Large tornado in central Alberta damages homes, but no serious injuries reported

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DIDSBURY, Alta. - A tornado that slammed central Alberta on Saturday afternoon wrecked homes and killed livestock, but no serious injuries have come to light so far.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 01/07/2023 (1099 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

DIDSBURY, Alta. – A tornado that slammed central Alberta on Saturday afternoon wrecked homes and killed livestock, but no serious injuries have come to light so far.

Environment and Climate Change Canada issued a tornado warning at 1:50 p.m. local time, noting meteorologists were tracking a severe thunderstorm in Mountain View County that was producing a tornado near Didsbury, Alta.

RCMP said they received reports of a large tornado in the county along Highway 2 at Highway 581, ranging from one to two kilometres wide.

People embrace after a tornado damaged homes near Carstairs, Alta., Saturday, July 1, 2023. No injuries were reported. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh
People embrace after a tornado damaged homes near Carstairs, Alta., Saturday, July 1, 2023. No injuries were reported. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

Police said numerous homes were damaged, and while they initially said there were reports of injuries, Cpl. Gina Slaney later said there were no known injuries as of yet.

The tornado warning was later ended.

Dean Allan, deputy mayor of Carstairs, said the twister passed between Didsbury and Carstairs, damaging 12 homes.

“A couple of them were completely destroyed. There’s no deaths — just some minor injuries, luckily,” Allan said, adding some livestock was also lost.

“All in all, everything went well, or as good as can be for something like that.”

Carstairs fire chief Jordan Schaffer said five homes were completely destroyed, including one where rescuers had to extricate a woman from her basement.

“Digging through debris, we were able to get her out without a scratch,” Schaffer said.

“The house was 100 per cent gone.”

Lisa Arrowsmith, a former Canadian Press reporter, was driving south on Highway 2 towards Calgary with her husband on Saturday afternoon when she said the sky got dark and they could see a very large funnel cloud to their right.

“The thing that came to my mind is we either have to turn around and drive as fast as we can the other way, or we have to try to outrun this,” Arrowsmith said, although she explained that turning around on the divided highway would have been next to impossible due to barriers.

“You make a split-second decision, and we just thought, well, we’d better just floor it and hope for the best.”

She said many people had pulled over to shoot video of the twister. But she kept the pedal down and after some hail hit the car, they knew they were finally in the clear, she said.

“It was very frightening to think maybe you were going to get caught on the highway with nowhere to hide and nowhere to seek shelter,” she said.

Storm chaser Aaron Jayjack posted video online of a tornado near Didsbury crossing a highway, appearing to damage two rural homes on both sides of the roadway.

In the video, he calls out to anyone who might be in one of the homes, but is prevented from getting any closer due to downed utility lines blocking the driveway.

Fortis Alberta, which supplies electricity in the area, reported outages in both Didsbury and Carstairs on Saturday afternoon.

Tanya Croft, a spokeswoman for the utility, said late in the afternoon that crews were still assessing the damage but that she believed most service had been restored.

The Town of Carstairs posted on Facebook that water-use restrictions were in effect, and would remain so until electricity was restored.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted a message to people injured in the tornado or whose homes were damaged that Canadians “are here for you.”

“As officials continue to monitor the situation, please stay safe,” Trudeau said on Twitter.

— By Rob Drinkwater in Edmonton

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 1, 2023.

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