- Thread starter
- #51
flowerweaver
Deeply Rooted
There was no tornado warning. One minute we were outside on a fine summer day building the foundation for a new greenhouse, the next it was black as night. When Tucker started galloping around his corral, we checked the radar and all it said was 4" hail. We had about ten minutes to get all the animals in their sheds, but Tucker doesn't have a barn yet. That size hail can kill. Where we live the ground is rock so cellars and basements are uncommon. Fortunately the house is solid masonry and survived a direct hit. It was gone in about ten minutes. Our three vehicles and six roofs were all badly damaged and are in various states of repair.
The worst loss, though, were the ancient trees around our house, two of which landed on our roof, and the Texas champion Italian Stone Pine that shaded our backyard landed on the greenhouse where I had put three of the dogs. They were OK, but the tree was blocking the door. When the electricity came back on the pole behind the greenhouse caught on fire and I fractured my thumb frantically breaking a hole through the wall to get them out of there, and spend the rest of the summer in a cast. As for my landscaping, what the tornado didn't destroy, the electric and tree companies did with their heavy equipment. Fortunately we and all our animals survived.
The worst loss, though, were the ancient trees around our house, two of which landed on our roof, and the Texas champion Italian Stone Pine that shaded our backyard landed on the greenhouse where I had put three of the dogs. They were OK, but the tree was blocking the door. When the electricity came back on the pole behind the greenhouse caught on fire and I fractured my thumb frantically breaking a hole through the wall to get them out of there, and spend the rest of the summer in a cast. As for my landscaping, what the tornado didn't destroy, the electric and tree companies did with their heavy equipment. Fortunately we and all our animals survived.