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First Hand Account Of Cullman County Tornado

| May 12, 2008 @ 1:42 pm | 5 Replies

Thanks to one of our faithful blog readers for this account of the the Cullman County storm that blew through shortly after midnight Saturday night:

James/JB,
I & my family will always be thankful for all that you & your team does
to keep our communities as safe as possible. In my heart James, I felt
like you were trying to tell me from your live TV coverage, “Melba” I’m
talking to you now…..be prepared & go to a safe place…. I know you
weren’t singling me out per say, but all the same, I want to somehow
convey how much your warnings help……..

I knew from everything I was reading last week & seeing outside ALL day
Saturday afternoon, that the atmosphere was being primed for exactly
what it was like April 8, 1998 in which a tornado came across our
mountain here in Arkadelphia & took off my screened in back porch!

The tornado that came through yesterday morning around 12:30 AM, did do
damage to my home (roof) & property mainly…, but it is structurally
sound & we were very blessed…considering it was actually on the ground
just above my house between 1/4 & 1/2 mile away. It destroyed many
trees & completely twisted off a new radio tower recently installed for
the fire departments & emergency officials to be able to communicate
with each other throughout the county on the same radio frequency….
It then moved moving down the mountain crossing CR 8 & devastated the
Colony community about 5 miles up the road.

I only saw what the tornado damage did on CR 34 (which is where I live),
CR 35, CR 8, & Hwy. 91. I was told by some friends that went on the
back county roads(CR) in Colony, that it was even worse there. They
said there were homes actually leveled.

This time 10 years later, my oldest son, daughter in-law & 2 grandkids
(4 & 1) were at my house for the weekend for (mother’s day) along with
my youngest son (16) & husband. We all got into our smallest bathroom.
I put my daughter in-law & 2 babies in the tub. There were 7 of us
crammed into a bathroom meant for 2 people at the most. I know God was
hearing prayers. I handled the crisis fine then, but today, I have
tears of joy & relief, but for some reason I also have tears of sadness
to. That part I can’t explain….

The lightening was so intense, it struck a large pecan tree in my aunt’s
yard about 3 hundred yards up the road, traveled down the tree through
the roots and ruptured our 6 inch water main that runs under our road.
So that left everyone on our road without water until late yesterday
afternoon. The power was out because the tornado that touched down a
little further up which is where it took out power poles & lines. They
reset them late yesterday & we got power back then. I can’t even begin
to describe how intense that storm was. We were filling our pool with
water Saturday afternoon getting it ready for the summer. We turned the
water off before going in for the night with the water level a little
over 4 inches from the bottom of the skimmer. We have a 24 foot round
above ground pool. Yesterday morning, when we went outside to find out
exactly what all the damage was, I was shocked to see water spilling out
of the skimmer. That means we must have gotten at least 4 inches of
rain on the mountain in Arkadelphia. I expected maybe 1-2 inches at the
most & then having finish filling it up.

I did thank God on my way to work this morning as I was driving up Hwy.
91 through Colony (as I work in Hanceville.) Just seeing all the damage
that the tornado caused, it just causes you to relive in your head over
& over what you were feeling as it was coming toward my home…. but
with God’s grace, he blessed my home by not destroying it… I’m
thankful for having a family to love, to be loved by, & keeping us safe.
When you hear a tornado coming & know that there is absolutely nothing
you can do about it, that is when you know, that you know, that you
know……..there is a God.

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About the Author ()

James Spann is one of the most recognized and trusted television meteorologists in the industry. He holds the AMS CCM designation and television seals from the AMS and NWA. He is a past winner of the Broadcast Meteorologist of the Year from both professional organizations.

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