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Oklahoma Weather Tips (Humor)
e-mail | 5-20-03

Posted on 05/20/2003 6:04:55 PM PDT by I'm ALL Right!

Oklahoma weather humor!

This was sent by the wife of the head meteorologist of the Nat'l Weather Bureau, based in Norman, OK---Considering the past couple of weeks here, we all need a little touch of humor.

A Little Taste of Oklahoma Living

For those of you who aren't familiar with tornadoes and are hearing news coverage of this, I put together a short glossary to help you understand.

Fujita Scale: Scale used to measure wind speeds of a tornado and their severity.

F1: Laughable little string of wind unless it comes through your house, then enough to make your insurance company drop you like a brick. People enjoy standing on their porches to watch this kind.

F2: Strong enough to blow your car into your house, unless of course you drive an Expedition and live in a mobile home, then strong enough to blow your house into your car.

F3: Will pick your house and your Expedition up and move you to the other side of town.

F4: Usually ranging from 1/2 to a full mile wide, this tornado can turn an Expedition into a Pinto, then gift wrap it in a semi truck.

F5: The Mother of all Tornadoes, you might as well stand on your front porch and watch it, because it's probably going to be quite a last sight.

Meteorologist: A rather soft-spoken, mild-mannered type person until severe weather strikes, and they start yelling at you through the t.v.: "GET TO YOUR BATHROOM OR YOU'RE GOING TO DIE!"

Storm Chaser: Meteorologist-rejects who are pretty much insane but get us really cool pictures of tornadoes. We release them from the mental institution every time it starts thundering, just to see what they'll do.

Tranquilizer: What you have to give any dog or cat who lived through the May 3rd, 1999 tornado every time it storms or they tear your whole house up freaking out of their minds.

Moore, Oklahoma: A favorite gathering place for tornadoes. They like to meet here and do a little partying before stretching out across the rest of the Midwest.

Bathtub: Best place to seek shelter in the middle of a tornado, mostly because after you're covered with debris, you can quickly wash off and come out looking great.

Severe Weather Radio: A handy device that sends out messages from the National Weather Service during a storm, though quite disconcerting because the high pitched, shrill noise just as an alarm sounds suspiciously just like a tornado. Plus the guy reading the report just sounds creepy.

Tornado Siren: A system the city spent millions to install, which is really useful, unless there's a storm or a tornado, because then of course you can't hear them.

Storm Cellar: A great place to go during a tornado, as it is almost 100% safe, though weigh your options carefully, as most are not cared for and are homes to rats and snakes.

May-June: Tourist season in Oklahoma, when people who are tired of bungee jumping and diving out of airplanes decide it might be fun to chase a tornado. These people usually end up on Fear Factor.

Barometric Pressure: Nobody really knows what this is, but when it drops a lot of pregnant women go into labor, which makes for exciting moments as their husbands are trying to drive them to the hospital and dodge tornadoes at the same time.

Cars: The worst place to be during a tornado (next to a mobile home). Yes, you can out run a tornado in your car...unless everybody on the road decides to do the same thing, and then you're in grid lock.

A Ditch: Supposedly where you're supposed to go if you find yourself without shelter or in your car during a tornado. Theoretically the tornado is supposed to pass right over you, but since it can lift a 20 ton truck and up root a three hundred year old tree, I'd bet my life on out-running it in a car.

Mobile Home: Most people are convinced mobile homes send off some strange signal that triggers tornadoes, because if there's one mobile home park in a hundred mile radius, the tornado will find it.

Earthquake: What any Californian would rather go through on any scale of severity than face a tornado.

Tornado: What any Oklahoman would rather go through on any scale of severity than face an earthquake.

Twister: Slang for 'tornado' and also the title to a movie starring Helen Hunt, which incidentally everyone thought was corny and unrealistic until May 3rd, 1999.

Power Flash: One of the most reliable ways to track a tornado at night, it's the term used when the tornado hits a power line and a bright light flashes. It's also the emotion experienced by meteorologists when they get to make the call to interrupt prime-time must-see t.v. and a million dollars worth of advertising to track a storm for viewers.

Here are some phrases you might want to learn and be familiar with:

"We'll have your electricity restored in 24 hours," which means it'll be a week.

"We're going to be out for a week, so buy a lot of supplies and an expensive generator," means it's going to be on in twelve hours, probably as soon as you return from Wal-Mart.

"It's a little muggy today." Get outta town. It's getting ready to storm.

"There's just a slight chance of severe weather today, so go ahead and make your outdoor plans." Ha. Ha ha ha ha.

And Rene's BIG TIP of the day:
When your electricity goes out, and you go to bed at night, be sure to turn off everything that was on before it went out, or when it is unexpectedly restored in the middle of the night, every light, every computer, your dishwasher, your blow dryer, your washing machine, your microwave and your fans will all come on all at once.

1) You'll just about have a heart attack when they all come on at the same time, waking you from a dead sleep.

And...

2) Your breakers will blow, leaving you in the dark once again.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Political Humor/Cartoons; US: Oklahoma; Unclassified
KEYWORDS: meteorology; oklahoma; tornado; tornadoalley; twisters; weather
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I had a friend who used to hide under her bed any time there was a sprinkle. (She moved here from California.) I guess we're just used to it!
1 posted on 05/20/2003 6:04:56 PM PDT by I'm ALL Right!
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To: All; ivoteright; No Fool; Tax-chick; 2Jedismom
Anyone out there know how to ping the Oklahoma crowd? I'd certainly appreciate it if you could (if it's not difficult.)
2 posted on 05/20/2003 6:11:16 PM PDT by I'm ALL Right!
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To: I'm ALL Right!
Thanks for the weather tips!
3 posted on 05/20/2003 6:24:19 PM PDT by UnklGene
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To: I'm ALL Right!
Anyone out there know how to ping the Oklahoma crowd?

Sure, just stand on the back porch and yell "Soooowwwwweeeee!"

4 posted on 05/20/2003 6:27:44 PM PDT by DallasMike
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To: I'm ALL Right!
Bump for Oklahomans
5 posted on 05/20/2003 6:27:52 PM PDT by I'm ALL Right!
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To: DallasMike
Wow, if'n I had pigs, or if'n any of my kin or neighbor-folk had any hogs, that might work.
6 posted on 05/20/2003 6:31:23 PM PDT by I'm ALL Right!
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To: I'm ALL Right!; ivoteright; No Fool; Tax-chick; 2Jedismom
Anyone out there know how to ping the Oklahoma crowd? I'd certainly appreciate it if you could (if it's not difficult.)

It's not difficult. But you'll have to print this article out and get a bunch of envelopes.......

7 posted on 05/20/2003 6:36:18 PM PDT by sam_paine
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To: I'm ALL Right!
I'm about an hour east of Atlanta, GA and we get a few tornado warnings here every spring a few in the fall usually too and I don't care how many we have I will never get use to it. I've lived here all my life and my parents actually had a company build a storm shelter at her house just because tornadoes freak me out so badly. One year we had one close enough that I could hear it going by a couple miles away and I really thought I would die from a heart attack before anything got near us.
8 posted on 05/20/2003 6:42:06 PM PDT by honeygrl
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To: honeygrl
Wow! I've been in OK for 32 years and have NEVER had one come even CLOSE to me. (just knocked on some wood...)
9 posted on 05/20/2003 6:57:16 PM PDT by I'm ALL Right!
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To: PhiKapMom
Ping!
10 posted on 05/20/2003 7:19:45 PM PDT by MizSterious (Support whirled peas!)
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To: I'm ALL Right!
My grandmother was terrified of thunderstorms. Every time the sky got dark she would drag me down to the storm shelter with the damn spiders and all the mold and mildew and stay for HOURS! Finally she got a fallout shelter built (this was the early 60's) but for her it was a deluxe model storm shelter with BEDS!
11 posted on 05/20/2003 7:21:25 PM PDT by dljordan
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To: honeygrl
I got caught in the tornado the hit Nashville, Tn. in 99'. I was on the interstate downtown and saw a funny little swirling cloud and the next thing I know WHAM! signs were falling over, trashcans were flying by and the thing picked my truck up and moved it over three lanes. I floored that sucker and got away but you couldn't have driven a nail up my butt with a sledge hammer! Many beers that night.
12 posted on 05/20/2003 7:25:31 PM PDT by dljordan
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To: dljordan
"...but you couldn't have driven a nail up my butt with a sledge hammer!"

ROTFLMBO!

13 posted on 05/20/2003 7:53:14 PM PDT by I'm ALL Right!
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To: DallasMike
Sure, just stand on the back porch and yell "Soooowwwwweeeee!"

That would attract the Razorbacks from Arkansas but they could probably hear it in Oklahoma, too. They would just ignore it.

14 posted on 05/20/2003 8:02:31 PM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot (Not all things that need to be done need to be done by the government.)
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To: I'm ALL Right!
"Wow! I've been in OK for 32 years and have NEVER had one come even CLOSE to me. (just knocked on some wood...) "

The sound they make is the most eerie noise you'll ever hear.
15 posted on 05/20/2003 8:03:45 PM PDT by honeygrl
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To: dljordan
"My grandmother was terrified of thunderstorms."

I'm that way too. My nanny told me a story when I was little about a lady who died on the toilet when lightening struck and I've been terrified to pee during a storm ever since. Can lightening go through windows? I hear conflicting answers to that so never let my kids watch storms through our sliding glass door.
16 posted on 05/20/2003 8:05:53 PM PDT by honeygrl
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To: I'm ALL Right!
Ditto!! :-))
17 posted on 05/20/2003 8:07:22 PM PDT by Humal
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To: sam_paine
And then you have to send them to the Dallas Post Office, who will toss the envelopes out the window with the expectation that someone headed North will eventually pick them up...
18 posted on 05/20/2003 8:08:39 PM PDT by jonascord (Aim for the Face!)
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To: dljordan
My silly hubby has no fear of tornadoes or hurricanes. He grew up near Clearwater, FL and actually went out in one of the worst hurricanes they had there back in the 90's to a bar to hang out. He's 6' tall and over 250Lbs and said the wind was so strong he almost couldn't walk. The time the tornado went close enough to hear from my mom's house he and my dad were standing outside on the porch with it hailing while me and my brother were UNDER the house. You would think a man in his 50's and a man in his 30's would have more sense... guess not.
19 posted on 05/20/2003 8:09:52 PM PDT by honeygrl
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To: I'm ALL Right!
You are lucky and you better be knocking on wood. I grew up in OK. We really did stand outside and watch the "little" tornados in the sky...NOT those on the ground. My folks have been at the tail end of both the F5 in 1999 and the latest one. Now THAT is really lucky!
20 posted on 05/20/2003 8:10:27 PM PDT by TXBubba
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