Baltimore Sun

Pasadena neighbors clean up after storm tears through neighborho­od

- By Donovan Conaway

Pasadena resident Dawn Ruploff thought she saw a tornado Sunday evening.

“It wasn’t a storm, it was a tornado. It ping ponged across the street from me,” Ruploff said. “I watched it and took cover in my house.”

The winds even blew open the front door of her house and broke a window, as well as causing a tree to fall down in her pool.

“It was a big swirling thing that ripped down all the wires. It was insane,” she said. “The house was shaking and sounded like a train.”

When the storm cleared, her front yard and others were full of tree debris, which she and her neighbors were picking up Monday afternoon.

The storm that tore through her neighborho­od in Lake Shore shortly after 5 p.m., also caused a tree to fall onto a garage where more than 20 people were seeking shelter during a child’s birthday party. Emergency responders transporte­d 21 people to area hospitals from the incident.

On Monday, the National Weather Service said the storm was a micoburst, not a tornado. Commonly described as a severe weather storm that causes damage, microburst­s occur when air sinks during thundersto­rms of a certain size.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Ray Martin compared a microburst to when hot water is boiling and when the water is lifting and falling from the heat at the bottom of the pot.

“This was a typical microburst a little stronger than your average,” he said. “It was a very unstable atmosphere (Sunday), there was a lot of humidity and heat. Which is conducive to strong thundersto­rms.”

During summer, the National Weather Service calls these “pulse thundersto­rms” because they pop up based on small atmospheri­c fluctuatio­ns.

Alittle over a week ago, there was a similar weather event in an Annapolis area neighborho­od that damaged10 to 12 homes.

Of the 21 people who were transporte­d to the hospital after the tree fell on the 30 foot by 30 foot garage, 19 were adults and two were children, said Capt. Russ Davies, spokesman with the Anne Arundel County Fire Department. One adult had critical but not believed to be life threatenin­g injuries, six patients had serious but not life threatenin­g injuries and another 14 had minor injuries.

They were transporte­d to Baltimore Washington Medical Center, Shock Trauma Center in Baltimore, Johns Hopkins and Johns Hopkins Bayview.

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