Tornado touched down Sunday in Fergus, Ont., experts confirm
A tornado left a path of destruction in Fergus, Ont. on Sunday.
That was confirmed by the Northern Tornadoes Project (NTP), based out of Western University in London, Ont., after their experts visited the small community on Monday.
The survey team has given the twister a preliminary rating of EF0, the lowest rating on the Enhanced Fujita Scale, with estimated wind speeds between 90 km/h and 130 km/h.
Reaction from residents
Tabitha Champagne said she’s always keeping an eye on the skies.
“I love weather, so I generally will check the radar every day. Yesterday it looked pretty boring.”
She was at home in Kitchener, Ont. when things started to really pick up around 9:30 p.m.
“All of the sudden, it literally broke loose,” Champagne told CTV News. “It went from 30 km/h winds to, like, 100 [km/h]. It was pouring and there was ice mixed in with it.”
A tree leans on the roof of a home in Fergus, Ont. on Nov. 11, 2024 after a possible tornado was reported on Nov. 10, 2024. (Tom Podolec/CTV News)
Jay Price was at his Fergus, Ont. home when the storm drew his attention away from the television.
“All of a sudden, you could hear the thunder and the wind just picked up,” he recalled. “It was probably the strongest wind I’ve ever seen in my life. It just whipped right through.”
He spoke to CTV News on Monday morning, while trying to remove a tree that had fallen onto his roof. No one inside the home felt the impact, but Price said it came close to his son’s bedroom window.
“It was probably the weirdest thing I’ve been a part of in my life. It was almost surreal,” he said. “You weren’t sure what was happening.”
Emergency response
While the storm was felt throughout Wellington County, Guelph and the Region of Waterloo, most of the damage was reported near Fergus.
Crews from Centre Wellington Fire Rescue responded to a couple of calls during the storm, but overall, Deputy Fire Chief Jonathan Karn said the community fared pretty well.
“We were out twice last night to a fire alarm as well as some [hydro] wires down due to trees that came down,” he explained “No significant calls for us last night with the storm.”
Emergency responders assess the damage outside a Fergus, Ont. home on Nov. 11, 2024 after a possible tornado was reported on Nov. 10, 2024. (Tom Podolec/CTV News)
Tornado investigation
On Monday morning, NTP confirmed a survey team had been dispatched to Fergus to investigate "potentially tornadic damage.”
“[The storm] strengthened as it came through the middle parts of Ontario, through London and Kitchener,” explained NTP executive director David Sills. “As it went through the Fergus area, we saw there was a rollup in the precipitation and there was some rotation, even some evidence of lofted debris, so we believe that there was probably a tornado.”
He said the investigation could also expand to nearby communities.
“Fergus is where we know there was an enhanced area of damage, so we’ll start there. Through the day, we will probably get more reports and we can expand outward from there. This looks like it could be a longer track, maybe. It might even extend toward the Erin area. We have a report of damage there.”
A man loads broken tree branches into a wood chipper near Fergus, Ont. on Nov. 11, 2024 after a possible tornado was reported on Nov. 10, 2024. (Tom Podolec/CTV News)
Ontario’s “tornado corridor”
The latest investigation comes after the Northern Tornadoes Project confirmed a tornado hit the community of Ayr, Ont. in August. Initially investigators believed the storm was an EF1, but it was later upgraded to an EF2 tornado after researchers reviewed additional evidence.
Sills said twisters are common through this stretch of southern Ontario.
“From Windsor to north of Toronto, and then out to eastern Ontario, kind of north of [Highway] 401, that area is where we see a lot of our tornado activity in southern Ontario, our own little tornado corridor, and that’s focused there by the Great Lakes.”
It’s also not unusual to see them this late in the season.
“Way back in the 1960’s, there was a tornado that went through the Exeter region in December,” Sills said. “So even December isn’t out of the question. It’s just a question of whether the ingredients come together or not. Sometimes we get these low pressure systems coming through. They pump in that Gulf air and, even if it’s kind of out of season, and if the ingredients are there we can get a tornado.”
- With reporting by Ashley Bacon
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
N.Y. prosecutors charge Luigi Mangione with murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO, court records show
Late Monday, Manhattan prosecutors filed murder and other charges against Luigi Nicholas Mangione in the killing of UnitedHealthcare's CEO, according to an online court docket.
Union dropped wage demand to 19% over four years in Canada Post negotiations: CUPW
The Canadian Union of Postal Workers has reportedly dropped its wage demand to 19 per cent over four years, CUPW negotiator Jim Gallant told CTV News.
Taxpayer-funded Eras Tour tickets returned by federal minister
While tens of thousands of fans packed Vancouver's BC Place for the last shows of Taylor Swift's Eras Tour this weekend, a federal cabinet minister wasn't one of them.
Alan Young, lawyer and scholar known for landmark legal challenges, dies at age 69
York University says Alan Young, a lawyer and legal scholar known for leading the challenge of Canada's prostitution laws before the country's top court, has died at age 69.
What the upcoming holiday GST relief will mean for consumers
The federal government's GST break will arrive this Saturday, just in time for the last stretch of holiday shopping.
Canada Post strike on day 26 as union sends new proposals
With the Canada Post strike nearing four weeks, the postal service says it doesn't see an end in sight.
'Looking for the Weinstein of Quebec': impresario Gilbert Rozon's civil trial begins
Just for Laughs founder Gilbert Rozon's civil trial for sexual assault opened Monday at the Montreal courthouse with his lawyer portraying him as the scapegoat in a hunt to find Quebec's Harvey Weinstein.
AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton to receive Nobel Prize in physics today
British Canadian computer scientist Geoffrey Hinton and co-laureate John Hopfield are set to receive their Nobel Prize for physics at a ceremony in Stockholm today.
Israel's Netanyahu takes the stand in long-running corruption trial
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu took the stand on Tuesday in his long-running trial for alleged corruption, setting off what's expected to be a weeks-long spectacle that will draw unwelcome attention to his legal woes as he faces an international arrest warrant for war crimes and the fighting in Gaza continues.