Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Watching an incredible storm approach in the village of Hadley. Awesome lighting, thunder and has started raining. The last thunder clap actually shook the house. Nothing like Florida for weather!
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#2
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We had our car struck by lightening in July which gives a whole different perspective on Florida storms. Not so cool when you have been that close to a lightening strike.
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#3
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By the way - does aussie mom mean you have an aussie or are an aussie. I have what is probably the world's largest Australian Shephard - almost 100 pounds of romping stomping lovely boy. |
#4
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My house just keeps lighting up.....flashes light up the front door windows, the windows throughout the house, the sliders and all the skylights...
![]() I think Hadley was more directly under the storm as it approached than my area of Caroline....didn't have that rumbling, house shaking thunder, I know of what you speak!!! The rain is very welcomed, especially since my lawn was cut today. |
#5
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I can't imagine what that strike was like...and I hope that you never experience that type of event again....EVER! |
#6
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#7
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Shouldn't take her too long to get home. Hopefully she'll call you soon to tell you about the spectacular light show.
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#8
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Has pretty much calmed down in Hadley - seeing some "heat lightning" strikes in the distance and some rumbles, but I believe it has passed. Hope everyone is safe. Wonder if the fire in Liberty Park was from a lightning stike???
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#9
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Still raining in Laurel Valley and thundering too, but not as bad as an hour ago.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
#10
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![]() Wow, 100 lbs, that is the largest Aussie I ever heard of. |
#11
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So needless to say, not as fascinated with lightening storms as I use to be. |
#12
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If you have an opportunity to go to any of the presentations on Lightning given at rec centers, go and listen. When I heard these two men were going to give a presentation on lightning to our village group, I thought ..oh this is going to be a pitch for their company. They don't have a company. They are two villagers who became interested in lightning after they witnessed seven homes burnt down from lightning in the past eight years. They consulted the University of Florida at Gainesville who has a department that studies ligntning and its effects. They bring a lot of useful knowledge about being safe and get no monetary gains for their presentations. They don't have a lightning protection company...they just know lightning.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
#13
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#14
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These two men will NOT even give you the names of people that install lightning rods at the presentation. I think they are above board...and by the way snake oil is exactly what I thought too. But our neighbor, who owned a large electrical company, and our other neighbor who was in charge of lightning rods installed on airplanes at NASA, both had them installed. As these lightning experts said, chances are your home will never get struck.......but if it is, properly installed copper rods, will safely conduct the immense current into the ground. There is a book about lightning, I think by the folks at University of Florida. Central Florida is the lightning capital of the U.S.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
#15
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How many degrees does the temperature drop after such a lightening storm in October?
Ditto, how low does the humidity drop afterwards? How many of you who were experiencing the lightening also could "feel" the barometer dropping??? After a very long extended period of hearing our weathermen up north say how "murky" our weather has been with very high humidity day after day and tons of rain (no lightening) day after day, we are wondering what happened to our old days of crisp New England "fall foliage weather"??????? In other words, cool sunny "sweater weather" which is energizing. All we've been feeling is clammy, damp, humid and achy. Relatives of ours who reside in Arizona, say the dry heat is much more soothing than the humidity is. Today actually is the first day the sun has been out in a long time. I can understand why the meteorologists are calling it MURKY. They even mentioned mushrooms growing on their front lawns......which we have also noticed on ours.......plus the other day we had a HUGE explosion of winged flying ants come up from under our deck boards (Trex decking) and start flying and walking all over the place; thinking it was springtime again. Seasons are very confused up here. We should have a hard frost by now. Too much rain, for sure. Way too much constant humidity.....and we are three to four hours from an ocean. I just looked up humidity and heat in Florida (as we feel we've been living in Florida for most of this summer)..........also checked out the heat in Arizona which is a DRY HEAT without the humidity, but still hot...... On a Florida Travel Forum it says: ""In Florida, more people die from excessive heat than from lightning. "" ""The human body temperature rises dangerously when hot days combine with high relative humidity, because perspiration cannot evaporate and cool the body. "" ""Elderly persons and small children, or persons who are on certain medications, overweight, or have an alcohol habit are particularly vulnerable to heat stress. "" ""Florida's humid climate is attributed to the fact that no point in the state is more than 60 miles from salt water, and no more than 345 feet above sea level. "" ""Humidity is the degree of wetness or dryness of the air and is measured by a percentage ratio called "relative humidity." The warmer the air becomes, the more moisture it can hold, therefore, a person can feel the humidity on a warm day with 80 percent humidity than on a cold day with the same humidity. "". |
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