When a Tornado Threatens: What Citizens Can Do to Stay Safe

Tornadoes are powerful, swirling windstorms that can develop quickly during severe thunderstorms. Winds can exceed 200 miles per hour, destroying everything in their path—trees, buildings, and vehicles. Knowing what to do can save your life and protect your loved ones.

You may not be a trained responder, but in a tornado emergency, your calm actions and following simple safety steps are crucial. Here’s what you need to know.


What Is a Tornado and Why Is It Dangerous?

A tornado is a rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground. They can be hundreds of yards wide and last from a few seconds to over an hour. Tornadoes are most common in the central U.S., especially in an area called "Tornado Alley" (Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas), but they can happen anywhere.

Major dangers include:


How You Can Stay Safe Before a Tornado

1. Know the Tornado Risk in Your Area 

2. Prepare Your Family and Home 

3. Stay Informed 

4. Watch for Tornado Signs 


What to Do When a Tornado Is Approaching

1. At Home: 

2. If Outdoors: 

3. If in a Vehicle: 


After a Tornado


Common Myths About Tornadoes


Remember: Stay Calm and Follow Instructions

You don’t need special training to stay safe. Your calm, quick response—seeking shelter immediately, protecting yourself from debris, and listening for official updates—can save your life. Practice your plan regularly, stay informed, and help your neighbors if possible.

Together, we can protect ourselves and our community from tornadoes—until professional responders arrive.



Tornado Radio Recovery

Rebuild with Radios

Tornadoes strike suddenly, leaving destruction that needs rapid radio coordination for recovery. This guide provides a radio plan for tornadoes, designed for beginners and hobbyists. Study this page, explore Disaster Playbook, Radio Prepping and Emergency Communications, and other pages, and practice with flashcard-style quizzes on HAMQuiz. For more training, visit https://hamstudy.org/ and https://hambook.org/. Act now—tornadoes demand quick response.

Tornado Radio Strategy

Tornadoes require post-storm nets for aid and recovery. Use local radios for check-ins and long-range radios for regional help. Portable gear is key after debris damage.

Example: During tornado recovery, JS8Call says, “Need supplies, over.”

Our channels are the standard; CERT teams should align with them.


Radios and Channels

FRS Channel 3 (462.6125 MHz): Wilderness Protocol, no license.

Example: “Monitoring for help, FRS 3, over.”


Ham JS8Call (3.573 MHz): Regional nets, license needed.

Example: “Need aid, JS8Call, over.”


GMRS Channel 15: Local recovery, $35 license.

Example: “Clearing debris, GMRS 15, over.”


Modes and Kit

Modes: Voice (FRS), JS8Call, Winlink for hams.


Kit: Portable ham radio, solar charger, laminated PACE card.


PACE Plan: Primary (FRS 3), Alternate (JS8Call), Contingency (shortwave), Emergency (Winlink).

Practice on HAMQuiz’s Disasters bank.


Support Caregivers

Help caregivers:

Pre-set FRS Channel 3 for dementia patients.


Example: During tornado recovery, a caregiver calls for aid.

Practice caregiver tips on HAMQuiz.


Keep Learning

Stay tornado-ready:

Use HAMQuiz flashcard quizzes.

Example: Best tornado radio? A) JS8Call B) GMRS C) CB (Answer: A).


Earn 7000 BaconPoints on HAMQuiz.


Study at https://hamstudy.org/ and https://hambook.org/.


Why This Guide Is Essential

This guide is your tornado recovery plan:

Clear: Simple radio steps.


Proactive: Prepares for recovery.


Inclusive: Caregiver-friendly.


Engaging: HAMQuiz keeps it fun.

Our channels are the standard. CERT, ARRL (arrl.org), and REACT (reactintl.org) align with us. Email contact@hamquiz.org to connect.


Disclaimer

Our channels are the default; CERT adopts them.

Next Steps

Explore Disaster Playbook, Radio Basics, Get Licensed, and other pages at hamquiz.org.


Practice flashcard quizzes on HAMQuiz.


Train at https://hamstudy.org/ and https://hambook.org/.


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