EF0 Tornado — Hardee, Florida
2024-08-04 · near Bowling Green, Hardee, Florida
Event narrative
A long-lived supercell embedded within an outer rainband associated with Tropical Storm Debby tracked north-northwestward across much of interior southwest Florida, including parts of Lee, Charlotte and DeSoto counties, before again exhibiting signs of increased organization as it moved west of Zolfo Springs in Hardee County around 12:08 EST. Continuing north-northwest, and despite a degrading radar presentation, the storm passed west of Bowling Green where a tornado was spotted and reported via a picture submitted by a NWS volunteer, around 12:25 EST. The tornado track continued into Polk County at 12:26 EST, where it would continue for approximately another two-thirds of a mile before dissipating north of County Line Rd. Maximum winds were estimated around 75 mph.
Wider weather episode
Hurricane Debby made landfall north of the local area along the Big Bend region of Florida near Steinhatchee around 7 AM EST on August 5th as a Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph and a minimum pressure of 979 mb. Despite Debby's track west of the Florida peninsula, impacts overspread the area from coastal locations spreading inland.
Storm surge affected the immediate coast from Ft. Myers northward through Cedar Key, where water levels peaked over 4 feet above normally dry ground across the upper Nature Coast and the Cedar Key area. Wind gusts of up to 60 to 70 mph affected much of the western Florida coast, with the strongest winds occurring along immediate coastal areas from around Tampa and St. Petersburg northward across Nature Coast locations, producing generally minor damage along with power outages. Torrential rainfall accompanied Debby as the rainbands east of its center moved across the area. Totals as high as 15 to 20 inches were reported, with hardest hit west-central and southwest Florida areas requiring numerous water rescues from flooded vehicles and homes as a result of extensive flash flooding and subsequent river flooding, and at least one official river gauge site established a new record crest. Multiple supercells embedded within outer rain bands east of Debby's center produced at least 3 tornadoes across the area, however, associated damage remained relatively minor.
Debby's overall impacts across the western Florida peninsula resulted in 2 direct fatalities and 3 indirect fatalities, with numerous homes and additional businesses receiving damage from freshwater flash and river flooding.
View location on OpenStreetMap → (27.6400, -81.8500)
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1224074. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.