Tornadoes hit Wales and Midlands

Blackleaf

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Tornadoes have struck parts of Wales and the Midlands, causing damage to buildings and cars.

Winds of up to 94mph have been recorded in parts of Wales, with the seaside town of Aberystwyth bearing the brunt.

Tornadoes hit Wales and Midlands

BBC News
17th November 2016


Clarach caravan park near Aberystwyth has been evacuated with further risk from debris

Tornadoes have struck parts of Wales and the Midlands, causing damage to buildings and cars.

Winds of up to 94mph have been recorded in parts of Wales, with the seaside town of Aberystwyth bearing the brunt.

Police said no injuries had been reported, though a caravan park in the area has been evacuated after up to 20 caravans were overturned.

The Met Office has issued a yellow severe weather warning of very strong winds moving eastwards across the UK.

Brought in by a squally cold front, BBC Weather says the high winds are expected to clear to the east through the course of Thursday afternoon.


Kate Aspinall said the Grinshill Animal Rescue Centre near Shrewsbury suffered 'major damage'

Any further tornados are likely to be confined to northern parts of the Midlands over the next couple of hours.

However, further squally winds and a brief but intense spell of rain are anticipated, before clearing into the North Sea this evening. BBC Weather added.

'Sheets of metal'

Dyfed Powys Police said trees and roof tiles were also blown into roads, with several being forced to close.

Thomas Scarrott, director of the Clarach Bay Holiday Village, near Aberystwyth, said around 15 to 20 caravans had been upended and overturned.

He said: "As I was walking out of the door the wind started to increase and it went from zero to take cover in seconds. My initial thought was it must have been a tornado."

He added: "The danger now is that the wind is blustery and blowing the debris. There are large sheets of metal blowing around. We're OK indoors."

As the high winds spread east, the Grinshill Animal Rescue Centre near Shrewsbury reported "major damage".

Posting photos on Facebook, Kate Aspinall said there was no roof left on the kennels, after a tree fell on it causing damage.

She said: "Dogs and cats are safe thank God. We are OK, a little wet and wind swept."


It was a "lucky escape" for Thomas Scarrott at the Clarach Bay Holiday Village

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Tecumsehsbones

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Reminds me of a time an American doctor and a Briddish doctor were at an AIDS conference, and the Briddish doctor claimed the Briddish AIDS was the greatest AIDS in the world. The American doctor said "That's ridiculous." The Briddish doctor said "Your AIDS is incurable." "So what?" the American doctor replied, "So is yours." The Briddish doctor said "No, ours is invincible!"
 

Blackleaf

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I have family all around there. Newtown, Welshpool, Carno, Llanidloes, Carsews.

In the ancient county of Montgomeryshire (or in Powys as they have now been since some of the UK's ancient counties were destroyed and some new ones were created in 1974).
 
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Blackleaf

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Methinks it has something to do with all that hot air meeting up with cold shoulder.... ;-)

Tornadoes are caused by the wind ricocheting off a mountain range, then travelling to another mountain range and ricocheting off that, then travelling to another mountain range and ricocheting off that and then going back to the original mountain range, thus forming a big circle, and the wind keeps going round and round and round and round and getting faster and faster and faster and narrowing and narrowing and narrowing until it forms a tornado.