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Sumter Landing Storm
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Most of the Vendor tents lost also.
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That was one wicked storm and we are by Lopez! Worst I've seen in awhile. Hope no one was hurt!
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We were there having a great time listening to Scooter. It was very scary!
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what? no scooter tonite?
darn. |
We were there when the storm hit. Hope Scooter and his equipment are alright.
The storm came with almost no warning. |
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The 5:00pm news reported a tornado warning had been issued for Marion County. It makes you wonder why this event hadn't been canceled.
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Exactly!!
QUOTE=Bogie Shooter;752042]Didn't anyone see that big black cloud to the west?[/QUOTE] |
We are all adults here, I think, should know enough to not go out to the square when the weather is threatening. Don't ya think?:wine:
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I was driving to work when the storm hit.A tree came down right beside me in the right lane right before the Sumter bridge.Scary stuff as I had to swerve to avoid it
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Again, I'll say: We need fire sirens blaring when there is a tornado warning, especially during the night when people aren't seeing or hearing radio, t.v. or internet. This is not a new idea. Every city, suburb and small town where we've lived since 1960 did this, but not TV.
Also, I am registered on the sheriff's Code Red list in Marion, Sumter and Lake Counties, to get robo-calls advising of tornado conditions or citings, and several times like today, did not get a call. Did Marion County actually have a tornado warning? If so, did anyone get a Code Red call? https://cne.coderedweb.com/Default.a...VIGOctEw%3D%3D |
My weather radio went off because I have Marion county also included in my programming for alerts....I live in Sumter county. It went off, I put on TV and immediately knew what was going on and the Villages, even the portion in Marion county, was not in an area of concern for this particular storm. They warning was over fairly quickly.
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We were at Red Sauce. a Palm Tree came down an awning came flying by everyone was ushered inside, Several vendors lost tents, the FD showed up to assist and check out the situation. Thank goodness nobody was injured
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I was near one of the vendor booths. Although I was keeping tabs on the rain with the Doppler app on my phone, there was no indication of the wind coming. Shortly after the rain started, the winds came through with enough force to pretty much destroy most of the vendors canopies. The wind was so strong it blew tables across the square, twisted the canopies into piles of twisted metal and even caused one vendors sign to be embedded into a palm tree trunk about 50' away from his booth. I know it is going to take time for many of the vendors time to get back to business as usual. The emergency crews showed up in very short time to treat any injuries but thankfully, nobody was hurt. All that was left was a long wet cleanup.
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Drove through right after the storm. We were at Red Lobster, saw the wind and rain and no sign of bad storm there. When we hit Buena Vista near Arnold Palmer--trees down. BIG TREES. Headed to Lake Sumter saw the vendors gathering up what was left of the tents. Lots of people at Red Sauce and City Fire. Fire Dept in the area. Glad no one was hurt.
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I was out doing choirs and when I made my last stop, at Publix in Mulberry Grove, it wasn't raining. The storm hit just as I was finishing at the checkout line. I tried to wait it out for a while, then got the bright idea to go on home. For those of us who decided to leave, a Publix employee loaned us one of those big Publix umbrellas, let us drive up to the curb and he came out with an umbrella to load our cars. Everyone who went before me made out fine.
As I was walking to my car, a gust of wind came and blew my umbrella inside out with the part that was supposed to cover me flying up straight above the shaft. I got thoroughly drenched. My flip flops slid off my feet, so I carried them the rest of the way to the car, walking barefoot on the soaked concrete. The rain was beating down on me so hard! I was thoroughly drenched from head to toe. The thunder roared and the lighting flashed and I suppose I could have been scared. Instead all I could do was let out a hardly laugh because, well... it was so much fun! |
It looks to me like it was just another beautiful day in The Villages.
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Can anybody in Virginia Trace/Sunset Pointe area tell me what it was like there?
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Bump
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Our house was hit by lightening and our weather radio never went off. Luckily we just need to replace a circuit breaker. Strange thing is that our home in NY was also hit by lightening this summer.
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We are on Glenview, there were three foursomes on the golf course in our area, the sky was absolutely black and they continued playing (but we see that all the time dumb dumb dumb), then the heavens opened and you could not see across the golf course, how they got back to the club house I'll never know. With the rain we had high winds, our back yard is covered in tree branches off the course, clean up day today. After the rain stopped we had thunder and lightening and then it started to rain again. Wild night, and our weather radio did go off to warn us about flooding, nothing else. A typical freak tropical storm.
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Called my mom who is in the Sunset Pointe Area- no damage there to see other than some limbs.
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Kind of understated on Villages Daily Sun front page.
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I am one that does not need a second or third party to tell me when danger is apparent/threatening or imminent.
I do not believe it is the responsibility of some automated piece of equipment to alert me to potential threats....sirens for example work as long as one is in it's cone of sound...and it is working as intended. Weather radio for night time I think is adequate.... I know I certainly do not need to be tuned in to a television station with a weather person in their moment of fame and theatrics about all the impending red graphics and watch boxes with street by street arrival times....ridiculous at best. The Villages has more people who totally ignore threatening weather while on the golf courses than any place I have ever lived. Maybe they think they are macho when they are in fact acting very, very stupid. btk |
Amazing how localized Florida weather can be. Im in Silver Lake, about 3 miles from LSL and all we got was a lot of rain. There may have been some wind, but nothing extraodinary.
I unplugged my weather radio. It was going off for every little thing. It was ridiculous being wakened up at 3:00am to read that they temperature had dipped below 32. It would also go off because there were thunderstorms in the "area" of Lake, Marion and Sumter counties, that were capable of producing tornadoes. Because we live right on the border of those three counties, it was suggested that we have it tuned for all three. The problem is that because we live in the borders of those three counties the outer edges of those three counties are many miles from here. My radio would go off when it was bright and sunny here and we never even got rain. As far as thunderstorms capable of producing tornadoes, I think that that includes pretty much every thunderstorm. So, after this thing going of unnecessarily about twenty or so times including several times in the middle of the night, I just unplugged it. Would I want to know if a tornado was heading into my area? Yes, of course. But, am I going to leave my home and head to a shelter at 3:00 am every time there is a thunderstorm "capable of producing tornadoes" 25 miles from here, or when the temperature dips below freezing? How many of you would? It's a shame that these radios can't be programmed to be more local and to only go off when there is a real threat. Until then, they are just useless wastes of money promoted by alarmists. |
Just for the record, there are no nearby shelters.
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We live in Mira Mesa and boy did did we get the rain and the winds. Was so bad that we couldn't see across the street. Large branches from our tree were falling all over the place. The winds seem to come in waves. Our power blinked twice but no outages. The t v news did say it was coming to the villages. At first the path was north of us but then the wind shifted and was told it was heading to the villages but no tornado warning for us I have my alert set for Sumter county instead of lake since we live so close to Sumter and lake is so large that most of the time it doesn't effect us.
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Good post as usual. |
I was at LSL last night and this storm came fast. I had run six miles earlier that afternoon and other than just gray skies got nothing. So my friend and I made a decision after checking the radar first to go see Scooter thinking it would be ok for the 90 minutes we planned on being there. It looked like there was a system to the north that could maybe at worse clip us but otherwise looked clear.
We had no indication of any warnings and headed for the square. About an hour or so later we got nailed. Four of us huddled under the gazebo overhang and got battered by the wind and rain. Drenched to the core. We had front row to the square destruction right in front of our eyes. We thought we were either witnessing a tornado or a micro burst. We were basically trapped in that position realizing we were on the wrong side of the stage taking the brunt of the storm so after a good 10 minutes or so of this quickly ran to the other side of the gazebo in the pouring rain with thunder and lightening all around us. Being on the stage would have been useless. Even Scooter hightailed it off the stage. No protection up there and everything on the stage was drenched with big puddles on the floor. I definitely think had this been a tornado we'd be talking loss of lives here. There needs to be some warning system for us up at the squares. Unless you have the net on your phone and are tied to it you'd have no idea. We were dancing the whole time and other than seeing dark clouds heading our way (thinking rain) we had no idea and would have left had we known what was coming. |
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"Four of us huddled under the gazebo overhang and got battered by the wind and rain."
There are restaurants and stores just across the street you could have ran to or even The Villages Sales Office right across the street. Standing outside in the wind and rain for what you believe could have been a tornado coming leaves one to wonder. As for warning people at the square, doesn't sudden high wind and rain lend itself to a a warning to get the heck off the square and into a building? The Villages Sales Office was still open at 6 pm when the storm hit and is a huge and a safe building. |
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When it happened at first it was fine. It started like usual. Rain only. We did what we've done in the past ran to the dry safe spot that is near us. When a passing storm comes we have a niche right there that is usually dry and safe. It quickly turned bad and we had no choice but to stay put. I've stood in that same spot tons of times and have felt quite safe. The rain stops and we resume dancing. This was different. As soon as there was a lull which took about 15-20 minutes we ran to the sales office area. The warning would have made a bid difference had we known. By the time the storm hit it was too late. This came quickly with no warning. |
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I am off campus, but it appears you weathered the storm no worse for wear. Good. |
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Was anyone hurt?
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Not that I saw. The emergency crews were there shortly after it happened, checking to make sure everybody was all OK and to help where they could in cleaning up. I think there were about 3 emergency vehicles there.
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