So far, we haven't been too close to it. I saw a funnel cloud from about 15-18 miles away as it hung over an area near Baldwin, Ks. The worse hit is Greensburg, Ks which, as you can see in these pictures borrowed from our local paper, was pretty much destroyed entirely (This tornado was the first ever 5 on the new Enhanced Fujita scale):
10 have been killed in Kansas this weekend I read, 8 in Greensburg. Seems like I'm not the only one who thinks were being picked on:
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“To have this many significant tornadoes is tremendously unusual,” said Larry Ruthi, meteorologist in Dodge City.
The Federal government has declared this a disaster area but the state is having trouble getting the Guard in to help because most of their equipment is in Iraq.
The much more minor impact for us has been the Eagle Project we're working on for my younger son. We were trying to clean up a blighted area at the school that houses my office and now there is a pond in the middle of the area we had cleaned up and seeded with grass on Saturday. I've got to see if I can figure out a way to get a bunch of dirt into the pond without damaging any of the seeded area if I can help it. I was thinking of "pumping" dirt using a shop vac and a long pipe; but it's probably just a pipe dream! Oh, I didn't intend a pun!
I researched the new Enhanced Fujita scale and found this at the WIBW website:
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Enter the Enhanced Fujita Scale.
The scale still has six levels, EF 0 through EF 5. Here is a chart of the new EF Scale and the approximate wind speeds.
RATING: Approx. Wind Speed
EF0 >85 MPH
EF1 86-110 MPH
EF2 111-135 MPH
EF3 136-165 MPH
EF4 166-200 MPH
EF5 >200 MPH
A second advantage that the Enhanced Fujita Scale has over the old F Scale is that it takes into account damage to vegetation. In the past if a tornado ripped across a cow pasture it may have only been rated a F1 because it didn't cause any damage. While if this tornado had gone through a town or city it may have caused damage and been a F3. With the EF scale a tornado should have the same rating no matter where it tracks.
My dad was a meteorologist and studied at the University of Oklahoma under Fujita who was there then. That original scale has been around for 50 years so it was probably due for an upgrade.
I have seen 5 tornados/funnels in my life now; none of them very closely luckily! I think the worse I ever saw was at least 10 miles away and was only a 2 on the old Fujita scale.