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Twists and turns on road to Canberra

24 Dec, 2008 07:35 AM
No, it's not the Mid-West of the United States, let alone Kansas.

This tornado was photographed yesterday by Tathra couple Heather and Neil Leckie on the highway between Nimmitabel and Cooma, as the region was hit by series of heavy and violent storms.

On their way to Canberra at the time, Mrs Leckie, an artist, said she looked out of the car window, and said, ''Gosh, look at that.''

''I've never seen anything like that in my life before,'' she said.

According to the Bureau of Meteorology, it is extremely rare to capture such a good image of a local tornado, even though up to 100 of them happen in NSW every year. Mostly they pass unnoticed through the region's sparsely populated bush, causing little or no damage.

It is not known if Tornado Leckie wrecked havoc around Nimmitabel, but the bureau likes Mrs Leckie's picture so much they want to put it on the cover of December's Monthly Weather Review. Severe weather forecaster Michael Logan said tornadoes in Australia lacked the intensity of American ones because of differences in atmosphere.

While there were often a fair few in NSW, a tornado in Canberra would be improbable, but not impossible.

Weather conditions needed for one to form included severe thunderstorms, a cloud base low to the ground and strong winds in the upper atmosphere. The bureau issued a severe thunderstorm warning for parts of the Southern Tablelands, including the region where the photo was taken, and Canberra. Rain whipped the territory late in the evening, with Emergency Services on stand-by. Canberrans were told to expect large hailstones, very heavy rainfall, flash flooding and damaging winds.

A region south of Cooma received 36mm of rain in 30 minutes.

The NSW State Emergency Service reported that, despite the wet and wild weather, it had received just nine calls for help statewide.

Canberra got 18.4mm of rain yesterday, bringing the total for the month so far to 85mm, 32.5mm more than the historical average of 52.5. Canberra's dams were 52 per cent full as of yesterday. Today is expected to be fine and partly cloudy with a top of 25 ahead of a warmer Christmas Day and Boxing Day.

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Now click your heels together three times and repeat after me , theres no place......
Posted by crowster, 24/12/2008 8:34:35 AM
gotta love the first comment! congrats to the one whom caught the twister in action such a very rare event to be seen by anyone let alone now being able to be viewed by many. If there where more pictures or videos of it taken im sure others other then myself would love to see it.
Posted by les, 24/12/2008 9:22:46 AM
Congratulations to the Leckie family, "Fireguy" and "Fireman", for their brilliant tornado shot. There is a strong community of stormchasers and weather watchers here in the Canberra - Cooma Monaro - South Coast region - go to www.weatherzone.com.au and check out the forums, Breaking Weather links and read the full story of these storms. Better still register and become a weather watcher as well. Shots like these, when linked to radar records etc, do much to add to our knowledge of how and when these occur - important in providing the right public warnings too. Well done!
Posted by Wingnut, 24/12/2008 3:16:20 PM
mini tornado finally caught on camera
Posted by steve, 24/12/2008 4:02:23 PM
Ahhh ... it brings back memories of living in Oklahoma and surviving two tornado seasons - one tornado was within 500m of our duplex house - the wooden framework inside the brick was shrieking with strain. The house and we survived ... but hundreds in town were damaged or destroyed. Tornados are very intense storms. The sky is really alive - it was like a sunny day one minute and a dark boiling mass of funnel clouds the next.
Posted by Concerned Canberran, 25/12/2008 2:08:33 AM
Steve - there is no such thing as a mini tornado, it either is one or isnt. The term is used by the media but is highly inaccurate and I wince everytime I see that used. They are different sizes, depending on how much they damage they inflict determines where they lie on the Fujita Scale.
Posted by lee, 25/12/2008 9:08:46 PM

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TWISTER: The region’s stormy weather produced rain, thunder and even a tornado, spied from the road between Cooma and Nimmitabel by the Leckie family from Tathra. Main photo: HEATHER LECKIE
TWISTER: The region’s stormy weather produced rain, thunder and even a tornado, spied from the road between Cooma and Nimmitabel by the Leckie family from Tathra. Main photo: HEATHER LECKIE

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