| Of all the weather types
associated with thunderstorms – hail, tornadoes, floods, etc – lightning
is usually the most dangerous. In the United States there are an
estimated 25 million cloud to ground lightning flashes each year and
each one is a potential threat to life and property. During the past 10
years there has been an annual average of 44 lightning fatalities in the
United States. Vermont is ranked # 17th
per capita in lightning related deaths (1959 – 2003) One of the great
things about Vermont are the outdoor activities we all enjoy, but there
comes a time when we need to head indoors.

Lightning Fast Facts
- If you can see
it or hear it, you can be struck. Find shelter now.
- The primary rule
for lightning safety:
When Thunder Roars, Go
Indoors!
- Lightning is the
number two weather killer in the United States (behind floods),
killing more than hurricanes and tornadoes combined.
- Lightning kills
about 60 people in the U.S. each year and inflicts severe life-long
debilitating injuries on at least a 1,000 people a year.
- Every 5 seconds
between flash and boom is a mile’s distance from you.
- Under ideal
conditions, lightning’s thunder can be heard 12 miles away.
- Lightning is
really no wider than a few inches.
- “Bolts from the
Blue” – These lightning flashes have been documented to travel more
than 25 miles away from the thunderstorm cloud. Clear skies above
you are no indication of how dangerous a nearby storm is!
- The air within a
lightning strike can reach 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Lightning can
heat its path five times hotter than the surface of the sun.
- One ground
lightning stroke can generate between 100 million and 1 billion
volts of electricity.
Lightning Safety Facts
- The “30-30 Rule” offers easy to
follow lightning safety guidance. When you see lightning, count the
time until you hear thunder. If that time is 30 seconds or less, the
thunderstorm is close enough to be dangerous. Seek shelter. If you
can’t see the lightning, just hearing the thunder is a good back-up
rule. Wait at least 30 minutes after the lightning flash before
leaving shelter.
- No place outside
is safe during a thunderstorm!
- A house, or
other fully enclosed building with wiring and plumbing offers your
best protection against lightning. Once inside stay off of corded
telephones, computers and other electrical appliances and stay away
from sinks, showers, indoor pools and other plumbing. Don’t watch
lightning from windows or doorways. Inner rooms are safer.
- A car with a
metal roof and sides is your second best protection against
lightning. As in a house, don’t touch any conducting paths leading
outside. It is the metal shell that protects you, not the rubber
tires.
- Lightning causes
about $5 billion of economic impact in the U.S. each year!
What are the odds?
Here are some scary statistics to think about.
The odds of an individual being a lightning casualty
(injured) in a year in the U.S. is about 280,000-to-1. If you’re an
average person, in an average location, with average outside activities,
and average lightning safety behavior. That’s about 3,000-to-one over
your lifetime, with about 300-to-one odds of being seriously affected by
a family member or friend being a lightning survivor.
The odds of an individual being killed by lightning
each year in the U.S. is about 3 million-to-1, if you’re an average
person, in an average location, with average outside activities, and
average lightning safety behavior. That’s about 35,000-to-one over a
life time, and about 3,000-to-one of being seriously affected by a
family member or friend being killed by lightning.
Think about that.
Three thousand to one odds that
you yourself will be injured by lightning over your lifetime.
That’s not very good odds at all. The next time you are outside
and you see the telltale flash or hear the rumble, keep this in mind and
please take appropriate precautions – the odds are against you if you
don’t!
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