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Lightning Risk Reduction Outdoors

When Thunder Roars, Go Indoors!
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This document has two main sections: lightning safety when a safe location is nearby and risk
reduction--not safety!--when a safe location is NOT close. No place is absolutely safe from
lightning; however, some places are much safer than others. The SAFEST location during
lightning activity is a large enclosed building, not a picnic shelter or shed. The second safest
location is an enclosed metal vehicle, car, truck, van, etc, but NOT a convertible, bike or other
topless or soft top vehicle.

Safe Buildings
A safe building is one that is fully enclosed with a roof, walls and floor, such as a home, school,
office building or a shopping center. Even inside, you should take precautions. Picnic shelters,
dugouts, sheds and other partially open or small structures are
NOT safe.

Enclosed buildings are safe because of wiring and plumbing. If lightning strikes these types of
buildings, or an outside telephone pole, the electrical current from the flash will typically travel
through the wiring or the plumbing into the ground. This is why you should stay away from
showers, sinks, hot tubs, etc., and electronic equipment such as TV's, radios, and computers.

Lightning can damage or destroy electronics so it's important to have a proper lightning
protection system connected to your electronic equipment. The American Meteorological Society
has tips for protecting your electronics from lightning.

Unsafe Buildings
Examples of buildings which are unsafe include car ports, covered but open garages, covered
patio, picnic shelters, beach shacks/pavilions, golf shelters, camping tents, large outdoor tents,
baseball dugouts and other small buildings such as sheds and greenhouses that do not have
electricity or plumbing.

Safe Vehicle
A safe vehicle is a hard-topped car, SUV, minivan, bus, tractor, etc. (soft-topped convertibles are
not safe). If you seek shelter in your vehicle, make sure all doors are closed and windows rolled
up. Do not touch any metal surfaces.

If you're driving when a thunderstorm starts, pull off the roadway. A lightning flash hitting the
vehicle could startle you and cause temporary blindness, especially at night.

Do not use electronic devices such as HAM radios or cell phones during a thunderstorm.
Lightning striking the vehicle, especially the antennas, could cause serious injury if you are
talking on the radio or holding the microphone at the time of the flash. Emergency officials such
as police officers, firefighters, security officers, etc., should use extreme caution using radio
equipment when lightning is in the area.

Your vehicle and its electronics may be damaged if hit by lightning. Vehicles struck by lightning
are known to have flat tires the next day. This occurs because the lightning punctures tiny holes
in the tires. Vehicles have caught fire after being struck by lightning; however, there is no
modern day documented cases of vehicles "exploding" due to a lightning flash.

Bolts from the Blue
There are times when a lightning flash can travel horizontally many miles away from the
thunderstorm cloud itself and then strike the ground. These types of lightning flashes are called
"Bolts from the Blue" because they seem to come out of a clear blue sky. Although these
flashes are rare, they have been known to cause fatalities.

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When a Safe Location is Nearby:
  • Seek safe shelter when you first hear thunder, see dark threatening clouds developing
    overhead or lightning. Count the seconds between the time you see lightning and hear
    the thunder. You should already be in a safe location if that time is less than 30 seconds.
  • Stay inside until 30 minutes after you last hear thunder.

Click here to calculate how far lightning is away from you

Plan Ahead! Your best source of up-to-date weather information is a NOAA Weather Radio
(NWR). Portable weather radios are handy for outdoor activities. If you don't have NWR, stay up
to date via internet, TV, local radio or cell phone. If you are in a group, make sure all leaders or
members of the group have a lightning safety plan and are ready to use it.
Determine how far you are from a safe enclosed building or a safe vehicle. As soon as you hear
thunder, see lightning or see dark threatening clouds, get to a safe location. Then wait 30
minutes after the last rumble of thunder before you leave the safe location. If you are part of a
group, particularly a large one, you will need more time to get all group members to safety. NWS
recommends having professional lightning detection equipment so your group can be alerted
from significant distances from the event site.

When groups are involved, the time needed to get to safety increases. So you need to start
leaving sooner. Your entire group should already be in a safe location when the approaching
storm reaches within 5 miles from your location.

Here two common scenarios with suggestions on how to safely respond.

Coach of Outdoor Sports Team
You are a manager of a little league team and have a game this evening at the local recreational
park. The weather forecast for the day calls for a partly cloudy skies, with a chance of
thunderstorms by early evening. You arrive in your vehicle while the kids arrive with their parents.
Once arriving at the park, you notice the only buildings are the restroom's, an enclosed building.
Shortly after sunset, the skies start to cloud up and you see bright flashes in the sky to the west.
The local radio station mentions storms are on the way.

In this case, the safest locations are the vehicles the kids came in or the rest rooms. You
should have a choice of allowing the kids to go back to their vehicles or bring everyone into the
restroom's. It is important NOT to stay in the dugouts as they are not safe place during lightning
activity. Once at a safe place, wait 30 minutes after the last rumble of thunder before going back
outside.

Family at the Beach
You plan to go to the beach or lake later this morning with the kids. The weather forecast calls
for a nice morning followed by a 30 percent chance of afternoon thunderstorms. You decide to
head for the beach in your minivan. The beach is about 5 minutes from the parking lot. The only
nearby buildings are picnic shelters. By early afternoon you notice the skies darkening and hear
distant thunder. What would be your lightning safety plan of action?

In this case, the best place to go is your car. Do NOT seek shelter under the beach picnic
shacks because these are not safe in lightning storms. Wait 30 minutes until after the last
thunder crack before going back to the beach or driving home.

Camping
You and your family are camping. As you and your spouse are preparing dinner on the camp
stove, you here rumbles of thunder in the distance. You look around and you see your tent is
nearby, and a large picnic shelter is just down the trail. Your car is about ¼ of a mile away
parked at the trail head. What should you and your family do?

In this case, the smartest thing to do is to round up your family and get into your car. The tent is
not a safe place to be as it offers NO protection from a lighting flash. The picnic shelter is also
not a safe location. (Both the tent and picnic shelter will keep you dry…but they offer NO
protection from a lightning flash). It is best to remain in your vehicle for about 30 minutes after
the last rumble of thunder is heard.



When a Safe Location Is Not Nearby
The lightning safety community reminds you that there is NO safe place to be outside in a
thunderstorm. If you absolutely can't get to safety, this section is designed to help you lessen
the threat of being struck by lightning while outside. Don't kid yourself--you are NOT safe outside.

Being stranded outdoors when lightning is striking nearby is a harrowing experience. Your first
and only truly safe choice is to get to a safe building or vehicle. If you are camping, climbing, on
a motorcycle or bicycle, boating, scuba diving, or enjoying other outdoor activities and cannot get
to a safe vehicle or shelter, follow these last resort tips. These will not prevent you from being
hit, just slightly lesson the odds.

  • Do NOT seek shelter under tall isolated trees. The tree may help you stay dry but will
    significantly increase your risk of being struck by lightning. Rain will not kill you, but the
    lightning can!
  • Do NOT seek shelter under partially enclosed buildings
  • Stay away from tall, isolated objects. Lightning typically strikes the tallest object. That
    may be you in an open field or clearing.
  • Know the weather patterns of the area. For example, in mountainous areas,
    thunderstorms typically develop in the early afternoon, so plan to hike early in the day
    and be down the mountain by noon.
  • Know the weather forecast. If there is a high chance of thunderstorms, curtail your
    outdoor activities.
  • Do not place your campsite in an open field on the top of a hill or on a ridge top. Keep
    your site away from tall isolated trees or other tall objects. If you are in a forest, stay near
    a lower stand of trees. If you are camping in an open area, set up camp in a valley,
    ravine, or other low area. A tent offers NO protection from lighting.
  • Wet ropes can make excellent conductors. This is BAD news when it comes to lightning
    activity. If you are mountain climbing and see lightning, and can do so safely, remove
    unnecessary ropes extended or attached to you. If a rope is extended across a mountain
    face and lightning makes contact with it, the electrical current will likely travel along the
    rope, especially if it is wet.
  • Stay away from metal objects, such as fences, poles and backpacks. Metal is an
    excellent conductor. The current from a lightning flash will easily travel for long distances

If lightning is in the immediate area, and there is no safe location nearby, stay a little apart from
other members of your group so the lightning won't travel between you if hit. Keep your feet
together and sit on the ground out in the open. If you can possible run to a vehicle or building,
DO so. It is much safer than sitting on the ground.

Motorcyclist/Bicyclist: So has anyone been hit riding a bike? Here are just a few real examples
from the last few years.

  • Virginia Beach, VA: Motorcyclist killed while traveling on Route 58.
  • Altoona, PA: One motorcycle rider killed and three riders injured when they took shelter in
    a woods from a thunderstorm.
  • Wyoming: Motorcyclist injured while driving home on I-90 from Sturgis.
  • Taylor Park, CO: Dirt biker injured while heading down mountain pass.

Protect Yourself when on a bicycle, motorcycle or dirt bike.

  • Carry a portable Weather Radio or listen to commercial radio.
  • If you see threatening skies in the distance and you are passing a safe location, pull
    over and wait 30 minutes after the last thunder crack.
  • If you can turn around and get away from the storm, do so!
  • DO NOT ride into a lighting storm!

If you absolutely cannot get to a safe building or vehicle, here are some last resort choices:

  • Wait out the storm below an overpass. DO NOT touch steel girders. Move away from your
    bike. Remain on dry surfaces if possible. Overpasses are engineered structures and
    are likely to be properly grounded. Although an overpass is likely to be higher than the
    surrounding landscape, if it is struck by lightning, the electrical current will likely be
    channeled safely into the ground.
  • Look for a bridge. Stay away from water. Stay away from any metal surfaces. Be alert for
    rapidly rising water if under a bridge.
  • High tension wires: If high voltage electrical tension wires cross the road, you may want
    to seek shelter directly underneath these wires. Do not get too close to the large metal
    towers which hold up these wires. Stay at least 50 feet away. Electric companies design
    these high tension wires for lightning strikes. If lighting should strike the wires or towers,
    the current is designed to safely go deep into the ground.
  • If you are caught in the open and lightning is occurring within 5 miles, STOP riding, get
    off of your motorcycle/bicycle, find a ditch or other low spot and sit down.
  • Motorcyclists should move at least 50 feet away from their bike. Bicyclist should lay their
    bikes on the ground.

IMPORTANT: These recommendations are a last resort. You are NOT safe in these places
just marginally safer than in the open.

On the Water
The vast majority of lightning injuries and deaths on boats occur on small boats with NO cabin.
It is crucial to listen to the weather on a small aquatic vessel without a cabin. If thunderstorms
are forecast, don't go out. If you are out on the water and skies are threatening, get back to land
and find a safe building or vehicle.

Boats with cabins offer a safer but not perfect environment. Safety is increased further if the boat
has a properly installed lightning protection system. If you are inside the cabin, stay away from
metal and all electrical components. STAY OFF THE RADIO UNLESS IT IS AN ABSOLUTE
EMERGENCY!

What should you do if you are on a small vessel and lightning becomes a threat? If the vessel
has an anchor, then you should properly anchor the boat then get as low as possible.

Large boats with cabins, especially those with lightning protection systems properly installed or
metal marine vessels are relatively safe. Remember to stay inside the cabin and away from any
metal surfaces.

Scuba Divers
If the boat you are in does not have a safe cabin to be in during lightning activity, then you are
safer diving deep into the water for the duration of the storm or as long as possible. Your first
choice is to head in and get in safe building or vehicle.
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Lightning Safety Awareness Week
June 18-24, 2006