 200
INJURIES/FATALITIES: AT LEAST 25 FATALITIES. NUMEROUS INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 34.0880/-88.1328 AT 305 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 34.3109/-87.7858 AT 328 PM
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): 25.2 MILES IN MARION COUNTY
DAMAGE WIDTH: 3/4 MILE
NOTE: CONTINUED INTO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY


NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED DAMAGE ACROSS MARION
COUNTY IMPACTING THE HACKLEBURG AREA. IT HAS BEEN DETERMINED THAT THE
DAMAGE WAS CONSISTENT WITH A VIOLENT TORNADO. WINDS WERE ESTIMATED
UP TO 200 MPH. THE TORNADO APPEARED TO TOUCHDOWN SOUTHWEST OF
HAMILTON NEAR HIGHWAY 19 AND COUNTY ROAD 22. TREE DAMAGE WAS NOTED
IN THIS AREA. THE TORNADO WIDENED CONSIDERABLY AND BECAME DEADLY AS
IT MOVED ALONG HIGHWAY 43 SOUTHWEST OF HACKLEBURG. THE TORNADO MOVED
INTO HACKLEBURG WHERE SEVERAL SUBDIVISIONS WERE DESTROYED. THE
HACKLEBURG HIGH SCHOOL AND THE WRANGLER PLANT WERE DESTROYED. THE
TORNADO MOVED NORTHEAST AND GENERALLY PARALLELED HIGHWAY 43 AND
MOVED TOWARD PHIL CAMPBELL WHERE SIGNIFICANT DAMAGE CONTINUED. ALONG
THE DAMAGE PATH, THOUSANDS OF TREES WERE DOWNED...SEVERAL HUNDRED
STRUCTURES WERE DAMAGED, AT LEAST 100 OF THESE STRUCTURES WERE
COMPLETELY DESTROYED AS MANY HOMES WERE LEVELED.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS...ALONG WITH THE FOREMOST
EXPERT IN STORM DAMAGE ASSESSMENT REVIEWED THE DAMAGE IN HACKLEBURG
IN MARION COUNTY. THE MAIN INDICATORS OF HACKLEBURG HAVING EF-5
DAMAGE IS THE TOSSING OF VEHICLES UPWARDS OF 150-200 YARDS...ONE
WELL BUILT HOME WITH 4 SIDES BRICK WAS COMPLETELY LEVELED AND THE
DEBRIS FROM THE HOME WAS TOSSED TO THE NORTH OVER 40 YARDS...AND
THERE WAS LARGE AMOUNTS OF WIND ROWING...THE STREWING OF BUILDING
MATERIALS IN STRAIGHT LINES...AROUND THE CITY OF HACKLEBURG.

TORNADO 3...SHOTSVILLE TORNADO (MARION COUNTY)

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: EF-3 TORNADO OR POTENTIALLY HIGHER (FURTHER EVALUATION
UNDERWAY)
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): AROUND 140
INJURIES/FATALITIES: AT LEAST 6 FATALITIES, SEVERAL INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 34.1579/-88.1847 AT 357 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 34.3129/-87.9231 AT 420 PM
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): 19.1 MILES IN MARION COUNTY
DAMAGE WIDTH: 3/4 MILE
NOTE: STARTED IN MISSISSIPPI AND CONTINUED INTO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED ACROSS MARION
COUNTY IMPACTING THE SHOTSVILLE AREA. IT HAS BEEN DETERMINED THAT
THE DAMAGE WAS CONSISTENT WITH A TORNADO. WINDS WERE ESTIMATED
AROUND 140 MPH. THE TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN SOMEWHERE IN MISSISSIPPI
AND WILL NEED TO BE DETERMINED BY THE NWS IN MEMPHIS, TN. THE
TORNADO MOVED INTO MARION COUNTY NEAR COUNTY ROAD 93 AND DRY CREEK
ROAD. A FEW STRUCTURES WERE DAMAGED AND NUMEROUS TREES WERE SNAPPED
OFF AND UPROOTED IN THIS AREA. THE TORNADO CONTINUED NORTHEASTWARD
AND CROSSED HIGHWAY 78/I-22 WEST OF HAMILTON NEAR THE BEXAR
COMMUNITY. THE TORNADO STRENGTHENED TO EF3 INTENSITY AS IT CROSSED
HIGHWAY 19 AND COUNTY ROAD 20 WHERE SEVERAL HOMES WERE DESTROYED AND
AT LEAST 6 PEOPLE LOST THEIR LIVES. THE TORNADO THEN MOVED ACROSS
HIGHWAY 187 NEAR THE FRANKLIN COUNTY LINE. ALONG THE DAMAGE PATH...
HUNDREDS OF TREES WERE DOWNED...AT LEAST 25 HOMES, MOBILE HOMES AND
OUTBUILDINGS WERE DAMAGED OR DESTROYED. AT LEAST FIVE OF THESE
STRUCTURES WERE COMPLETELY OBLITERATED. THERE WILL BE ANOTHER
EVALUATION DONE ON THE WORST DAMAGE POINTS THE NEXT FEW DAYS TO
DETERMINE IF THE RATING NEEDS TO BE INCREASED. THE DAMAGE PATH IN
MARION COUNTY WAS 19.1 MILES LONG AND WAS 3/4 OF MILE WIDE AT ITS
WIDEST POINT.

TORNADO 4...PRELIMINARY TUSCALOOSA/BIRMINGHAM TORNADO TRACK...

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: AT LEAST EF-4
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): AT LEAST 165
INJURIES/FATALITIES: AT LEAST 65 FATALITIES. OVER 1000 INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 33.0297/-87.935 AT 443 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 33.6311/-86.7436 AT 614 PM
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): APPROXIMATELY 80.3 MILES
DAMAGE WIDTH: 1.5 MILES CROSSING I-65

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS HAVE BEGUN SURVEYING THE
MASSIVE DAMAGE ASSOCIATED WITH THIS LONG TRACK TORNADO...BY GROUND
AND AIR. THE START POINT IS BASED ON AERIAL SURVEY...WHILE THE END
LOCATION WAS DETERMINED BY A GROUND CREW. THUS FAR...DETAILED DAMAGE
INSPECTION HAS REVEALED A MAXIMUM OF EF-4 DAMAGE IN THE PLEASANT
GROVE. CASUALTY INFORMATION IS BASED ON THE LATEST OFFICIAL RELEASES
FROM THE ALABAMA EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY. THIS TORNADO WAS
PRODUCED BY A SUPERCELL THUNDERSTORM THAT BEGAN IN NEWTON COUNTY
MISSISSIPPI AT 254 PM CDT...FINALLY DISSIPATING IN MACON COUNTY
NORTH CAROLINA AT APPROXIMATELY 1018 PM CDT. SO...THIS SUPERCELL
EXISTED FOR ABOUT 7 HOURS AND 24 MINUTES...TRAVELING APPROXIMATELY
380 MILES PRODUCING SEVERAL STRONG TO VIOLENT TORNADOES ALONG THE
WAY. ADDITIONAL EVALUATION OF THE DAMAGE IN TUSCALOOSA AND JEFFERSON
COUNTY WILL CONTINUE TODAY TO DETERMINE IF THE RATING NEEDS TO BE
INCREASED. RESULTS WILL BE UPDATED WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE.

TORNADO 5...HALEYVILLE (MARION/WINSTON COUNTIES)

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: EF-3 TORNADO OR POTENTIALLY HIGHER (FURTHER EVALUATION
UNDERWAY)
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): AROUND 140
INJURIES/FATALITIES: AT LEAST 10 INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 34.0289/-87.9421 AT 510 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 34.3057/-87.4973 AT 551 PM
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): 31.8 MILES
DAMAGE WIDTH: 3/4 MILE
NOTE: MAY HAVE CONTINUED INTO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED DAMAGE ACROSS MARION
AND WINSTON COUNTIES IMPACTING THE PEA RIDGE, WHITEHOUSE, THORNHILL
AND HALEYVILLE AREAS. IT HAS BEEN DETERMINED THAT THE DAMAGE WAS
CONSISTENT WITH A TORNADO. WINDS WERE ESTIMATED AROUND 140
MPH WITH ADDITIONAL EVALUATION UNDERWAY. THE TORNADO APPEARED TO
TOUCHDOWN SOUTH OF HAMILTON NEAR HIGHWAY 278, COUNTY ROAD 2 AND
PHILADELPHIA ROAD WHERE TREE DAMAGE WAS NOTED. THE TORNADO TRACKED
NORTHEASTWARD AND STRENGTHENED NEAR THE PEA RIDGE AND WHITEHOUSE
COMMUNITIES. SEVERAL HOMES WERE DESTROYED AND SEVERAL PEOPLE WERE
INJURED. THE TORNADO PRODUCED SIGNIFICANT DAMAGE INTO THE
THORNHILL COMMUNITY AND SOUTHERN AND EASTERN PARTS OF HALEYVILLE
THE WINSTON FURNITURE COMPANY AND FONTAINE TRAILER COMPANY SUFFERED
EXTENSIVE DAMAGE. MANY HOMES WERE SIGNIFICANTLY DAMAGED OR WERE
DESTROYED. THE TORNADO CONTINUED TO PRODUCE TREE DAMAGE AS IT
ENTERED THE FOREST AREA IN NORTHERN WINSTON COUNTY. IT APPEARED THE
TORNADO MAY HAVE CONTINUED INTO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY.

TORNADO 6...SAWYERVILLE/EOLINE TORNADO (GREENE/HALE/BIBB COUNTIES)

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: EF-3 TORNADO
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): AROUND 145
INJURIES/FATALITIES: AT LEAST 7 FATALITIES, 50 INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 32.6211/-88.0462 AT 530 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 33.1443/-86.9998 AT 655 PM
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): 71.3 MILES
WIDTH: 1 MILE
NOTE: STARTED NEAR THE TOMBIGBEE RIVER IN SOUTHWEST GREENE COUNTY
AND CONTINUED INTO NORTHEAST BIBB COUNTY. THIS TRACK MAY NEED TO
EXTENDED INTO SHELBY COUNTY AFTER FURTHER SURVEYS ARE COMPLETED.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED MULTIPLE TRACKS
ACROSS GREENE...HALE AND BIBB COUNTIES. IT HAS BEEN DETERMINED THAT
THE DAMAGE WAS CONSISTENT WITH A TORNADO. THE TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN
IN FAR SOUTHWEST GREENE COUNTY NEAR THE TOMBIGBEE RIVER JUST WEST OF
TISHABEE ON COUNTY ROAD 69 NEAR HEAD DRIVE...AND HEADED NORTHEAST
ACROSS RURAL GREENE COUNTY NORTH OF FORKLAND. AT LEAST 4 MOBILE
HOMES...3 OUTBUILDING...AND 2 CHURCHES WERE DAMAGED OR DESTROYED
ALONG WITH NUMEROUS TREES. 2 MINOR INJURIES WERE NOTED IN GREENE
COUNTY. THE TRACK STARTED AS AN EF-1 BUT INCREASED TO AN EF-2 RATING
WHILE IN GREENE COUNTY. THE TORNADO THEN CROSSED THE BLACK WARRIOR
RIVER AND MOVED INTO HALE COUNTY PASSING THROUGH SAWYERVILLE AND
NORTHEAST INTO THE TALLADEGA NATIONAL FOREST. NUMEROUS MOBILE HOMES
AND SINGLE FAMILY HOMES...1 CHURCH...AND COUNTLESS TREES WERE
DAMAGED OR DESTROYED. THERE WERE 40 INJURIES AND 6 FATALITIES ACROSS
HALE COUNTY. THE TRACK INCREASED FROM AN EF-2 TO AN EF-3 WHILE IN
HALE COUNTY JUST NORTHEAST OF SAWYERVILLE. THE TORNADO THEN CROSSED
INTO SOUTHWEST BIBB COUNTY IN THE TALLADEGA NATIONAL FOREST AND
MOVED NORTHEAST TO EOLINE AND ENDED IN MARVEL. SEVERAL MOBILE HOMES
AND SINGLE FAMILY HOMES...1 BUSINESS...AS WELL AS THE EOLINE FIRE
STATION...AND COUNTLESS TREES WERE DAMAGED OR DESTROYED. THERE WERE
8 INJURIES AND 1 FATALITY IN BIBB COUNTY. EF-3 AND EF-2 DAMAGE WERE
NOTED FOR THE MOST PART IN EOLINE AND CENTRAL BIBB COUNTY THEN
DECREASED IN INTENSITY AS IT MOVED INTO NORTHEAST RURAL BIBB COUNTY
TOWARD MARVEL. MAX WINDS WERE ESTIMATED UP TO 145 MPH AND WAS 1 MILE
WIDE AT ITS WIDEST POINT IN CENTRAL BIBB COUNTY.

TORNADO 7...ARGO/SHOAL CREEK/OHATCHEE/FORNEY TORNADO (JEFFERSON/ST.
CLAIR/CALHOUN/ETOWAH/CHEROKEE COUNTIES)

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: LIKELY GREATER THAN EF-3 (FURTHER EVALUATION UNDERWAY)
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): POTENTIALLY UP TO 180
INJURIES/FATALITIES: NUMEROUS FATALITIES AND INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 33.6792/-86.5699 AT 623 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 34.0661/-85.420 AT 747 PM (AT GEORGIA
STATE LINE)
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): 72 MILES
WIDTH: UP TO 1.25 MILES
NOTE: CONTINUED INTO GEORGIA

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED THE DAMAGE PATH
FROM EASTERN JEFFERSON COUNTY NORTHEAST TO CHEROKEE COUNTY. IT HAS
BEEN DETERMINED THAT THE DAMAGE WAS CONSISTENT WITH A VIOLENT
TORNADO. THE TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN NEAR ARGO...BETWEEN DEERFOOT
PARKWAY AND ADVENT ROAD...JUST NORTH OF INTERSTATE 59. THE TORNADO
THEN MOVED EAST ACROSS THE INTERSTATE INTO ST. CLAIR COUNTY. THE
TORNADO CAUSED EF-0 TO EF-1 DAMAGE AS IT TRACKED NEAR MARGARET AND
NORTH OF ODENVILLE. JUST NORTHEAST OF ODENVILLE...THE TORNADO
STRENGTHENED AND WIDENED CONSIDERABLY. THE TORNADO THEN MOVED
EAST-NORTHEAST ALONG COUNTY ROAD 22...THROUGH SHOAL CREEK. DAMAGE
ALL ALONG CR-22 WAS EXTENSIVE. SEVERAL HOMES HAD ALMOST ALL WALLS
BLOWN OUT...AND ONE ROUGHLY 40 YEAR OLD HOME WAS COMPLETELY LEVELED.
THE PATH CONTINUED EAST-NORTHEAST ACROSS NEELY HENRY LAKE INTO
CALHOUN COUNTY. THE GREATEST AMOUNT OF DAMAGE WAS DONE ON THE
EASTERN SHORES OF THE LAKE...JUST NORTH OF OHATCHEE. IN THIS AREA
NUMEROUS HOMES AND MOBILE HOMES WERE COMPLETELY LEVELED...INDICATIVE
OF A VIOLENT TORNADO. AT LEAST ONE WELL BUILT HOME WAS NEARLY SWEPT
CLEAN OF EVERYTHING ABOVE ITS BASEMENT...SAVE FOR A FEW ITEMS OF
FURNITURE. WINDS HERE WERE LIKELY MORE THAN 150 MPH...PERHAPS AS
HIGH AS 180 MPH. THE DAMAGE PATH AT THIS POINT REACHED ITS WIDEST...
AROUND 1.25 MILES. THE TORNADO CONTINUED TO CAUSE EXTENSIVE DAMAGE
ON AN EAST-NORTHEAST PATH ACROSS NORTHERN CALHOUN COUNTY...JUST
SOUTH OF THE ETOWAH COUNTY LINE. ALL HOMES IN ITS PATH RECEIVED
SIGNIFICANT DAMAGE AND MANY WERE COMPLETELY DESTROYED. A SMALL
CHURCH ON ROCKY HOLLOW ROAD NEAR THE WEBSTER CHAPEL COMMUNITY WAS
COMPLETELY LEVELED. THE TORNADO BRIEFLY WENT THROUGH SOUTHEAST
ETOWAH COUNTY SOUTHEAST OF REAVES...CLIPPED A SMALL PORTION OF
CALHOUN COUNTY ONE LAST TIME...THEN MOVED INTO CHEROKEE COUNTY.
THERE IT DAMAGED NUMEROUS MORE HOMES AND MOBILE HOMES AS IT MOVED
EAST-NORTHEASTWARD. THE TORNADO APPEARED TO WEAKEN BRIEFLY AS IT
MOVED THROUGH FROG MOUNTAIN...BUT THEN IT WIDENED AND STRENGTHENED
ONCE AGAIN BEFORE IT REACHED COUNTY ROAD 45 NORTH OF ROCK RUN. ON
COUNTY ROAD 29 SOUTH OF FORNEY...AN APPARENTLY WELL BUILT FRAME HOME
WAS COMPLETELY LEVELED TO THE GROUND BY WINDS THAT MAY HAVE EXCEEDED
150 MPH. THE TORNADO THEN MOVED INTO GEORGIA AT COUNTY ROAD 28.
ALONG THE PATH...HUNDREDS OF STRUCTURES WERE DAMAGED AND
DESTROYED...AND MANY THOUSANDS OF TREES WERE UPROOTED...SNAPPED...
AND REDUCED TO SPIKED STUMPS.

NOTE: THERE WAS NO DAMAGE OBSERVED ON DEERFOOT PARKWAY...JUST WEST
OF THE STARTING COORDINATES ABOVE. THEREFORE...THERE APPEARS TO
BE A SMALL BREAK IN THE DAMAGE BETWEEN THE TUSCALOOSA-BIRMINGHAM
TORNADO AND THIS ONE...AS THE STORM WENT ACROSS THE PINSON AND
CHALKVILLE AREAS. THIS BREAK IN THE DAMAGE MAY NEED FURTHER
INVESTIGATION...TO MAKE SURE THAT IT INDEED DID OCCUR.

TORNADO 8...WATEROAK TORNADO (HALE/BIBB COUNTIES)

PRELIMINARY DATA...
EVENT DATE: APRIL 27, 2011
EVENT TYPE: EF-1 TORNADO
ESTIMATED PEAK WINDS (MPH): AROUND 105
INJURIES/FATALITIES: AT LEAST 0 FATALITIES, 0 INJURIES.
EVENT START LOCATION AND TIME: 32.8522/-87.4783 AT 650 PM
EVENT END LOCATION AND TIME: 32.8956/-87.401 AT 659 PM
DAMAGE PATH LENGTH (IN MILES): 5.5 MILES
WIDTH: 150 YARDS
NOTE: STARTED IN FAR EASTERN HALE COUNTY AND ENDED IN SOUTHWEST BIBB
BIBB COUNTY

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE METEOROLOGISTS SURVEYED MULTIPLE TRACKS
ACROSS HALE AND BIBB COUNTIES. IT HAS BEEN DETERMINED THAT THE
DAMAGE WAS CONSISTENT WITH A TORNADO. THE TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN 2
MILES SOUTHWEST OF WATEROAK IN HALE COUNTY AND PROCEEDED NORTHEAST
INTO THE TALLADEGA NATIONAL FOREST ENDING IN SOUTHWEST BIBB COUNTY 2
MILES SOUTHWEST OF MERTZ. 1 MOBILE HOME AND 1 BUSINESS WERE DAMAGED
OR DESTROYED ALONG WITH NUMEROUS TREES. THE ENTIRE TRACK CONSISTED
OF EF-1 DAMAGE. MAX WINDS WERE ESTIMATED UP TO 105 MPH AND WAS 150
YARDS IN WIDTH.

...ADDITIONAL INFORMATION...

A SPECIAL THANKS TO COUNTY EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OFFICES FOR THEIR
ASSISTANCE FOR ALL SURVEYS. MEDIA INQUIRIES CAN BE DIRECTED TOWARD
WARNING COORDINATION METEOROLOGIST JOHN DE BLOCK AT 205-664-3010...
OR METEOROLOGIST IN CHARGE JIM STEFKOVICH AT 205-585-8635.

A MAJOR CONTRIBUTION TO THE SUCCESS OF OUR SEVERE WEATHER WARNING
PROGRAM IS THE RECEIPT OF STORM REPORTS FROM ALL OUR CUSTOMERS AND
PARTNERS ACROSS CENTRAL ALABAMA. IF YOU WITNESSED OR ARE AWARE OF
ANY STORM DAMAGE DUE TO HIGH WINDS OR TORNADOES...PLEASE CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OFFICE...OR CALL OUR STORM REPORTING
HOTLINE AT 1-800-856-0758.

$$

08/MNK
0 likes   
Carla/Alicia/Jerry(In The Eye)/Michelle/Charley/Ivan/Dennis/Katrina/Rita/Wilma/Ike/Harvey

Member: National Weather Association
Wx Infinity Forums
http://wxinfinity.com/index.php

Facebook.com/WeatherInfinity
Twitter @WeatherInfinity


Return to “USA & Caribbean Weather”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: 869MB, Google Adsense [Bot], Stratton23, txtwister78 and 49 guests