Dayton Daily News

Tornadoes

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turned up the two confirmed tornadoes on Friday before the most recent bout Sunday, which gave way to temperatur­es Monday in the 30s and wind chills in the 20s.

While no one has been hurt in the recent Clark County tornadoes, the same conditions stirred up a twister Sunday in Richland County that injured six people and damaged a half-dozen homes and businesses in Shelby.

No explanatio­n accounts for why Clark County has attracted a large share of twisters, said McCall Vrydaghs, WHIO Storm Center 7 chief meteorolog­ist.

“Scientific­ally, there’s no reason why they’ve gotten so many tornadoes,” she said. “It just seems to have hap- pened that way.”

She said some mistakenly attribute the occurrence­s to geography, “but there’s really no rhyme or reason.”

Clark County’s four con- firmed tornadoes this year is half of the statewide total of eight. Two small tornadoes included in the statewide total churned up the same day in Stark County, similar to the pair reported Friday in Clark County.

Significan­t damage was reported Sunday at the Rose Garden Mobile Home Park on Upper Valley Pike in German Twp. One mobile home was destroyed and others damaged. The wind toppled two semi-trailers nearby at Pratt Industries on Baker Road.

The National Weather Ser- vice confirmed Monday that the tornado touched down about 3:12 p.m. and travelled 2.7 miles. The report noted the roof of an unoc- cupied mobile home “was found lofted over a stand of trees into a field about 150 feet to the north” and insulation was “scattered in the trees high off the ground.”

One of Friday’s twisters was spotted near South Charleston and destroyed a barn, scattering debris over 1,200 feet, according to the National Weather Service. The other near South Vienna, confirmed by video and eyewitness accounts, kept to open fields and caused no direct damage, though the storm system caused other damage to structures in the area.

The first local tornado of 2019 spun up Feb. 7 near Pitchin in Clark County. Offi- cials determined it to be an EF-0 maxing out at 85 mph. On the ground for about six minutes, it travelled roughly 7.5 miles before dissipatin­g northwest of South Charleston.

Last April, National Weather Service investigat­ors confirmed an EF-1 tornado touched down three miles west and northwest of Selma and southwest of South Charleston, in Clark County. In 2017, a tornado caused extensive damage in Park Layne, a community in the southwest corner of Clark County. A Sunoco gas station, a Family Dollar and the Mel-0-Dee restaurant all had to shut down for a time during extensive repairs.

The weather will improve this week.

Vrydaghs said the region may see showers and thundersto­rms Thursday into Thursday night but expects little threat of tornadoes.

“At this point it looks like the severe weather threat will stay off to our west in Illinois and Missouri,” she said. “Thankfully, at this point, it doesn’t look like we have a severe threat for this week.”

 ?? JAROD THRUSH / STAFF ?? A tornado Sunday destroyed an unoccupied mobile home and scattered debris behind a treeline at the Rose Garden Mobile Home Park in Clark County.
JAROD THRUSH / STAFF A tornado Sunday destroyed an unoccupied mobile home and scattered debris behind a treeline at the Rose Garden Mobile Home Park in Clark County.
 ?? MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF ?? What’s left of a mobile home at the Rose Garden Mobile Home Park. Half of Ohio’s confirmed tornadoes this year have touched down in Clark County.
MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF What’s left of a mobile home at the Rose Garden Mobile Home Park. Half of Ohio’s confirmed tornadoes this year have touched down in Clark County.

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