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June 21, 2017 · Escambia County · 2017
EF0

June 21, 2017

2:08 PM
Escambia County, Alabama · Near Brewton (ZIP 36401)
Fatalities
0
Injuries
0
Path Length
0.8 mi
Max Width
25 yd
DateJune 21, 2017
Time2:08 PM
CountyEscambia
CityBrewton
Property Loss$0
Crop Loss$0
SourceNCEI 708707
NWS Birmingham

5 WNW Bradley - 5 NNW Bradley A brief tornado touchdown occurred in the Conecuh National Forest. The first observed point of damage was on Beaver Creek Road just south of Bradley Road. The tornado may have started farther to the southeast, but that area was not accessible. The tornado tracked northwest across Bradley Road and lifted. Tree damage was observed along the path. The tornado crossed Highway 84 and lifted near Nelson Road. Formed in association with the remnants of Tropical Storm Cindy. Start: 31.0563/-86.8075 End: 31.0680/-86.8119

NWS EF Scale: F0

Event Narrative

A brief tornado touchdown occurred in the Conecuh National Forest. The first observed point of damage was on Beaver Creek Road just south of Bradley Road. The tornado may have started farther to the southeast, but that area was not accessible. The tornado tracked northwest across Bradley Road and lifted. Tree damage was observed|along the path. The tornado was rated an EF-0 with estimated peak winds of 75 mph.

Episode Narrative

Tropical Storm Cindy first developed in the central Gulf of Mexico on the afternoon of Tuesday, June 20th and made landfall between Cameron, LA and Port Arthur, TX during the early morning hours of Thursday, June 22nd. Despite the center of the storm being far removed from the north central Gulf Coast, the effects of Cindy extended several hundred miles to the east of the center and impacted the local area starting late Tuesday and persisting through the end of the week.||The primary impact across southwest and south central Alabama was from heavy rain and flooding. The highest storm total observed was in Thomasville, AL which measured 11.37 of rain ending Friday night, June 23rd. Numerous locations across south central and southwest Alabama recorded 5 to 10 inches of rain. The heavy rain resulted in numerous instances of flash flooding and minor to moderate river flooding. ||Coastal flooding also impacted Mobile and Baldwin Counties, particularly in the typical low lying locations. Tidal gauges indicate the maximum inundation was around 3 feet MHHW in the north end of Mobile Bay. ||Four tornadoes occurred in southern Alabama during Cindy, 3 EF-0 and 1 EF-1. ||Two fatalities occurred, one due to high surf and one due to rip currents.

Outbreak Context

Part of 4-tornado outbreak on June 21, 2017

Shared Episode Narrative

Tropical Storm Cindy first developed in the central Gulf of Mexico on the afternoon of Tuesday, June 20th and made landfall between Cameron, LA and Port Arthur, TX during the early morning hours of Thursday, June 22nd. Despite the center of the storm being far removed from the north central Gulf Coast, the effects of Cindy extended several hundred miles to the east of the center and impacted the local area starting late Tuesday and persisting through the end of the week.||The primary impact across southwest and south central Alabama was from heavy rain and flooding. The highest storm total observed was in Thomasville, AL which measured 11.37 of rain ending Friday night, June 23rd. Numerous locations across south central and southwest Alabama recorded 5 to 10 inches of rain. The heavy rain resulted in numerous instances of flash flooding and minor to moderate river flooding. ||Coastal flooding also impacted Mobile and Baldwin Counties, particularly in the typical low lying locations. Tidal gauges indicate the maximum inundation was around 3 feet MHHW in the north end of Mobile Bay. ||Four tornadoes occurred in southern Alabama during Cindy, 3 EF-0 and 1 EF-1. ||Two fatalities occurred, one due to high surf and one due to rip currents.

Source Data
NCEI Event ID: 708707

See Also

0.8 mi25 yd wide