April 5, 2022
10:50 AM| Date | April 5, 2022 |
| Time | 10:50 AM |
| County | Bullock |
| City | Troy |
| Property Loss | $0 |
| Crop Loss | $0 |
| Source | NCEI 1021399 |
2 N - 3 NNE Beans Crossroads A tornado touched down and caused minor tree damage just east of Mascot Road. It moved east-northeastward across inaccessible forested land, and crossed Beaverdam Creek. As it approached Bullock County Road 14 in the High Ridge area, the tornado intensified and broadened, uprooting or snapping large limbs on numerous hardwood trees, especially alongside the road. The tornado then descended the High Ridge area into the valley to the east-northeast, and dissipated somewhere over inaccessible land west of Alabama Highway 223. Start: 32.0402/-85.8342 End: 32.0445/-85.8079
NWS EF Scale: F1
National Weather Service meteorologists surveyed damage in southwest Bullock County and determined that it was consistent with an EF1 tornado, with maximum winds near 95 mph. A tornado touched down near Mascott Road and tracked eastward across Beaverdam Creek. As it approached County Road 14 in the High Ridge area, the tornado intensified and broadened, uprooting numerous softwood trees or snapping large limbs on some hardwood trees, especially alongside the road. The tornado then ascended the High Ridge area and dissipated somewhere over inaccessible land west of Alabama Highway 223.
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.
Part of 18-tornado outbreak on April 5, 2022
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.