***Official 2022 Weather Thread***

jsb

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If you draw a line from my cousin's house, through my aunt's house, to my uncle's house -- it is PARALLEL to the tornado path. Luckily for all of them, the tornado path was about about 1.5 miles north of that line.

My folks are maybe another mile or 2 south of that.

In 2000 I was watching out my parents’ picture window during a tornado warning. It was weirdly calm. 1.5 miles down the road houses were being destroyed.

In that same tornado I knew someone who had their house destroyed. 8 years later the house was basically destroyed again in another tornado.
 
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BoxsterCy

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Flashback to campus, April 10, 1973. Alarm in 2311 Birch Hall went off. Took a look outside and rolled over and went back to sleep. Roommate trudged through the snow to class and back with "No classes". Me, "Gabes, you thought professors were going to get to campus through over a foot of snow?" Turned off I was light on that estimate, think it was more like 18" in Ames.

Turned into a huge in dorm party with people getting kegs from Torks on sleds or, in our case, pushing a car through the snow over and back after Lincoln Way was partly plowed.

 

aeroclone

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I think we’ll see the outlook include a moderate risk zone added in southern iowa down to central Missouri prior to the event with tornado probabilities increasing to the 15% level in that moderate zone.

Can someone explain how to interpret a tornado chance in this context? Does 10% mean a 10% likelihood that at least one tornado will hit somewhere in that shaded area? Or does it mean that you could expect that 10% of that area will be under a tornado warning at some point during the storm? Or 10% of that area will actually experience a tornado? I can see several ways one could interpret that number and the expected impact would vary greatly between them.
 

mred

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Can someone explain how to interpret a tornado chance in this context? Does 10% mean a 10% likelihood that at least one tornado will hit somewhere in that shaded area? Or does it mean that you could expect that 10% of that area will be under a tornado warning at some point during the storm? Or 10% of that area will actually experience a tornado? I can see several ways one could interpret that number and the expected impact would vary greatly between them.

From this site:


"The probabilistic forecast directly expresses the best estimate of a severe weather event occurring within 25 miles of a point."
 
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ScottyP

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Flashback to campus, April 10, 1973. Alarm in 2311 Birch Hall went off. Took a look outside and rolled over and went back to sleep. Roommate trudged through the snow to class and back with "No classes". Me, "Gabes, you thought professors were going to get to campus through over a foot of snow?" Turned off I was light on that estimate, think it was more like 18" in Ames.

Turned into a huge in dorm party with people getting kegs from Torks on sleds or, in our case, pushing a car through the snow over and back after Lincoln Way was partly plowed.


Thanks for posting Boxster. I'd be curious to hear from some of the "veteran/seasoned" posters on this site if they remember this storm and if they have any stories.
 

BCClone

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Not exactly sure.
Thanks for posting Boxster. I'd be curious to hear from some of the "veteran/seasoned" posters on this site if they remember this storm and if they have any stories.
I remember excited since I had just turned 1 1/2 a few days before. I probably put on my snowsuit to feed the bottle calves. Got started early back then at work.
 
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