Severe Weather Awareness Week: Hail and Wind safety

Janet Schwanz

LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) – Day 4 of 5 for Severe Weather Awareness week prompts the topic of hail and wind safety.

Damaging winds from severe weather can result in expansive losses like we have seen in derechos recently. Severe thunderstorms produce hail and strong winds, but there is particular criteria that storms need to produce in order to become severe-warned (one or more of the following):

Severe Tstorm Criteria

When very strong wind gusts exceed 80 mph, you should take shelter like you would for a tornado.

Nws

NWS Hastings

As for hail, the speeds that some stones fall from the sky may impress you!

Stones that are 1-inch in diameter (the size of a quarter) are considered severe, along with everything larger in size:

Hail Sizes

Typical fall speeds of hail stones that are severe (1″+) can be around 25-40 mph.

It is possible for very large hailstones (diameters exceeding 4″/softballs) to fall at over 100 mph!

Hail and wind pose a lot of danger to anyone enjoying outdoor activities.

You can do your part to raise awareness and enhance safety – be sure to check the forecast and inform friends and family of your plans if severe weather is possible. Plan an evacuation route and know how long it would take to reach safety if and when bad weather strikes.

Categories: Channel 8 Eyewitness News Weather, Severe Weather