Monday, April 11, 2011

Wind Damage Reports From Jasper, County!

Hey bloggers. Happy Monday! I still have a few reports that came in from areas of Jasper, county from last nights storms! Reports of more wind damage in the area. Take a look at these reports below.

REMINGTON JASPER INLARGE TREE FELL ACROSS VEHICLE. 3 LARGE TREES DOWN ACROSS ROADWAY. TOWN WITHOUT POWER.


WHEATFIELDJASPERINPOWERPOLE AND WIRES DOWN.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wind speeds for both reports were unknown however as you can tell they were gusting at a dangerous level! Here are a few recorded high wind gusts from around the viewing area last night. Of course winds speeds were much higher in the areas of these storm reports!

Wind Gusts.

Remington, 40 mph.

Fort Wayne, 35 mph.

Lafayette, 33 mph.

Kokomo, 31 mph.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

As for the weather outlook today! Well, we do have a very slight chance of a few light or should I say stray scattered showers however overall we will be mostly cloudy with a few breaks in the clouds from time to time possible. Any rainfall would be very light and few!
You can see that cold front has already passed over the area, This chart is looking at 2:pm EDT this afternoon.We are continuing to see our temperatures fall as the day goes on. We're at a current temperature of 58.7* degrees in the Lafayette, area. We will see that cooler air push into the area as we head into the overnight with an expected low of 38* degrees.

As for tomorrow (Tuesday)
I look for a B-E-A-Utiful day with highs in the low 60s and mostly sunny skies across the area. A low that night around 36* degrees with light winds between 10 and 15 mph. So get out and enjoy the weather!

That's it for now bloggers. I wish you all a great day!

God Bless!

2 comments:

  1. Justin---curious as to where you got these damage reports. Our neighbor lost a huge evergreen tree but didn't see any other damage. My wind gauge "only" registered a high gust to 36 mph. It sure felt much stronger!

    MA in REM

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey Mary Anne.

    These reports in this post came right out of the national weather service.

    The damage differs from one mile to the next with these storms.. It was pretty amazing to watch on the radars and velocity maps.

    ReplyDelete