Wild storms whip southern Ontario

Residents fear what might be next

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Ontario's volatile summer and the fear of what might be next was on the lips of stunned residents Friday as they surveyed destroyed homes, flipped cars and trees snapped like twigs in the wake of nature's latest weather drama -- tornadoes tearing across the province.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 22/08/2009 (6079 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Ontario’s volatile summer and the fear of what might be next was on the lips of stunned residents Friday as they surveyed destroyed homes, flipped cars and trees snapped like twigs in the wake of nature’s latest weather drama — tornadoes tearing across the province.

The string of twisters Thursday, which claimed the life of an 11-year-old boy and left hundreds of families homeless, came amid a season of wild storms that have at times turned tragic.

Last week, a woman and two boys survived a vicious and sudden lightning strike in a park in Brampton, Ont., just days after another strike killed a woman on a beach on Lake Huron. Three U.S. tourists were killed by a tornado in the province’s remote north in July.

Darren Calabrese  / THE CANADIAN PRESS
Damaged homes in Vaughan, Ont. Friday after a tornado touched down in the neighbourhood north of Toronto on Thursday night.
Darren Calabrese / THE CANADIAN PRESS Damaged homes in Vaughan, Ont. Friday after a tornado touched down in the neighbourhood north of Toronto on Thursday night.

Thursday’s tornadoes, which struck the rural community of Durham and the city of Vaughan especially hard, aren’t necessarily the last for a season that’s already seen 10 twisters across the province, Environment Canada warned Friday.

"We could easily see that number climbing," said meteorologist Geoff Coulson.

As she surveyed the detritus-strewn streets of the north-Toronto suburb of Woodbridge, business owner Gerry VanWirdum acknowledged Friday feeling uneasy about the recent weather.

"It is hitting close to home; we’ve had very unsettled weather this summer," VanWirdum said.

Marco Nicolosi, taking in the damage in Vaughan, said he hoped not to see another storm like Thursday’s.

"It was something else," Nicolosi said. "It’s been a weird summer."

The terrifying spectacle came as the Maritimes were bracing for the impact of hurricane Bill, which was expected to enter the waters of Atlantic Canada late this weekend, packing winds of at least 150 kilometres per hour.

The lone fatality from Thursday’s storm was the 11-year-old, who was killed when a tornado tore through a conservation area near the southwestern Ontario town of Durham, where children were at a day camp.

The boy, whose name was not released, was from the Durham area and was killed by debris, police said.

Mike Muir, Grey County EMS manager, said the majority of emergency resources were sent to the Saugeen Conservation Area, "where a number of injuries occurred."

Six other people were treated in hospital and released, the majority of the injuries being scrapes, cuts, bruises, and minor broken bones, a hospital spokeswoman said.

Acting Mayor Dan Sullivan said it would take months of work to remove the "scars" on the community, which he said is in recovery mode.

Only minutes after arriving at the industrial site where the worst damage had occurred in Durham, Coulson confirmed with "no doubt" a tornado rated at least F2 on the Fujita scale had touched down, meaning winds roaring upwards of 180 to 240 km an hour.

He estimated the damage occurred in a "matter of seconds. The worst of these things can be very, very brief, but it’s very, very intense," he said.

Vaughan Mayor Linda Jackson called it a "real miracle" that no one in her city was killed or seriously injured.

Still, the devastation was widespread. Some 44 homes were so badly damaged that they will likely be demolished, said Jackson; a total of 600 homes sustained some form of damage from the storm.

 

— The Canadian Press

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