Decade after Elie tornado, former storm chaser remembers every detail - Action News
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Manitoba

Decade after Elie tornado, former storm chaser remembers every detail

When Justin Hobson left work one June evening 10 years ago, he was hoping he might spot something the amateur storm chaser had never seen.

Forceful twister that tore through community west of Winnipeg was the first official F-5 tornado in Canada

Environment Canada officials inspect damage in Elie, Man., in June 2007. (The Canadian Press)

When Justin Hobson left work one June evening 10 years ago, the storm chaser was hoping he might spot something he had never seen before.

Still an undergraduate science student, Hobson had known for days that weather conditionsforming around southern Manitoba might produce a tornado.

He became fascinated with severe weather as a 12-year-oldwatching the summer blockbuster Twister in 1996, and later took up storm chasing just like the movie's main characters.

He still remembers clearly the tropicalheat and humidity the day he finally got to see a twister in real life.

In the days leading up to June 22, 2007,Hobson was refreshing Environment Canada's radar constantly, watching for a storm to show up on his screen.

"It was extremely unstable that day," he remembers.

The tornado in Elie, Man., on June 22, 2007 was the first record F-5 tornado in Canada. (Justin Hobson)

Above the humid air near the surface was a mass of colder air. Winds were fierce and changing directions in higher altitudes ideal tornado conditions.

Hobson said just before 5 p.m.,he left work in Winnipeg and began driving home towardOak Bluff. OnMcGillivray Boulevard, he got a first glimpse of the storm he'd been hoping for.

"It looked like a mushroom cloud growing," he said. "I was so excited."
Justin Hobson, after years of chasing storms, now works as a forecaster with Environment Canada. (Justin Hobson)

After a quick stop at home for his baseball cap and camera, Hobson drove toward Elie, about 45kilometres west of Winnipeg, where the clouds were darkest.

Around 6 p.m., and just over a kilometresouth of the centre of the storm, he parked his car on a gravel road between fields, eyes focused on the clouds above.

The speed at which the storm churned was unlike anything he had ever seen.

"That one sticks out how fast it was developing."

Not long after, a wall cloud lower cloud below the updraft of the storm formed, which is often a precursor to a tornado. Thensmall funnel clouds began to "dance" down to the ground, Hobson said, only to be sucked back up into the swell.

'It was quite calm,' storm chaser recalls

Around 6:30 p.m., he saw thetornadothat would go on to do so much damage in Elieform. It also turned out to be the first-ever F-5 tornado recorded in Canada.

That means the tornado topped the Fujita scale, a system devised to measure the strength of a tornado. An F-5 tornado would have been estimated to have produced winds between 420km/h and 510km/h. The Fujita scale has since been replaced with the enhanced Fujita, or EF, scale.

"It just grew and grew and then got skinny again and then really grew, and that's what led to the destruction as it crept toward the town," saidHobson.

While the tornado reached speeds of up to 500 km/h, Hobsonsaid he never felt scared or threatened by it.

"It was quite calm. The birds were chirping," Hobson said. "It was actually peaceful."

Elie tornado anniversary

7 years ago
Duration 0:32
Today marks the 10th anniversary of the Elie Manitoba tornado. It was and still is Canada's largest recorded twister in history.

The tornado ended up lasting about 40 minutes, according to data collected by Environment Canada. It travelled about six kilometres, mostly throughfields, but caused significant damage in the community of Elie.

There, the tornado flattened homes, tore apart a flour mill, smashed trucks and ripped out hydro lines.

At one point it picked up a two-storey house and threw it 23 metres. It also sucked up a van full of drywall and tossed it 100 metres, according to Environment Canada.

Amazingly, no one was killed in the storm, with only minor injuries reported.

Hobson recalls seeingreminders of the storm's power like fluffs of insulation and shingles landing on the ground around his vehicle ashe drovehome after the tornado had ended.

"That was obviously the debris that got lifted from the tornado hitting the town," he said.

He later turned the experience into a master's thesis. He nowworks as a forecaster with Environment Canada.

with files from Robin Summerfield