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House on Top of a Tornado
Tornado Season
House on Top of a Tornado


For those of you who aren't familiar with tornadoes and are hearing news coverage of this, here is a short glossary to help you understand.

Tornado with Stars

Fujita Scale:
Scale used to measure wind speeds of a tornado and the severity.

F-1 Tornado
F1:
Laughable little string of wind unless it comes through your house, then enough to make your insurance company drop you like a brick. People enjoy standing on their porches to watch this kind.

F-2 Tornado

F2:
Strong enough to blow your car into your house, unless of course you drive an Expedition and live in a mobile home, then strong enough to blow your house into your car.

F-3 Tornado

F3:
Will pick your house and your Expedition up and move you to the other side of town.

F-4 Tornado

F4:
Usually ranging from 1/2 to a full mile wide, this tornado can turn an Expedition into a Pinto, then gift wrap it in a semi truck.

F-5 Tornado

F5:
The Mother of all Tornadoes, you might as well stand on your front porch and watch it, because it's probably going to be quite a last sight.

Televison Set

Meteorologist:
A rather soft-spoken, mild-mannered type person until severe weather strikes, and they start yelling at you through the TV.
GET TO YOUR BATHROOM OR YOU'RE GOING TO DIE!!!

Video Camera

Storm Chaser:
Meteorologist-Rejects who are pretty much insane but get us really cool pictures of tornadoes. We release them from the mental institution every time it starts thundering, just to see what they'll do.

Dog and Cat

Tranquilizer:
What you have to give any dog or cat who lived through the May 3rd, 1999 tornado every time it storms or they tear your whole house up freaking out of their minds.

Moore, OK Tornado

Moore, Oklahoma:
A favorite gathering place for tornadoes. They like to meet here and do a little partying before stretching out across the rest of the Midwest.

Bathtub

Bathtub:
Best place to seek shelter in the middle of a tornado, mostly because after you're covered with debris, you can quickly wash off and come out looking great.

Weather Radio

Severe Weather Radio:
A handy device that sends out messages from the National Weather Service during a storm, though quite disconcerting because the high pitched, shrill noise just as an alarm sounds suspiciously just like a tornado. Plus the guy reading the report just sounds creepy.

Tornado Sirens

Tornado Siren:
A system the city spent millions to install, which is really useful, unless there's a storm or a tornado, because then of course you can't hear them.

Snake

Storm Cellar:
A great place to go during a tornado, as it is almost 100% safe, though weigh your options carefully, as most are not cared for and are homes to rats and snakes.

Vacation Travers

May-June:
Tourist season in Oklahoma, when people who are tired of bungee jumping and diving out of airplanes decide it might be fun to chase a tornado. These people usually end up on Fear Factor.

Barometric Pressure Meter

Barometric Pressure:
Nobody really knows what this is, but when it drops a lot of pregnant women go into labor, which makes for exciting moments as their husbands are trying to drive them to the hospital and dodge tornadoes at the same time.

2 Cars Involved in Road Rage

Cars:
The worst place to be during a tornado (next to a mobile home). Yes, you can out run a tornado in your car...unless everybody on the road decides to do the same thing, and then you're in grid lock.

Trying to Hide From Tornado

A Ditch:
Supposedly where you're supposed to go if you find yourself without shelter or in your car during a tornado. Theoretically the tornado is supposed to pass right over you, but since it can lift a 20 ton truck and up root a three hundred year old tree, I'd bet my life on out-running it in a car.

Radar

Mobile Home:
Most people are convinced mobile homes send off some strange signal that triggers tornadoes, because if there's one mobile home park in a hundred mile radius, the tornado will find it.

Earthquake Measurements

Earthquake:
What any Californian would rather go through on any scale of severity than face a tornado.

Tornado

Tornado:
What any Oklahoman would rather go through on any scale of severity than face an earthquake.

Twister

Twister:
Slang for 'tornado' and also the title to a movie starring Helen Hunt, which incidentally everyone thought was corny and unrealistic until May 3rd, 1999.

Power Flash

Power Flash:
One of the most reliable ways to track a tornado at night, it's the term used when the tornado hits a power line and a bright light flashes. It's also the emotion experienced by meteorologists when they get to make the call to interrupt prime-time must-see TV and a million dollars worth of advertising to track a storm for viewers.


Here are some phrases you might want to learn and be familiar with:
  1. "We'll have your electricity restored in 24 hours," which means it'll be a week.
  2. "We're going to be out for a week, so buy a lot of supplies and an expensive generator," means it's going to be on in twelve hours, probably as soon as you return from Wal-Mart.
  3. "It's a little muggy today." Get outta town. It's getting ready to storm.
  4. "There's just a slight chance of severe weather today, so go ahead and make your outdoor plans." Ha. Ha ha ha ha.
And the number one BIG TIP of the day:
  1. When your electricity goes out, and you go to bed at night, be sure to turn off everything that was on before it went out, or when it is unexpectedly restored in the middle of the night, every light, every computer, your dishwasher, your blow dryer, your washing machine, your microwave and your fans will all come on all at once.
  2. 1) You'll just about have a heart attack when they all come on at the same time, waking you from a dead sleep.
  3. 2) Your breakers will blow, leaving you in the dark once again.


  4. Happy Tornado Weather!!!


    Author Unknown

    Possibly from Oklahoma with all the Oklahoma references--especially the huge 1999 tornado that did so much damage in and near Oklahoma City.
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