visible satellite during active storm reports
Visible Satellite 22:42Z on 2019-06-21. Satellite images are derived from the NOAA Open Data Dissemination Program.

Tornado Reports

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Time Rating Radar State County Location Narrative
22:42Z EF1 KPAH KY Marshall Gilbertsville Arpt A 50-yard wide tornado with peak winds near 110 mph snapped and uprooted trees. The tornado appeared to touch down along the edge of Kentucky Dam Village property near Golf Course Maintenance Drive. It crossed Highway 641 and created a clear path from near 641 to the marina. At the marina, two piers (which were connected to other piers as an extension) broke loose and were pushed out into the bay, dragging concrete block tie downs along the floor of the bay. These piers sustained major damage to roofs and connections between the piers. The piers which were connected to the shore were damaged, not only at the connection point between piers, but also at the connection to the shore. Electrical systems were destroyed along with gang planks between the shore and piers. There were four piers connected to the shore. The two piers that were damaged were the inside two piers, with the outside piers sustaining minor damage.
23:00Z EF1 KPAH KY Lyon Mont The tornado began east of the Woodlands Trace and Silver Trail Road junction and tracked southeast along Silver Trail Road before crossing into Trigg County. Hundreds of trees, some very large, were snapped or uprooted. The path of this tornado was in densely wooded areas of the Land Between The Lakes National Recreation Area. Peak winds were estimated near 100 mph. Most of the path was in Lyon County, however a popular tourist spot was struck in the Trigg County portion.
23:02Z EF1 KPAH KY Trigg Rockcastle The tornado continued into Trigg County from Lyon County. Although the Trigg County portion of the track was only about one-half mile, it tracked southeast across Hematite Lake. This is a popular nature-viewing area in the Land Between The Lakes National Recreation Area. The entire track was through heavily wooded areas. Hundreds of trees, some very large, were snapped or uprooted. Peak winds were estimated near 100 mph.
23:10Z EF0 KMAF TX Pecos Ft Stockton A thunderstorm produced a tornado 16 miles southeast of Fort Stockton. The tornado was seen by both law enforcement and the public. The length and path width are estimated. No damage was reported with this tornado.
23:22Z EF1 KHPX KY Trigg Cadiz Minor roof damage occurred to at least eight homes, primarily from falling trees. One home had a broken window. One barn was levelled. Several power lines were downed, mainly from falling trees. At least 200 trees were uprooted, snapped, or had broken limbs. The tornado traveled mainly along and north of Kings Chapel Road initially, then traveled along Cool Spring Cave Road before crossing South Montgomery Road, north of Caledonia. Peak winds were estimated near 95 mph.
23:31Z EF1 KHPX KY Christian Peedee The tornado appeared to begin in a cornfield along Highway 164 north of Peedee, where a large amount of the corn was blown down. Major tree damage and a debris field was observed on Highway 164. It then continued east/southeast where a barn collapsed. It damaged around a dozen homes, mainly to soffits and roofing. One small guest house was destroyed along Striped Bridge Road. The contents remained on the slab, but the roof and walls were blown around the side of a barn (which itself sustained minor damage). Numerous large trees were snapped and uprooted along the path. A tree blocked Highway 107. The tornado appears to have lifted just west of the Interstate 24/Pennyrile Parkway interchange. Peak winds were estimated near 105 mph.
23:31Z EF1 KHPX KY Christian Newstead This EF-1 tornado appeared to start along Pierce Lane near I-24 and traveled along Pierce Lane for almost a mile. Three empty grain bins were destroyed and blown into a field. Most of the damage was on the south flank of the tornado. Many large, old trees were snapped or uprooted. Towards the end of the path a house lost half of its roof. Peak winds were estimated near 100 mph.
23:57Z EF0 KHPX KY Todd South Zion The tornado started along Hammacksville Road south of Trenton. It tracked through cornfields, with strong convergence noted within the downed corn. It also uprooted and broke several large limbs off of some trees. There is drone footage of the tornado track and eyewitness reports/pictures of the tornado. Maximum winds were estimated near 85 mph.
00:35Z EF1 KOHX KY Simpson Hillsdale Brief EF1 tornado touched down near I-65. The survey crew found a mixture of straight line winds and a small area of a tornado embedded within. The tornado hit the Salem Rd area hard with extensive tree damage. A wheat field had distinct circulations quite visible.
00:39Z EF1 KOHX KY Allen Mt Aerial The National Weather Service in conjunction with Allen County EMA conducted a storm survey across the western half of Allen County. There was significant straight line wind damage across much of the county facing an easterly and southeasterly direction. Interspersed with the straight line wind damage was at least one tornado across western Allen County north of and paralleling KY 585.||The tornado touched down near the Horseshoe Ford Road and Horseshoe Bend Road intersection. There were numerous large hardwood trees split, twisted, and uprooted facing from northerly to southeasterly. Horseshoe Bend Road was closed due to trees down across the road and from flooding. Winds in this area were estimated to be between 90 and 95 mph. Further east along Mayhew Road a large, well-built barn|was uplifted and removed from its foundation with several cedar and maple trees twisted and snapped. Across a farmer's field, corn was flattened and twisted in multiple directions. Large, heavy fuel tanks were rolled in two different directions on Mayhew Road. Several barns and outbuilding had roof damage as well.||At the Mayhew and Pope Road intersection there was extensive softwood and hardwood tree damage, especially around the Harmony|Missionary Baptist Church at 5226 Pope Road. Residents said there was a major pressure change with the tornado.||There were indications there may have been more than one tornado as tree positions would go from a tornadic circulation of northeasterly to southeasterly direction and then to all straight line wind damage in an easterly wind direction, then back to a tornadic circulation in multiple directions. Radar supports this ground analysis with mesovortices along the leading edge of the potent squall line. The width of the individual circulations varied between 75 and 125 yards with widespread straight line wind damage all around. Most of the wind damage was between 85 and 95 mph.||More tree and power line damage was along KY 585 near Shores Road. The tornado dissipated halfway between the intersection of KY 585 and Shores Road and the intersection of Shirk Road and Grider Drive.||The survey crew traveled all along southern Allen County south of Scottsville and found straight line winds facing east and southeasterly directions.
01:00Z EF0 KOHX TN Davidson Donelson A brief EF0 tornado touched down In the Stones River Bend Park and moved southeast, snapping several trees along the river. Moving through the Standford Estates subdivsion, the tornado blew down numerous large trees in a convergent pattern on Edgemont Drive, Myrick Drive, Stanford Drive, Belding Drive, and Jenry Drive, with some trees falling onto and severely damaging homes. Many of these same homes were also damaged in a severe microburst on April 18, 2017. The tornado continued southeast and blew down many more trees on Wellington Square, Lebanon Pike, and along the Stones River Greenway before lifting.
01:04Z EF0 KOHX TN Davidson Smith Spgs A small, brief EF0 tornado touched down in Antioch near the intersection of Anderson Road and Country Way Road. The tornado took a U-shaped path and moved southeast across Oak Trees Court, Country Meadow Drive, Country Meadow Court, Country Lawn Drive, Towne Village Road, Fall Court, Dove Creek Road, and Huntingboro Trail, snapping and uprooting numerous trees in a narrow, convergent path. A few trees fell onto homes causing minor damage. Turning more eastward, the tornado strengthened and caused significant roof and siding damage to many homes along Leatherbury Court, Seasons Lake Court, and Seasons Drive. The tornado appears to have lifted north of the intersection of Smith Springs Parkway and Mt View Road.
01:04Z EF1 KOHX KY Allen Amos The National Weather Service conducted a storm damage survey across southeast Allen County to assess damage from the storms on Friday Evening, June 21. There was a significant amount of straight line wind damage across southern Allen County. Most of this damage had wind speeds between 60-65 mph all facing east southeast direction. There were two significant areas of straight line wind damage. There was a barn north of Amos on Highway 99. The second was two large barns just north of Hayesville, TN. ||Interspersed among the straight line wind damage was a tornado which first touched down a half mile east of Amos. A family farm had numerous trees twisted, snapped, and uprooted. Several barns sustained severe structural damage to the roofs. A dozen or so portions of two by fours were impaled into the ground in multiple directions. ||Further southeast on Highland Church Road numerous trees were uprooted and snapped with trees facing from the north northeast to the southeast direction. There was clear evidence that the tornado went to the Tennessee state line in Macon County as we could see trees snapped and uprooted on the state line which correlates well with the NWS Nashville storm survey across the Macon County line. ||At 2592 Highland Church Road (Highland General Baptist Church) there was significant brick damage on the west, south, and east sides of the church due to open vents. The survey crew zig zagged across roads south of Scottsville to Highway 31 but only found sporadic straight line tree and barn damage all facing a southeasterly direction. ||The very last concentrated area of damage the team found was at 444 Old Buck Creek Road were there was numerous softwood tree damage at the residence with power poles down across the road.
01:07Z EF1 KOHX TN Macon Green Vly A short but intense EF-1 tornado touched down in far northern Macon County near Green Valley Road and moved eastward across Oak Knob Road and along Underwood Road before lifting. Hundreds of trees were snapped and uprooted along the path, a few homes were damaged by falling trees, and several barns and outbuildings were damaged. The tornado damage was surrounded by a massive 8 mile long by 1.5 mile wide downburst which also caused scattered severe damage over a much wider area.
02:24Z EF1 KMRX TN Fentress Armathwaite An EF-1 tornado touched down in the Armathwaite community west of Brannon Lane and moved east across Stockton Road, Mt Helen Road, HM Brooks Road, Chestnut Ridge Road, and Sam Smith Road before lifting. A few barns and outbuildings were damaged and hundreds of large trees were snapped and uprooted along the path, with the worst damage along Sam Smith Road where a home narrowly missed being crushed by numerous trees. The tornado path may have been longer to the east but that area is not accessible by roads.

Storm reports are derived from "The Storm Events Database" (National Centers for Environmental Information) and/or "Past Storm Reports" (Storm Prediction Center).