Whether you were personally struck, your horse was struck out in the field, your neighbor or friend got hit, electrical outage?..

  • Statick@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    Lightning hit a tree right next to my house and went through the invisible dog fence and fried a bunch of stuff in my house… The invisible fence and many other things are grounded now…

    The bark on the tree literally blew off and there was a huge bang and flag of light when it struck. Scared the crap out of everyone in my house.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I live where there is a lot of lightning (west central FL) so have had near misses where the flash and sound came at the same time but the incident I remember:

    I worked at a payroll company. One of our new clients was a landscaping company and in the first week they had an employee hit by lightning, and that one incident was more expensive to the workers’ comp plan than the rest of the year combined, all companies. Poor guy died and not fast, it was heartbreaking. I also learned in that job that seawall building and underwater welding were our most risky clients (highest workers’ comp cost) followed closely by racecar drivers.

    • over_clox@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      Tonight, like right now, we’re having numerous lightning strikes, but practically no thunder, and barely any rain. Upper atmosphere lightning maybe? 🤔

      This is only the third time in my life I’ve seen such a weird weather pattern, seems to come along with towns nearby having tornadoes… 🤷

      Southeast Mississippi here… Weird weather like now.

  • pwalshj@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    My apartment building in NYC was struck about 30 years ago. It blew about 10 bricks out of the parapet wall on the roof and, curiously, the intercom in the entrance played Disney Radio for 3 weeks.

  • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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    3 days ago

    I saw a RED bolt of lightning hit the ground about 30 feet away. It looked as thick and solid as a young tree sapling, and let out a mighty boom that sounded just as solid.

    And it was red. Why was it red? I’ve wondered if it was just bright, and made my retina flare.

  • xxce2AAb@feddit.dk
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    4 days ago

    Approximately 25-30 meters. Hit the middle of the street while I was watching out of a window from an elevation of about 10m. It was an experience.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    In school, my PE in the senior years was rowing. You basically gathered a crew with one experienced steering person, put the boat on the river, did the predefined round, put the boat away, and you could go home. Be there early, get you boat out quicker, row a bit faster, and you were done early.

    One day, the teacher stopped boats going out shortly after we left because of the weather. We were at the farthest point when we noticed the thunderstorm. I can tell you, in a thunderstorm you don’t want to be the one high point in the middle of the river! So we ran the boat home, pulled it out of the water and carried it up the ramp to the boat house. When we were in the middle of the ramp, lighting struck the flag pole about 5-10m from the ramp. Light and sound effects simultaneously, and it was LOUD!

    I don’t remember the moments after the impact, but we were told that no group ever had carried their boat up the ramp and into the building that fast.

  • spiffy_spaceman@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I was a lifeguard in high school. During a storm I went out in the rain to collect the fanny packs of medical supplies (we didn’t have to wear them back then). As I was rounding the last corner of the pool, lightning struck something across the parking lot (it was a big lot) about 50-100 yds away. I heard the bolt come down in a crackle and I turned to see it hit the ground. Everything happened in super slow motion: I remember turning as it connected and anticipating the boom. Even though I kind of joke about getting struck by lightning as a bucket list item, witnessing the amount of energy that is any lightning bolt is very humbling and a little terrifying. I still love being in electrical storms, though!

  • 6stringringer@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    My grandparents were asleep when lightning struck a tree perhaps 10 feet< away just on the other side of the wall their headboard was against. I recall that there was a window next to their bed. My grandfather said he thought the house was exploding because of the way everything was illuminated. I was asleep about 20 feet away across the hall. It still feels like the loudest noise I could ever have imagined. I didn’t have a window looking directly at it but the entire house was lit up. Quite the ”shock” being awoken from a deep sleep with the combination of lightning & thunder. I remember how much it smelled like ozone as well.

  • Quilotoa@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    When I was a kid, I saw a strange yellowish-orange ball shoot across the yard in front of me. No one would believe me. A couple of years ago, I read the description of ball lightning. I think that must have been it.

    • HurricaneLiz@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I saw ball lightning during a lightning storm in Iowa like 3 decades ago, it does exist, but yeah, no one believed me either 😂

  • elfharm@sh.itjust.works
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    3 days ago

    When I was a kid my house was struck by lightning. It actually struck my bedroom but we were all downstairs watching TV at the time. It was a super loud bang and the power went out, and our dog started yelping like she was dying. We found the dog huddled in the back corner of the yard. She was fine, we think the noise just scared her. The outlet in my bedroom wall where it hit was destroyed, just some charred chunks of plastic and metal that had blown out of the wall and hit the side of my bed. I think we ended up having to replace all the outlets in my room. It knocked off the siding where it hit the outside of my bedroom wall, but i don’t think it even damaged it, we just hung it back up. The fire department came and made sure there were no hotspots, and they were able to trace the path. It hit my room, traveled through the house, and then out to the transformer on the street, which had blown up. Oddly though, I don’t think any of the electronics in the house were damaged, not even the stereo in my room right by where the lightning struck.

  • early_riser@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Several years ago there was a strike somewhere in our neighborhood, close enough to damage several electronics in my house, mostly via the network. I lost my router, and the built-in ethernet port on my PC.

    When I was in high school a friend and I were waiting outside the school when it started raining. Lightning struck the field across the street. I wanted to look around the area to see if I could find some fulgurite (sand that gets fused into glass by lightning) but never got a chance to.

    I have several antennas in my backyard (amateur radio) and have to disconnect my radios whenever lightning gets close. I can tell when a storm is in the area through the radio even when the weather around me is clear. I really should get a lightning detector.

    On a related note, some government entity in the US (I believe it’s either NOAA or the NWS) keeps a public database of lighting deaths.

  • Doublenut@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    Lightning hit the ground right in front of the car i was in. Honestly no clue how close it was for too bright.

    I’ve seen some trees get hit. My neighbors’ just a couple years ago. It caught fire on the inside which was pretty cool. It was a huge old oak, just kinda went out on its own and they cut it down a couple weeks later.

    I went to high-school with a guy who was struck. He was in a coma. I was in school with him after, I think he was a junior at 19. His goatee grew in stripes of orange to red.

  • owenfromcanada@lemmy.ca
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    4 days ago

    Lightning touched down in my neighbor’s yard. My wifi access point and my laptop battery both got cooked, and I may have accidentally tought my kids a new word.

  • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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    4 days ago

    Couple years ago, lightning struck a tree on our neighbor’s property across the street. We didn’t see the strike, but we heard it; the tree basically exploded. Some of the branches fell onto the power lines and started an electrical fire, so it was a whole big thing. Bunch of people standing out on their driveways watching the police and fire department trying to deal with it.

  • moody@lemmings.world
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    4 days ago

    I lived across the street from a power distribution station. One night while I was outside, there was a lightning strike there, and it lit up the sky like daylight for 2-3 full seconds, and the power for the whole town went out.