Over the weekend Tony and I attended a fellowship business meeting, which took place two and a half hours from us in Camdenton, Missouri. We left shortly after 11:00 and headed southwest on Interstate 44. The weather was beautiful, although there was a forecast of potential strong storms.
Halfway there (just before Rolla if you know the area) we started hearing storm warning messages on the radio. The counties and cities they mentioned were far away. However, the counties and cities started to get closer and eventually (around St. Robert) we were in the path of the storm. It was raining so hard Tony pulled over to the side of the road. The wind was strong, and a couple of small pieces of hail hit the hood of the car, but nothing like what the warning messages had indicated might happen. Five minutes later everything had passed and we continued on our way.I don't know if it was the same storm or a different one that eventually made it to the St. Louis area, but parts of the metropolitan area weren't as lucky as Tony and I were. A tornado formed (believed by the National Weather Service to be of EF-3 strength with winds up to 152 mph), which had a path up to a mile wide. This was the first tornado to cause fatalities in the area since 1959. Five people died.
Tornadoes are strange, unpredictable storms. The affected areas were 15-20 minutes from our condo, and less than five minutes from Son Donald's house. Neither of us had any issuesFriday night I received a text from the woman taking care of Pimento the Foster Cat while we were gone. It said:
"I should have known that something would happen when you guys left. Check the news about the tornado damage in St Louis city. No damage here."
This is the third time something has happened when we were gone. We were in Hawaii in February when the area had snow and arctic temperatures. During our California trip, a broken water main resulted in a city-wide boil water order that lasted for several days. This time was severe weather.
It makes me wonder if our streak has exhausted itself, or if I need to prepare myself for something else.Five years ago: Ouch!
Scary, so glad you are ok and escaped the worst.
ReplyDeleteThankful for your safety...Keeping those in the path of the tornados in our prayers...
ReplyDeleteThank you. They need all the prayers they can get.
DeleteSorry to read that five died.
ReplyDeleteAfter seeing photos I'm surprised it wasn't more.
DeleteGlad you're safe!
ReplyDeleteI live aat lake in the ozarks now and camdenton is not too far away from me although I don't travel that way much any more we have missed the storms so far but there is a big one with hail and tornadoes coming in tonight the lake included-scary stuff
ReplyDeletestlouis has gotten hit a couple times already this week-stay safe hugs
I hope the forecasters are wrong about tonight.
DeleteSad to hear about those who died.
ReplyDeleteGood to hear you were not in harm's way but sad to see so many people affected, displaced, injured..
ReplyDeleteMany of them are in a low-income area, so they're doubly affected.
DeleteI remember hearing about that. Tornadoes are very scary to me and so destructive.
ReplyDeleteOh I think I'd worry if I lived in your area, should I hear that you are about to take another leave of absence.
ReplyDeleteI grew up in this area, so to me tornadoes are something to keep an eye on but not freak out over.
DeleteThe answer is clear - do not leave home!
ReplyDelete:-)
DeleteHave your preps ready in case of natural disasters, including food, water, water purification aids, medicine, first aid. The Feds have now gutted Fema and relief funds, there is nothing left for average folks' emergencies...you're on your own because all the money is going to weapons of war. The best resource online is the Canadian Prepper's YouTube channel.
ReplyDeleteSadly, you make a lot of valid points.
DeleteThose storms are awful. Glad you are safe.
ReplyDeleteWe almost had more last night. One storm that was trying to drop a tornado went just to the south of us. It rained like crazy.
ReplyDeleteWe got driving rain but not much else.
DeleteGlad you are alright. One of the reasons I stay in Las Vegas is because we don't get tornadoes, hurricanes or a lot of snow. We hardly ever get big earthquakes here and the Winters are mild.
ReplyDeleteYou should get a job for the chamber of commerce :-)
DeleteThat's crazy! I'm glad everyone was alright and you didn't have any damage to deal with when you came home.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteSo sorry about the fatalities. Weather can be so unpredictable.
ReplyDelete