Tornadoes touch down in Westman
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 12/06/2024 (673 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Phones in Westman rang out with emergency alerts on Wednesday afternoon as a powerful thunderstorm coming in from Saskatchewan brought tornadoes and loonie-sized hail.
Tornado reports were sent from Rapid City and Rivers north of Brandon and from La Rivière to the city’s southeast, Environment and Climate Change Canada meteorologist Dave Carlsen told the Sun by phone.
“This storm started in Saskatchewan just around noon today and it progressively moved eastward into southern Manitoba,” Carlsen said. “There’s been some large to very large hail reported with the storm and a few reports of tornadoes.”
He said it was still too early to determine the exact number of tornadoes that touched down but said reports had been received from storm chasers that have been trusted sources of information in the past.
“It hasn’t been anything so far that’s been huge or damaging that we know of,” he said. “They’ve been more the dusty-looking tornadoes rather than the big ones you see down in Oklahoma, but that is certainly subject to change as the day goes on.”
Tornado warnings were also issued for the municipalities of Glenboro-South Cypress, North Cypress-Langford and Oakland-Wawanesa, the towns of Neepawa and Carberry, the Municipality of Lorne, the rural municipalities of Victoria and Stanley, and Winkler and Morden.
When the Sun spoke with Carlsen around 5:15 p.m., he said the forecast at the time predicted that the storm would continue producing severe weather such as tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds until it moved into North Dakota and Minnesota around 7 or 8 p.m. on Wednesday.
While the hail in Manitoba was closer to the size of quarters and loonies, Carlsen said it was almost as big as golf balls when the storm was in the Yorkton, Sask., area.
“This is the biggest day of severe weather that we’ve had,” Carlsen said. “I think we did have a day in May that was farther east or around Winnipeg and in the Red River Valley, but in terms of Westman, southwestern Manitoba, it looks like this is the first day like this this year.”
In these kinds of storms, Carlsen recommended that people stay indoors and off the highways.
“Especially keep an eye on the sky and pay attention to your favourite weather information source so you can get the warnings from Environment Canada quickly.”
In Brandon, emergency alerts were sent to phones around 4:40 p.m. Carlsen said those alerts are sent out when the Doppler radar shows a “certain threshold of rotational velocity as well as certain reflectivity signatures.”
Once those conditions capable of sustaining a tornado are identified, warnings are issued. Warnings will also be sent out if there is a severe thunderstorm and reliable reports of tornadoes are sent in to meteorologists.
The Doppler radar also indicated there might have been wind speeds approaching 100 kilometres an hour at one point, but no on-the-ground reports of that were received.
» cslark@brandonsun.com
» X: @ColinSlark