Warin wrote:You and your tent do not want to be the highest point around.
Lightening tends to strike the high points.
If you feel your hairs standing on end ... that is a prelude to a lightening strike... if possible move to a lower point, if not crouch down - keep feet together for a single point of contact to the ground.
To add....eggs wrote:So the feet can be at a significantly different voltage to the head - hence the ability to form a current through the body without an actual hit with lightning.
Crouching with feet close together minimises the voltage that can traverse the body from the ground difference.
Cows can get quite a shock between the front and rear legs..
keithj wrote:If there's a lightening stike close by there may be a voltage difference between each leg when you walk, so either shuffle or walk with tiny steps to minimise it. Same for fallen HV cables.
Avatar wrote:AI says:I use a 3mm CCF foam mat under an air mattress and 6mm CCF above.
Is this enough of an electrical insulator from the ground or is crouching in the tent better?
north-north-west wrote:Lightning, not lightening. Two different words, two different spellings, two different meanings.
I'm really disappointed with some of you.
Tortoise wrote:north-north-west wrote:Lightning, not lightening. Two different words, two different spellings, two different meanings.
I'm really disappointed with some of you.
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My only excuse is that my brain is scrambled egg at the moment. Mild cognitive impairment perhaps?
north-north-west wrote:Lightning, not lightening. Two different words, two different spellings, two different meanings.
I'm really disappointed with some of you.
johnw wrote:north-north-west wrote:Lightning, not lightening. Two different words, two different spellings, two different meanings.
I'm really disappointed with some of you.
So am I
Tortoise wrote:johnw wrote:north-north-west wrote:Lightning, not lightening. Two different words, two different spellings, two different meanings.
I'm really disappointed with some of you.
So am I
Not a patch on how disappointed pedants can be with themselves. But we digress.
Lostsoul wrote:Just today I was caught in a thunderstorm with lightning close by,paddling from Narcissus to Cynthia Bay.Was on the part crossing the bay,had no where to go and just kept paddling and hoped for the best.
Biggles wrote:I've spent a few wild nights on Feathertop (camping area) and Sealers Cove (Wilsons Prom) in truly frightening electrical storms, but it was nothing to an historical event, the memory of which haunts me of the danger that awaits out in the open.
If you're a mere speck in the wide open spaces with a camera on a tripod, as I was in 2013 on the vast and lonely Mundi Mundi Plain outside Silverton, NSW, beware of the storm. I had driven out onto the Plain to watch and hopefully photograph a typically wild outback thunderstorm; lightning was very active on the horizon. The storm's leading edge, with energetic lightning either side, was about 10-15km away. I thought it was safe to stay there for a few minutes, but...then came the experience: a bluish-purplish tinge (the second occasion I have experienced this, the first being just outside Tennant Creek where I was working in 2011) — St Elmo's Fire is an indicator of a boisterous charge building up very close by. I picked up my tripod, camera bag and dashed 400m back to the car. As the storm moved forward and lightning illuminated the dusk, a profoundly blinding bolt of lightning struck a group of boulders a few metres from where I was standing. This frightening event was recounted at Silverton camping ground, where the manager there, a keen photographer himself, told me that the Plain is the worst place to be with lightning active. The following morning (beautiful, calm and warm, in typical post-storm outback fashion!) I returned and looked at the outcrop of granite — blackened, smouldering and smashed with scorch marks on the earth. The indents from my tripod's spike feet were still clearly visible — and only 7m measured from the rock outcrop to the leftmost tripod leg.
Avatar wrote:
Great anecdote. Luck was with you that day. I don't think anyone will have a closer strike story without severe injury.
Sealers is fairly sheltered but the trees would have been of concern.
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