Before Lightning Strikes...
· Keep an eye on the sky. Look for darkening
skies, flashes of light, or increasing wind. Listen for the sound of thunder.
·
If you can hear thunder, you are close enough to the storm to be struck by lightning.
Go to safe shelter immediately.
· Listen to NOAA Weather Radio, commercial radio,
or television for the latest weather forecasts.
· An AM radio will pick up static
from lightning strikes in your vicinity before you see or hear them.
When
a Storm Approaches...
· Lightning storms are often announced by a sudden drop
in temperature and increase in wind. The temperature drop and breeze are usually
the result of a downburst of cold air. Once the air hits the ground, it has no place
to go but outward in all directions. In the process, the cold air mixes with the
warmer air at ground level, becoming a breeze and a temperature drop. Temperature
will also drop from the air moving toward you through all of that cold water, in
the storm, that is approaching. This can happen several minutes before it actually
begins to rain.
· Find shelter in a building or car. Keep car windows closed and
avoid convertibles.
· Telephone lines and metal pipes can conduct electricity.
Unplug appliances. Avoid using the telephone or any electrical appliances.
· Stay
away from open doors and windows. fireplaces, radiators, stoves, metal pipes. sinks,
and plug-in electrical appliances.
· Avoid taking a bath or shower, or running
water for any other purpose.
· Turn off the air conditioner. Power surges from
lightning can overload the compressor, resulting in a costly repair job!
· Draw
blinds and shades over windows. If windows break due to objects blow by the wind
the shades will prevent glass from shattering into your home.
If Caught
Outside...
· The summits of mountains, crests of ridges, slopes above timberline,
and large meadows are extremely hazardous places to be during lightning storms. If
you are caught in such an exposed place, quickly descend to a lower elevation, away
from the direction of the approaching storm, and squat down, keeping your head low.
A dense forest located in a depression provides the best protection. Avoid taking
shelter under isolated trees or trees much taller than adjacent trees. Stay away
from water, metal objects, and other substances that will conduct electricity long
distances.
· Stay in the car if you are traveling. Automobiles offer excellent
lightning protection.
· If you are in the woods, take shelter under the shorter
trees.
· If you are boating or swimming, get to land and find shelter immediately!
Protecting Yourself Outside...
· Don't take laundry off the clothesline.
·
Keep away from fences, metal clotheslines, telephone lines, power lines, pipelines,
and any electrically conductive elevated objects.
· Avoid hilltops, open spaces,
isolated buildings, exposed sheds or other metal structures. Descend from ridges
and mountains on the leeward side.
· Don't handle flammable materials in open
containers.
· Don't use metal objects such as fishing rods and golf clubs. Golfers
wearing cleated shoes are particularly good lightning rods.
· Avoid the highest
object in the area. If only isolated trees are nearby, the best protection is to
crouch in the open, keeping twice as far away from isolated trees as the trees are
high. Whenever lightning is nearby, take off backpacks with either external or internal
metal frames. In tents, stay at least a few inches from metal tent poles
.
·
When you are setting up a campsite in the summer-time, keep thunderstorms in mind.
Don't pitch your tent close to the larger trees in the area, since these are the
ones sought after by lighting. Be especially careful to avoid trees that have long
vertical notches in their trunks, or have long, narrow strips of bark peeled from
the trunk. When lighting hits a tree, most of its force travels down the moist area
between the bark and the wood of the trunk. The bark gets stripped off when the resulting
stream forces its escape, and the narrow vertical notches come about as the tree
heals over the following years.
· Go to a low-lying, open place away from trees,
poles, or metal objects.
· Make sure the place you pick is not subject to flooding
· Stop tractor work, especially when the tractor is pulling metal equipment, and
dismount. Tractors (including lawn tractors) and other implements in metallic contact
with the ground are often struck by lightning.
· Get out of the water and off
small boats. If you cannot get out of the small boat (i.e., too far from land) you
should position yourself as low as possible in the boat, preferably with your entire
body below the line of the boat. Do not try to out race the storm to land. Also when
getting out of the water go at least 100 yards away from the shore.
Be
a Very Small Target!
· Lightning takes the path of least resistance to
the ground. Since air is a very poor conductor, lighting seeks anything better -
and an upright human being is far better for its purpose than air! Stick up above
the grass and trees while hiking, and you become a prime target.
· Squat low to
the ground. Place your hands on your knees with your head between them. Make yourself
the smallest target possible. By squatting with your feet close together, you have
minimal contact with the ground, thus reducing danger from ground currents.
·
If the threat of lightning strikes is great, your group should not huddle together
but spread out at least 15 feet apart. If one member of your group is jolted, the
rest of you can tend to him.
· If you can't get out of the open, put your pack,
walking stick, whatever, about 30 feet away from you, propped up high, and huddle
on the ground.
· Don't sit down, you make a larger target. Crouch down (between
two boulders if possible) on your feet on top of your rolled sleeping bag, a foam
pad, coiled rope or whatever supplementary insulation you have and ride out the storm.
· Do not lie flat on the ground---this will make you a larger target!
After
the Storm Passes...
· Stay away from storm-damaged areas.
· Listen to the radio
for information and instructions
.
If Someone is Struck by Lightning...
·
People struck by lightning carry no electrical charge and can be handled safely.
· Call for help. Get some one to dial 9-1-1 or your local Emergency Medical Services
(EMS) number.
· The injured person has received an electrical shock and may be
burned, both where they were struck and where the electricity left their body. Check
for burns in both places.
· Give first aid. If breathing has stopped, begin rescue
breathing. If the heart has stopped beating, a trained person should give CPR.
·
Learn First Aid and CPR
· Take a Red Cross first aid and CPR course. Call your
local Red Cross chapter for class schedules and fees.
Common Questions
and Answers
Q: If you see lightning in the sky flashing all over the place,
but hear no thunder does this mean it is too far away? or is there lighting that
is close that never has thunder?
A: All lightning produces thunder. If you don't
hear it, it's far off, depending on what other noise there is (strong winds between
you and the lightning will disperse the thunder pretty well).
Q: Can you
really count between thunder and lightning and see how far it is and how does that
work?
A: Yes, count the number of seconds between lightning flash and sound of
thunder, and then divide by 5. This works if you assume an average speed of the sound
to be .2 miles per second.. Light travels at about 186,000 miles/second. Sound travels
considerably more slowly. The distance to a lightning stroke is the time it takes
for the sound to reach you after you've seen the lightning divided by the speed of
sound.
Q: Is a travel trailer safe in lighting?
A: Yes, provided it
is earthed (metal legs, not on wood or on rubber tires).
References
·
The Guide to Safe Scouting (#34411) available from the local BSA Council Office.
· Fieldbook, Boy Scouts of America (#3200)
· All About Lightning, Dover Books,
ISBN 0-486-25237; Martin A. Uman
· First Aid merit badge pamphlet
· Electricity
merit badge pamphlet
· Emergency Preparedness merit badge pamphlet
American
Red Cross materials:
1. Are You Ready for a Thunderstorm? (ARC 5009)
2. Thunderstorms
and Lightning...the Underrated Killers (ARC 5001)