In January 1991 there was a short, violent storm that swept through the suburb of Hornsby and wreaked havoc. Someone described that event on the radio this morning as a tornado, and given what happened there yesterday, he suggested there was a 'Tornado Alley' operating there.
When I searched the internet for the 1991 event, I found only the violent storm, no mention of the word 'tornado', except that there was in fact a tornado around then in Hornsby, Tennessee, and also one in Hornsby Bend, Texas.
Anyway, let's go with this 'Tornado Alley' idea. Our news media need to compete with the bigger and better tornadoes that just killed several people in the US, and indeed the massive typhoon last week in the Philippines, which killed thousands and made millions homeless, and which is still the real natural disaster story of the moment.
The
local media certainly made hay with our little tornado today. Hornsby
was crawling with camera crews this morning as I inspected the damage and the
clean-up operations. The reporter/camera operator from the ABC
distinguished himself by being particularly territorial towards me I
thought. Clearly jealous of the fine work being done by Sydney
Sapiential photographing the damaged cars in the station car park, he
rather rudely plonked his camera right in front of mine, and pretended I
wasn't there. (ABC, lift your game, you're dealing with the big boys
now!)
I'd just passed through Hornsby yesterday, and was on
my way down the Pacific Highway to Pymble when a bit before 3pm a there
was one of the fiercest downpours I've experienced. Visibility was
shocking, and the traffic slowed to a crawl, but there was no hint of any wind. When I first heard the news
of the collapsed roof at the Westfield shopping centre movie complex, I
assumed it was just due to a drain blockage and water build up. But
news trickled in about a swathe of damage - trees down, roofs wrecked,
cars upturned or squashed under other cars, and a demountable cabin at
the station, turned on its side with six people inside it.
It turns out there was a 50m wide path of destruction, 2km long, passing through central Hornsby via the shopping centre, the library, the Hornsby Inn, the train station, and the TAFE campus. And it's been officially declared by the Meteorology Bureau to have been a tornado, rather than the 'possible mini-tornado' we were hearing about yesterday.
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When I searched the internet for the 1991 event, I found only the violent storm, no mention of the word 'tornado', except that there was in fact a tornado around then in Hornsby, Tennessee, and also one in Hornsby Bend, Texas.
Anyway, let's go with this 'Tornado Alley' idea. Our news media need to compete with the bigger and better tornadoes that just killed several people in the US, and indeed the massive typhoon last week in the Philippines, which killed thousands and made millions homeless, and which is still the real natural disaster story of the moment.
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It turns out there was a 50m wide path of destruction, 2km long, passing through central Hornsby via the shopping centre, the library, the Hornsby Inn, the train station, and the TAFE campus. And it's been officially declared by the Meteorology Bureau to have been a tornado, rather than the 'possible mini-tornado' we were hearing about yesterday.
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