Go to your basement immediately. Find a corner without windows, crouch down and over your head.
If you do not have a basement get to a room in the center part of your house on the lowest floor. A bathroom or closet is best.
Again, stay away from windows.
you should go to the safest part of your house like bathroom with no windows!
no
1. Stay away from windows. 2. Get into a basement or storm cellar.
Get to the basement or storm cellar. If you don't have one go to a room in the center part of your house away from windows. A bathroom or closet is best.
Well, yes and no. If the waterspout comes ashore and hits the beach house, it can destroy it. But if the waterspout comes ashore, it is no longer a waterspout - it is a tornado.
You need. to go as low as you can. The safest place in your home is the basement. Go as low as you can and cover your head. Try to put yourself under a table and hang on so the tornado does not pull you away. Always be safe!
Well this depends where you are if you are at your home you should get to your basement. If you were driving down the street and a tornado comes you should find a sturdy building or, if none is available, a ditch.
House Tornado was created in 1988.
No house can offer 100% protection from a tornado. The best option is a house with a basement to go to in case of a tornado.
Generally you should shelter in place during a tornado as you are more likely to survive if caught in your house than if caught in a car. Evacuating from a tornado is not as simple as it sounds, as the paths of tornadoes can be unpredictable and it is possible to get stuck in traffic since peak tornado activity often coincides with the evening rush hour. That said, if you are in a mobile home when a tornado is coming you should leave it for sturdier shelter.
The house is invading the tornado's natural habitat, so of course the tornado will fight to keep its territory.
cellar. or if it comes to it your bathtub cover yourself with a mattress