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Technically, KikLove is correct... in your link:
There has been tornadoes in winter time in anyplace, anywhere. It could happen in Chicago, it could happen in IL... you just never know what the nature can do to anybody here.
Tornadoes Do Occur in Winter
Tornadoes have been recorded in temperatures even inf the 50's.
There has been tornadoes in winter time in anyplace, anywhere. It could happen in Chicago, it could happen in IL... you just never know what the nature can do to anybody here.
Winds toss SUVs as if they were matchbox cars. Trees and limbs become deadly projectiles hurtling toward homes. Families huddle in basements, storm shelters and interior bathrooms.
Those are just a few of the scenes played out every year when tornado season hits. It's a weather myth that tornadoes are solely features of spring or summer. Tornadoes can happen during winter as well.
All you have to do is look at January 2012. On January 9, tornadoes hit the Houston metro area. Only two days later, western North Carolina was hit by three tornadoes, injuring around 18 people. This past Tuesday, we saw around a dozen twisters strike portions of Kentucky, Indiana, Tennessee and Mississippi.
"April through July is the most active period for tornadoes with May being the most active month," says Tornado Expert Dr. Greg Forbes (find him on Facebook). "However, tornado outbreaks can happen in any month of the year when instability and wind conditions become favorable."
That means the cold winter months of January and February can be favorable for twisters.
Tornadoes Do Occur in Winter
False. Temperatures can be lower. There can be tornadoes any month of the year. Rare but not unheard of having one in winter months. The changes from hot to cold can make it worse sometimes.
Not where I live, it's not. Tornadoes never form here below 70 degrees, and that's because of Lake Michigan, which does play a factor.
How warm does it have to be for a tornado to form