What The Hail???
Doug_Harris
cats22 at STNY.RR.COM
Tue Sep 9 04:18:46 UTC 2008
A sad, and amazing, story.
--
Almost as amazing is the 'fact' that I sent my note on this issue
three days (ahead) from now: on 9/12, according to my computer's
time stamp. It's since been adjusted back to Eastern Daylight Time.
dh
sagehen wrote, on Monday, September 08, 2008 11:38 PM
Subject: Re: What The Hail???
on 9/12/08 10:23 AM, Doug Harris at cats22 at FRONTIERNET.NET wrote:
> Might those 'baseball' stories have been originated by fishermen?
> dh
> Poster: Marc Velasco <marcjvelasco at GMAIL.COM>
> Subject: Re: What The Hail???
>
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> ---
>
>
> Common [Midwest] terms [for hail]: pea-, dime-, golfball-, and
> baseball-sized hail; although, it needs be said that baseball-sized hail
was
> rarely reported live, but common
> in "big storm" stories. Lawyers might further say that this list
includes,
> but is not limited to, the above mentioned terms.
~~~~~~~~~~
I can testify to having seen & experienced baseball-sized hail. There was a
great swath of storms that swept across the US from Texas to Michigan &
perhaps even into PA on April 4, 1974, spawning many many tornadoes &
doing enormous damage. We lived about a mile off its path & so only
suffered some of the milder effects. I, all unawares, was driving an old
Chevy pick-up more or less parallel to the storm's path when overtaken by a
hurricane-like rainstorm & hailstones that I was sure would break the
windshield. They did dent the hood. They came down by bucketfuls for several
minutes. The ground was covered with them.Our aluminum house roof was
pocked in many places. We thought to save a few examples of these truly
baseball-sized beauties & stuck them in our freezer. We forgot that they
needed to be sealed & of course they sublimated in the dry air of the
freezer & eventually disappeared altogether. Great souvenirs! The lasting
souvenirs were scraps of building materials & household goods that rained
down for hours after the storm had passed, sad remains of houses utterly
destroyed in nearby Xenia OH, the town worst hit in the whole country.
AM
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