CincyGus wrote:
Three years ago, the week prior to Memorial day, I was at a state park in my first voyage in our new to us, used popup camper. The sirens came up, I tuned in the local news radio station and discovered a tornado watch was out. I watched the skies until it started to rain so bad I couldn't and then all hell broke loose. The wind was blowing the tenting on my dinette slide out into the camper like a sail on a ship. It was covering about 1/4-1/3 of the dinette, tight as a drum and I really thought it was going to rip to shreads.
The popup had four stab jacks all down but it was rocking pretty bad. Never felt it come up off the ground but felt like it could at any minute. I finally got scared enough to lay in the floor of the popup with the dinette cushions on top of me, and praying so quickly I'm certain the Lord was ignoring my pronunciation and reading my mind.
Lasted about 20-25 minutes and found out later a Tornado has in fact passed near us and touched down about 2 miles away, damaging some stick and brinks pretty severly.
Now, I make notice of where the bath houses or shelters are at when I enter a campground and at the first sign of severe weather, we move.
The one and only good thing about the storm, the popup did not leak a drop and I was thrilled that if it could withstand that kind of wind and rain, I had made a good purchase.
Wow! we had a similar experience with our pop-up at a COE campground. We had our handicapped son with us at the time, when a storm just ran up out of nowhere. The sky went black and the wind whipped up. I could see the bathhouse from the front door and my plan was to walk the approx. 100 yards to the bathhouse. Well, about that time the sky opened up and poured down walnut-size hail and lightening. My son can't walk fast so I decided to stay put rather than put ourselves out there in the midst of it. To say it was a frightening experience would be the understatement of the year. When the storm cleared we stepped out of the pop-up and found a small tree that was about 12 feet from the camper--split completely down the middle, obviously struck by lightening. and our awning was torn all to pieces.
In retrospect, I'm sure there were warnings up--if we had only been attuned to them. Since then we have upgraded our phones so we can get weather updates anywhere we happen to be.