A Terrifying tornado runs thru small town! Storm Stories Lone Grove, OK



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27 thoughts on “A Terrifying tornado runs thru small town! Storm Stories Lone Grove, OK”

  1. Edmond's Severe Weather Shelter Registration Program is a free and voluntary program that allows residents who own a personal severe weather shelter in the Edmond city limits to register their shelter with the City of Edmond. Shelter registration is part of our effort to be proactive in response to rescue situations that can occur as a result of severe weather. — Guess she didn't do that….

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  2. My husband was born and raised in S.E. Oklahoma. He went to school in Norman Ok at University of Oklahoma. He's seen his fair share of twisters, did some chasing in 1977 for OU 's research lab. I grew up in the Texas panhandle in Amarillo. We had a few twisters but nothing big, an EF1 hit the eastern side of town while I was in high school. We a had a couple near the Girl Scout Camp when I was there one summer. Now we live in Hurricane Alley, the Texas Gulf Coast. We had a little Category 1 hurricane, Beryl, this year on July 8. We still have fencing down in our back yard, thankfully our neighbors are cool with our Shelties, their dog and ours play between the yards right now until we can get the fence fixed. We survived Tropical Storm Allison, Hurricane Ike, Hurricane Harvey, and then Beryl. But at least you see them coming for days and weeks before they hit.

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  3. Born and raised in Oklahoma and was a weather spotter/stormchaser for over 20 years. Mid to late April to the end of June is Tornado season. However, every few years we will have off season tornados. Octobers, November, and December have all had damaging tornadoes. Pre-spring warm fronts can make it into the area and kick off Isolated tornadoes and even tornado outbreaks as early as February. As I said this isn't every year. It is a rare compared to spring and early summer where you can pretty much guaranty that multiple tornadoes will form within the state every year.

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  4. Tornadoes are just a way of life in Oklahoma we deal with it and we move on that's all we can do
    I was born and raised in Oklahoma City I've been here for 58 years and I don't consider myself in Oklahoman because that's the newspaper I consider myself an okie

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  5. I lived about 10 miles from Lone Grove when the tornado hit. It was night and the tornado was rain wrapped. Thank God for the storm chaser that confirmed it on the ground and turned back cars that were driving straight towards it, he saved lives. i had many friends and coworkers, including Sherri Frank, that lived in Lone Grove and were greatly impacted by this event

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  6. EF4 leaves debris. EF5 takes it all, leaving nothing but bare foundations, and even pulls the asphalt off the road. Either way, you want to be underground when it passes over.

    After watching storm chasers and storm vids for years, I had the mixed blessing of seeing supercells on the radar last week crossing Kansas. it was Tuesday after sunset. I was on a long haul passenger train from New York to Chicago to LA.

    The engineer came on the loudspeaker and said we were going slow because the freight trains up ahead had to slow down due to bad weather, and the dispatchers wanted us moving slowly since we might get into high winds ahead,

    i was looking at my weather app and said "No kidding…" we had a supercell northeast of us and southwest of us, and we were headed southwest, and that one looked like it was trying to form a hook shape at the bottom. I don't know if that really was w tornado, but the lightning and thunder were absolutely spectacular.

    The next morning a new Yorker in the dining car kept telling me over and over how on one side of the train the sky was absolutely black, dark as night, while the other side was still daylight. i should've checked the news the next day to see if that weather system actually dropped any tornadoes… it certainly had that look.

    But if I didnt have a storm shelter, there's nowhere i'd rather be near a tornado than the Southwest Chief, aka the old Santa Fe Railroad #3. It's two stories tall, and the interior hallway of the ground floor sleeper is steel walls on one end for lavatories and showers, which of course have no windows. An Ef5 might derail it, but you're basically in a tank.

    i've seen a video of an EF3 hit a freight train engine, and the two guys up front were begging their dispatcher to let them move, but they were stopped. so they just ducked and covered. The windows blew out but the train was fine, and they escaped major injury.

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  7. I know it doesn't sound right, and I agree. They rate tornadoes not on wind speed, but property damage. So a tornado with 190 mph winds out on the plains could be rated an EF2, while the same tornado becomes an EF 5 if it hits a town. I really belie be it should be the same as hurricanes, which are rated by wind speed.

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  8. I’ve heard of most of these events cuz it’s a topic I like to follow and learn about ever since experiencing one in Virginia, one in Massachusetts and one in New Mexico. But I’ve never heard of this one :/

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  9. Recky, it's so odd, the locations because my great grandfather moved to Lone Grove from Munich in the 1800's. I have photocopies of news papers from then. It was called Davis County, Indian Territory, lone Grove and Ardmore. As I watch these the tornados hit everywhere they lived, Enid, lone Grove, Ardmore, Norman, but in those days, and into the 40's, it wasn't like it was now for some reason. My mother never saw a big tornado until she was at Oklahoma University in Oklahoma City. My grandmother said that she always felt uncomfortable before a storm so, she'd pack the house up and move. Sure enough, one would hit where she had just left. Yeah, grandma was a little freaky deaky. She always said she could smell them. Because of her, no one in the family died. My great grandfather would have called that nonsense but he was long gone by then. Odd.

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