WKYT HOME ·  WYMT HOME ·  STATION INFO ·  CONTACT US
News  ·   Blogs  ·   .com Daily  ·   Classifieds  ·   Programming  ·   Employment  ·   Political  ·   Money  ·   Community  ·   Contests  ·   Entertainment
Central Kentucky Weather · Eastern Kentucky Weather · Eastern Kentucky Snogo · Jim Caldwell's Weather Blog · Maps & Radars · Weather Cams · WYMT Weather Class

Countdown To
Mountain News at 4PM

until WYMT's first 4PM newscast.
Mountain News at 4pm will be Live
On-Air and Live on the Web!

Sponsored Travel Headlines
NWS Meteorologists Make Determination On Floyd County Storm Damage Save Email Print
Posted: 8:34 PM Apr 14, 2008
Last Updated: 11:46 PM Apr 14, 2008
Reporter: Dara Rees
Email Address: dara.rees@wymtnews.com

A | A | A

A team from the National Weather Service tried to determine whether it was a tornado or straight line winds as they checked the damage from Friday's storm.

It was the sound of a freight train that made Hank Williams believe he had a tornado on his hands Friday afternoon.

“We were still dealing with very strong winds, maybe up to 70 miles per hour, when you have winds like that, maybe dealing with trees, you're going to have a load roar,” Meteorologist Brian Schoettmer said.

Meteorologist say very strong storm cell that lasted nearly 4 hours, brought a lot of damage to eastern Kentucky.

These meteorologists studied the line of the debris, computer models of the storm, and first hand accounts.

“It was just kind of a morphing storm. It changed it's shape and structure a lot and it produced a lot of wind damage across eastern Kentucky,” Meteorologist Jon Pelton said.

But was it a tornado? Pelton says it looks like straight line winds caused the damage in Floyd County.

“If it were more of a tornado, you would actually see the debris kind of converge toward a point,” Pelton said.

“Even though this was a straight line wind event, it shows that you can still do a lot of damage,” Schoettmer said.

Though it doesn't appear there was a tornado in Floyd county, the National Weather Service does agree at least one touched down in Wayne county.

Crews will take a trip to Clay County on Tuesday to see if a tornado caused the damage in that area.

Both meteorologists say because the public was warned in advance, most people were expecting the strong storm, and luckily, there were no serious injuries were reported.

Here's the official report from the NWS:

...DAMAGE IN FLOYD COUNTY DETERMINED TO BE STRAIGHT LINE WINDS...

A DAMAGE ASSESSMENT TEAM CONSISTING OF NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE EMPLOYEES SURVEYED DAMAGE IN EASTERN FLOYD COUNTY THAT WAS DETERMINED TO BE STRAIGHT LINE WINDS. DAMAGE TO TREES AND A FEW MOBILE HOMES IN THE BLUE MOON AREA ALONG MORGAN FORK ROAD WAS CONSISTENT WITH THAT OF DOWNBURST WINDS. PRELIMINARY WIND SPEEDS WERE ESTIMATED TO BE UP TO 70 MPH BASED ON THE DAMAGE OBSERVED AND LIKELY INFLUENCED BY TERRAIN IN THE AREA. WINDS SPEED HIGHER UP ON THE RIDGE TOPS SHOWED DAMAGE CONSISTENT WITH WINDS UP TO 80 MPH.

ONE TRAILER...WHICH WAS NOT ANCHORED...SLID OFF OF ITS FOUNDATION AGAINST AN ELECTRIC POLE...WHILE ANOTHER UNANCHORED TRAILER WAS HEAVILY DAMAGED. WITNESSES REPORTED VERY STRONG WINDS AND HALF-DOLLAR SIZED HAIL ALONG WITH HEAVY RAINFALL.

OTHER DAMAGE OBSERVED ON THE FLOYD AND KNOTT COUNTY LINE WAS ALSO DETERMINED TO BE STRAIGHT LINE WINDS. A FEW TREES WERE SNAPPED IN AN ISOLATED AREA NEAR LACKEY...WITH PRELIMINARY WIND SPEEDS ESTIMATED TO BE UP TO 80 MPH.

More Stories
US Government: Up To 9 Atlantic Hurricanes In 2008

NWS Meteorologists Make Determination On Floyd County Storm Damage

EF-2 Tornado Confirmed in Wayne County

Total Lunar Eclipse

Punxsutawney Phil Sees Shadow, Predicts More Winter Ahead

NOAA: 2007 A Top Ten Warm Year for U.S. and Globe

EF-1 Tornado Confirmed In Laurel County

Fall Foliage In Eastern Kentucky

Post Your Comments
First Name:
Location:
Enter Comments: characters left
Email (optional):
Email will not be displayed on site. For station contact purpose only.
Read Comments
Comments are posted from viewers like you and do not always reflect the views of this station.
Posted by: Jimmy Location: Topmost on Apr 14, 2008 at 10:10 PM
It seems that is is always straight line winds that hit Floyd, Knott and their neighbors according to the NWS. I have seen damages from both tornados and straight line winds. I have never seen a straight line wind twist large trees off their trunks and hurl them for some distance, but I have seen where tornados have. Wonder if it could be that the insurance companies don't like to pay any damages to the poorer counties of Appalachia?