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April 5, 2022 · Pike, Montgomery County · 2022
EF2

April 5, 2022

10:03 AM
Pike, Montgomery County, Alabama · Near Troy (ZIP 36040)
Fatalities
0
Injuries
0
Path Length
12.7 mi
Max Width
1,100 yd
DateApril 5, 2022
Time10:03 AM
CountyPikeMontgomery
CityTroy
Property Loss$0
Crop Loss$0
SourceNCEI 1021393
NWS Birmingham

2 NW  Orion - 3 ESE China Grove Minor tree damage was observed on AL 94 and determined to be the starting point of a tornado. Several trees were uprooted along Highway 231 as the tornado continued east. An extensive amount of trees were snapped in the front yard of a home on Old Highway 231 where the greatest degree of tree damage was found, but this home was not able to be accessed due to the amount of trees covering the driveway. Other nearby homes only received minor roof or siding damage. The tornado continued east where it uprooted multiple trees on Lockheed Martin Circle and snapped a few large branches on County Road 7708 and Davis Road as it was dissipating. Start: 31.9833/-86.0358 End: 32.0056/-85.9095

NWS EF Scale: F1

Event Narrative

National Weather Service meteorologists surveyed damage in northern Pike County and determined that it was consistent with an EF0 tornado, with maximum winds near 85 mph. This tornado started in southeast Montgomery County and crossed into Pike County just north of Jackson Creek. The tornado tracked eastward over rural areas with damage consisting mainly of uprooted trees.

Episode Narrative

An upper-level disturbance moved across the Deep South in the early morning hours of April 5, 2022. This fostered the development of a surface low which moved across Central Mississippi and into North Alabama. Thunderstorms in the morning initially posed a threat of large hail and damaging winds. Later in the morning and into the afternoon, storms became more surface-based and a tornado threat resulted, mainly impacting the southern and southeastern portions of Central Alabama. On April 6th, a strong cold front moved through Alabama, producing another round of severe thunderstorms, but no tornadoes.

Outbreak Context

Part of 18-tornado outbreak on April 5, 2022

Shared Episode Narrative

An upper-level disturbance moved across the Deep South in the early morning hours of April 5, 2022. This fostered the development of a surface low which moved across Central Mississippi and into North Alabama. Thunderstorms in the morning initially posed a threat of large hail and damaging winds. Later in the morning and into the afternoon, storms became more surface-based and a tornado threat resulted, mainly impacting the southern and southeastern portions of Central Alabama. On April 6th, a strong cold front moved through Alabama, producing another round of severe thunderstorms, but no tornadoes.

Source Data
NCEI Event ID: 1021393
SWDI Tornado ID: 2022-04-05T15:58:27Z_KEOX_F9
SWDI Radar Site: KEOX
SWDI Signature: TVS

See Also

12.7 mi1100 yd wide