Get to a basement or storm cellar and crouch down facing a wall covering you head. If you do not have a basement get to an interior room, hallway or closet on the lowest floor of the building you're in.
Get in the lowest place possible, i.e. basement, safe, etc. Make sure you are away from windows, glass, anything that can break. Have an emergency first aid kit including the following:
*Gallons/Bottles of water
*Radio
*Flashlights
*Extra Batteries
*Band-aids/Medicine/Med. Wrap/etc
Hope that helps. Good luck and stay safe.
If you are outside during a tornado, go to the nearest stable building (not a mobile home). If you cannot get into a building, keeping as low to the ground as possible is advisable; a ditch is a good last-resort measure.
You should immediately take cover as fast as you can. Being outside in a tornado can be very dangerous. The best thing to do is to look for a building in which you can hide. If there are no buildings close by, go into the nearest ditch possible and cover your head.
When there's a tornado coming, you should go in your basement and hide because since basements are underground, a tornado won't be able to hit your basement. If you don't have a basement, you should go to a room with no windows.
You should immediately take cover. If you are driving and you see a tornado, do not try to outrun it. Get out of the car and get into the nearest ditch possible. If there is no ditch, curl up in a ball and cover your head near some shelter. If you are at school, go to the hallway where there are no windows and crouch down and cover your head. If you are at home, huddle in the basement or in some small room where there are no windows.
If there is time, go to a prepared underground storm shelter,
or to an interior room in a large steel-framed or concrete building.
If indoors at home, seek shelter in a central room on the lowest floor, away from windows, and under a sturdy desk or table. In an emergency, the bathtub in your bathroom can provide some protection.
If outdoors, find a low place such as a concrete ditch or culvert, where you will have some protection from flying debris.
You shouldn't even be outside during a tornado. But if your trapped outside, get in a storm shelter or a near by building.
You go in the basement and find something storey to hid under.
you should not panic and remember all the things you need to do especially find a place where you can be safe ...
You should go to your basement or a central room with no windows and hunch down.
There is no tornado that can definitively be said to be the weakest. The lowest rating a tornado can get is EF0. When you get into the lower ranges of EF0 it becomes debatable as to whether an event should even be considered a tornado.
A tornado is a naturally occurring event.
No. A tornado is a weather event, so it is meteorological.
No. Climate is that average weather in a region over a long period of time. A tornado is a brief weather event.
No. A cyclone is a different kind of weather event.
That peril should be considered wind.
Yes. A tornado could be considered an event.
There is no tornado that can definitively be said to be the weakest. The lowest rating a tornado can get is EF0. When you get into the lower ranges of EF0 it becomes debatable as to whether an event should even be considered a tornado.
Nobody controls a tornado; it is a natural event.
Yes. A tornado is a violent weather event.
The best place to be in the event of a tornado is in a basement or cellar. If that is not an option, then go to an interior room on the lowest floor of your house.
A tornado is a naturally occurring event.
No. A tornado is a weather event, so it is meteorological.
Tornado Alley did not occur. It was not an event. Tornado Alley is a region in the central United States.
You can't exacly live near a tornado. A tornado is a short-lived event, usually lasting no more than a few minutes and it is impossible to predict exactly where one one strike.
Yes. A tornado is a type of violent weather event.
The tornado