High Wind — Summers, West Virginia
2024-09-27 · Summers, West Virginia
Event narrative
Over 50 trees and power lines were downed by high winds associated with the remnants of Hurricane Helene, resulting in road closures and power outages. At the peak of the strong winds, around 1 PM on Friday, nearly 1,400 customers were without power. A personal weather station near Lockbridge measured a peak wind gust of 65 mph at 12:13 PM EDT.
Wider weather episode
Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida as a powerful Category 4 hurricane late Thursday, September 26, and moved quickly northward into the southeastern states, and then turned slightly northwestward towards the southern Appalachian Mountains overnight into Friday morning, weakening as it moved over land. Helene's intensity and fast forward motion led to impacts being felt well inland, from the Florida Big Bend area into the Appalachians, and there was extensive damage in parts of southeast West Virginia. Widespread power outages occurred as high winds downed hundreds of trees across the region. Winds gusted as high as 55 mph to 60 mph in southeast West Virginia.
Flooding impacts from Hurricane Helene were extensive across the area, and were exacerbated by a predecessor rainfall event that occurred a few days before Helene reached the region, which brought six to eight inches of rain to the mountains prior to the arrival of the remnants of Helene. The three day rainfall totals associated with the remnants of Hurricane Helene across southeast West Virginia were between three and six inches.
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1215651. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.