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Rain again

BRG

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 20, 2005
Messages
1,962
Location
North Western SD
On Friday we had a big rain storm. We got 3.60 inches of rain in an hour. That is a total of 5.60 inches in the last week. Should make our Sorgum Sudan grass pretty good. We didn't have any real damage from the hard rain, but a neighbor had some hail damage. Quite unusual for this much rain the end of July, but we are happy we got it. We were pretty dry up until now. Hopefully we will keep getting a little over August.
 
Hot here today.. It was 90 by the morning- and I saw 97 once this afternoon... Now the weather guessers have issued a Severe Thunder Storm watch for all eastern Montana/Western ND/ and NW SD until 3AM...

Wouldn't mind a little cloudburst as long as the wind and hail stayed away....
 
Glad you didn't get any of the hard stuff. We got a bad hail storm a week ago today. My neighbors irrigated corn got wiped out. Mine was just tasseled out and the hail ruined most of the tassels so the corn won't be able to pollinate. At least there is enough left there to chop for silage. If anybody needs cattle fed this winter I'll have a mountain of silage. Lots of 60 bu. wheat got wiped out to. It was a big area that got hit.
 
Storm went right down the Canadian line- hit Scobey- and on over into ND...Some areas reported baseball size hail... Tornado(s) hit several areas and reportedly killed 2 and injured 1 over by Reserve near the ND border..
 
It's pouring here now and my wife just called from Fargo and said it's really coming down hard there.
 
'There's nothing left'

2 dead after tornado hits farmhouse
StoryDiscussionAssociated Press | Posted: Monday, July 26, 2010 10:00 pm | (4) Comments

A rare tornado tore through a farmhouse and killed two people inside, leaving nothing but the house's foundation and a few twisted vehicles as it swept through Montana's remote and sparsely populated northeastern corner.

A teenage boy and a man in his 40s were killed on the farm when the tornado touched down Monday evening about 13 miles west of Reserve, Sheridan County Sheriff Patrick Ulrickson said. A 71-year-old woman was taken by ambulance to a hospital in Plentywood and will be transported to Billings, he said.

Authorities declined to name the victims at the farm, saying they were still notifying family members. A nurse who answered at the hospital late Monday would not release any information about the woman's injuries.

Don Simonsen of the National Weather Service in Glasgow said the tornado touched down west of Reserve between 7:15 p.m and 7:45 p.m. before crossing into North Dakota, where it weakened.

There also was at least one tornado reported about 20 miles south of Flaxville in Daniels County, Simonsen said.

Before the tornado touched down, authorities reported heavy hail and rain, along with strong wind pushing through.

Medicine Lake resident Brandon French said he and five other men were watching the tornado from a hillside when they got a call that a farm to the west had been hit. The men got into a pickup truck and were among the first to arrive.

The house, barn, lean-to and various buildings that had been there just moments before were simply gone, he said.

"There's no houses, there's no buildings, there's nothing left," French said. "The vehicles were all turned over, there was a pickup plowed into a tractor _ it just wrapped the pickup around the tractor. You couldn't peel it off."

Ulrickson said the damage was devastating _ the house was completely gone from the foundation. The tornado also destroyed mobile home and other buildings, he said.

"We had a Quonset hut that was crushed like a pop can," he said.

The storm produced several tornadoes. Matt Moorman, observation program leader with the National Weather Service out of Glasgow said teams will be out this morning to verify the type and number of tornadoes that hit the ground Monday night.

"It's the type of system where it wasn't just one tornado on the ground for miles, it was one that would come down and go up in the clouds and form again somewhere else," Moorman said.

The Canadian storm entered Montana in the northern part of Valley County at around 5:30 p.m., Moorman said.

The storm passed through the northern part of Roosevelt County and through Daniels and Sheridan counties before heading on to North Dakota at around 8:35 p.m.

Moorman said the NWS issued six tornado warnings throughout those counties.

Three people are out verifying the tornado this morning, which is no easy task in such a rural area, Moorman said.

"It's hard here without a lot of population structure to tell if it was straight line winds versus twisting," Moorman said. "We're looking for ground proof to verify that they were tornados."

Northeastern Montana is part of the Hi-Line, with vast stretches of plains and rolling wheat fields just south of the Canadian border. The area where the tornado touched down was "extremely isolated," Fulkerson said.

Sheridan County's population has been shrinking, with just over 3,200 people in 2008, according the U.S. Census Bureau. The main source of income for its residents is farming.

In the northwestern corner of North Dakota, a sheriff's dispatcher in Divide County said they were no reports of storm damage or injuries.

Tornadoes are relatively rare in Montana, although on June 20, a tornado tore apart the state's largest indoor arena.

The June tornado touched down on top of the Rimrock Auto Arena in Billings, tearing off the roof and some siding and causing extensive damage to the interior. The arena was not in use at the time.

The tornado was the first large tornado to hit Billings in more than a half-century.
 
That is so sad. Worse than hail when lives are lost.

We didn't get any rain Monday, got a bit Tuesday.
We were in Spearfish for doctor appointments and planned
to stay for the Deadwood rodeo slack but came home
to bale hay. Now it is raining and no hay got baled. :cry:
Geez, I love this business.

We saw the hailed out country between Redig and
Belle Fourche on our way down that Justin had mentioned.
Hard to imagine hail that can pound the barrow pit to where
there is no grass! :shock: It look pretty bad through there.
Sure sorry for you folks who have gotten the hail.
Makes not getting our hay baled looked pretty minor
in comparison.
 
We had a hail storm over in the Limon Colorado area and it pounded the grass so bad that it looked like someone mowed it. Just 30 miles to the west of Limon they had a strom just as bad and all the grass looks like its the middle of winter. Some say that it might have froze some the grass with all the hail on the ground. I had heard that there was 5-6 inches deep in some spots.

To the north of me they had a hail storm about three weeks ago and the hail was soft ball size with 60 mph winds :shock: Not much left in that part but it didn't cover a very big area.
 
Heres what came to greet us tonight....Tornado warning- with some spotted apparently... We ended up with only .3 of an inch of rain- a few small hailstones- and not much wind-- but it sounds like north and west caught hell- and were wiped out....

CarlaRiccisWedding110.jpg


CarlaRiccisWedding111.jpg

I think this is one of the biggest circular layered clouds I've ever saw- (only got 1/2 in the picture) with winds/clouds going every direction at times...

These are taken from my driveway as the storm moved towards Glasgow which is just off behind the trees...
 
Faster horses said:
That is some picture. Can't you send that to the weather channel
or Northern Ag Network? Some weather station should love to
get that.
I did.. sent it to accuweather and the local weather bureau via Facebook....Several folks got some good pictures of that cloud...I think it was the biggest (tallest) multi ringed cloud I've ever saw- with each ring wanting to go a different direction-- and the outlying clouds taking off going every where...

I talked with Horseless- who is 40 miles northwest of us-- and he said 1.75 inchs of rain- over a half an hour of steady hail- and in some areas they are estimating 85 mph winds....Thinks some crops pretty well wiped out ....

Weird Weird weather-- and now one of the weather gals I talked to said they are thinking a hotter than normal August..
 
Before the storms- I was up checking on one bunch of cows- and making sure everything (bulls) were in thier right places... I noted that for almost Aug 1- the grass still has a good tinge of green to it- altho we could use a soaker to refill some shrinking dams and water holes in this pasture...

CarlaRiccisWedding103.jpg


CarlaRiccisWedding104.jpg


Since no fence was torn down- no missing bulls or extra bulls, I had a chance to look at calves now that the rest I wasn't sure of have been DNA IDed..Snapped a few pics of my favorites..

The OCC Magnitude bull calf with his Cole Creek Juanada Lad 81T mother.....
CarlaRiccisWedding109.jpg



An OCC Magnitude heifer calf with her Bannon of Wye UMF 8240 mother.
CarlaRiccisWedding108.jpg


A Galpin Lead On cow with her Legacy 726T bull calf...
CarlaRiccisWedding107.jpg


And my favorite- a Legacy 726T son and his Cole Creek Goldmere 31N mother..
CarlaRiccisWedding106.jpg
 
This old Big Sky can even look sorta pretty when its at its ugliest!!
My daughter said they are just pictures of "Ma Nature throwing a hissy fit"...

Looks like the "hissy fits" went east of us tonight- over more North Dakota way again... We only got about 3 drops of rain..

Temps are supposed to shoot up to near 100 tomorrow and Saturday- and they are saying another round of severe stuff could move back in on Saturday...
 

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