View allAll Photos Tagged stormdamage
Sturmschaden am Brodtener Steilufer!
In regelmäßigen Abständen verliert die Küste Grund und Boden, und Bäume versinken in der Ostsee. Es sind auch schon Menschen zu Schaden gekommen, wenn man zu leichtsinnig ist und zu nah an die Abbruchkante gerät!
It was sunny when we left for our walk but by the time we got to Canadian it was overcast. Then the sun showed itself through the clouds just as we returned to the car an hour later, making these storm damaged trees gleam in the light.
122 pictures in 2022 (24) damaged
7/100 x 2022 (square format)
He used a pulley to pull the split area together and then bolted it together. I hope it works! We're getting another big Nor'easter tonight and tomorrow. It will be the third one it less than two weeks.
This old and mighty Horse Chestnut was brought down in high winds near my village, blocking our main route out…the other side of this road leading out of the village is closed due to a gas leak which only left us with a narrow single track lane to leave the village by.
A few of the Hydro One trucks working to repair the power lines in Rondeau Provincial Park.
We are on a dead end road with less than 200 seasonal cottages.
Repair tricks started showing up the morning after the big storm.
There were at least 10 big trees dow on the wires and hundreds of feet of wire on the ground.
The workers did a tremendous job of getting the power back on.
They worked through Christmas and Boxing Day to get the job done.
Thanks.
Yesterday (Tues.) we drove the scenic route, called 'The Deer Trail' up to Elliot Lake. The road is gravel and has had road work done on it for the last year or so. (Widening, grading and gravel treatment). Needless to say there were a lot of water trucks and road crews on the route so this shot was taken from our van which was moving.
Last week we had a powerful storm with high winds, torrential rain and thunder and lightning. Our power was off from 5pm to 11pm. Luckily we had no trees down on our property but our friend on the Fire Dept. told us they had been up all night clearing hundreds of trees on the above mentioned route. When we drove up there we had pretty much forgotten about this event.
We were shocked as we drove past miles/kilometers of broken and fallen trees. Many had come down over the phone wires and were still hanging there with the wire almost touching the ground. All the trees were facing/fallen in one direction and in some areas, huge areas were flattened. It looked more like a tornado path than a micro-burst but the damage was shocking with hundreds of trees affected. I don't know how the crews managed to make the road passable although in some areas we had to go around debris.
After 3 named storms in 5 days we had to check out our woods at Ufton Court to ensure the visiting children were not in danger.
Trees fell by strong winds in a storm that came through The Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge near Decatur, Alabama.
Live, as it happens. I lived in Southeast Asia for more than 10 years. We are experiencing one of the strongest storms that I have seen outside of S.E. Asia. Electrical activity, high winds, hail, heavy rain. We have lost three large limbs from our silk tree. Full damage assessment will have to await abatement of the storm.
Photo by David & Leona Illig through a wet, blurry, front-door window.
The end of the tree from the big house garden.
When and if it stops raining long enough, I'll go back to see how the cleaning up has gone. My guess is that the garden is going to look very different.
Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites. :)
Although the sky was blue today, the wind was bitterly cold and blowing at full force, I noticed that part of the path along the coast at Milford on Sea was closed and went to investigate. With all the rain and wind, the cliff has shifted and a few of the beach huts have gone with it. You can see from the spray have wild the sea was
Well this storm that just blew through ended up packing a little more of a wallop than I expected.
Not a lot of snow, but HOLY COW.....when the winds got going yesterday afternoon, it got a little wild around here!
Right before it got dark we lost power.
Larry went down to the road to see what was going on.
This is the view from our driveway looking down our street.
The hill turned into a slushy sheet of ice and the huge pine trees lining the front of the German Club driveway started snapping in half with the 60mph plus winds.
One tree fell right on the power lines coming up the street.
Another tree fell during the night,. (picture from this a.m. in comments)
It had been raining and snowing most of the day, but it didn't start sticking on the ground until around 3 o'clock, and then conditions deteriorated rapidly.
I think it surprised a lot of people. They had dismissed school and people left work early, but many of them got caught in the middle of the worsening storm trying to make their way home. Thankfully, Larry came home early before the worst of it happened and they'd blocked off our road.
I am SO grateful that we bought our generator back when Hurricane Irene blew through. It certainly has come in handy these past couple of years with all these violent storms we've had.
Our region will be cleaning up after this storm for at least the next couple days!
I expect we'll be on the generator for awhile!
On the evening of Monday August 20, 2018, and into the morning of the next day, a storm system moved across southern Wisconsin, dropping as much as 15.3 inches of rain in western Dane County.
Wisconsin & Southern Railroad's Prairie Subdivision follows Black Earth Creek between Middleton and Arena, a distance of about 19 miles, including 13 crossings. With the major flooding of the creek and low-lying areas, WSOR sustained massive damage to the line, including dozens of washouts and several landslides.
D7A_9482ef
11/1/2019 Mike Orazzi | Staff
Utility crews work to restore power on Shrub Road after high winds caused a large to fall across the roadway early Friday morning.
The hole in the trail was unsafe for cyclists. Imagine me with me with my walker! See my how story continues with the description in next picture.
On the evening of Monday August 20, 2018, and into the morning of the next day, a storm system moved across southern Wisconsin, dropping as much as 15.3 inches of rain in western Dane County.
Wisconsin & Southern Railroad's Prairie Subdivision follows Black Earth Creek between Middleton and Arena, a distance of about 19 miles, including 13 crossings. With the major flooding of the creek and low-lying areas, WSOR sustained massive damage to the line, including dozens of washouts and several landslides.
D7A_9463ef
11/1/2019 Mike Orazzi | Staff
Utility crews work to restore power on Shrub Road after high winds caused a large to fall across the roadway early Friday morning.
yesterday's storm tore my cactus plant up = A lot will end up in the trash and then I can let the unsnapped one keep growing.
Documentation. Climate change is increasing wind strength and duration, and we are seeing more and more weather extremes.
Changes started with a major drought and extensive wildfires several years ago. More recently it's been atmospheric rivers and funnel clouds that don't touch the ground, so can't realistically be classified as tornadoes. Plus high waves, surf, and king tides. And hail, thunderstorms, and sustained high winds, up to 68 MPH by Ocean Beach.
This suffering pine tree has lost several major branches, and there seems to be more damage with each successive storm. Part of the roots even pulled up from the ground.
The city used to automatically clean up after storms and visitors the mayor encouraged to come here on weekends during the height of Covid. But the city workers soon stopped picking up the trash left behind, so the people who live in this area have to collect and dispose of it - or just ignore it. This area of the city is fast becoming a dumping ground for everything from food to appliances. Sad.
Note on photo reads, "Parallel drainage structure is overtaxed by sheet overflow from Rattlesnake Wash."
There are no known copyright restrictions on this image. All future uses of this photo should include the courtesy line, "Photo courtesy Orange County Archives."
Comments are welcome after reading our Comment Policy.
For everything there is a season.
© All my images are copyright. Please respect copyright.
Thank you.
Stagecoach Road ~MP 152
On the evening of Monday August 20, 2018, and into the morning of the next day, a storm system moved across southern Wisconsin, dropping as much as 15.3 inches of rain in western Dane County.
Wisconsin & Southern Railroad's Prairie Subdivision follows Black Earth Creek between Middleton and Arena, a distance of about 19 miles, including 13 crossings. With the major flooding of the creek and low-lying areas, WSOR sustained massive damage to the line, including dozens of washouts and several landslides.
D7A_9188ef