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Get out of the water when a storm builds up.
When lightning hits the water, the electricity runs across the surface and can hit you.
Seek shelter quickly. Avoid trees.

"Why is my head buzzing?"
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Thunder and Lightning |
Each year lightning claims many lives or causes injuries.
Up to 80% of those injuries happen when people use telephones during thunderstorms
and receive an electric shock, hearing damage, or burns when lightning strikes telephone wires in their area.
This is obviously the largest source of lightning related injuries.
Irrespective of this, when outdoors there is still great value in knowing what to do
if you get caught in a thunderstorm to minimise the risk of being struck.
First Aid
If someone has been struck be lightning,
apply immediate Expired Air Resuscitation (EAR) if not breathing,
or immediate Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) if no pulse.
Continue this until medical help arrives and they will have a good chance of survival.
You will not receive a shock from the victim.
Warning Signs
First long term warning signs are obviously the build up of storm clouds. This may be evident several hours prior to arrival of the thunderstorm, so it is worthwhile being aware of the surrounding weather to avoid being in a high risk location when the storm arrives.
Short term warning signs are the familiar sights and sounds of lightning and thunder.
The time difference between the lightning flash and the sound of the thunder can be used to estimate the distance to the lightning strike/storm. When there is a 10 second gap between the lightning and the thunder, the lightning is about 3 kilometres away - so at 3 seconds it is about 1 kilometre away. When the time difference is less than 10 seconds (lightning less then 3 kilometres away) it is time to seek shelter urgently!
Immediate warning signs which may precede a lightning strike are:
- A build up of static electricity like hair standing on end.
- "Buzzing" from nearby rocks, fences, and such.
- At night, a blue glow may show from an object that is about to be struck.
If you notice any of these signs, MOVE IMMEDIATELY!
How Lightning Strikes
Lightning (ground strike) occurs when the charge of static electricity in the clouds builds up to the point
where there is enough voltage for a spark to jump the gap from cloud to earth.
The charge in the cloud will be opposite to the corresponding charge induced on the ground.
These opposite charges are attracted, and will try to cancel each other out through the lightning strike.
High points, spikes and conductors will each affect the electric field, usually concentrating it.
This means that tall, pointy or conductive objects are more likely to be struck by lightning than other objects.
A Miss could still be a Hit!
Just before a lightning strike, the voltage (potential difference) between the cloud and the ground can be several million volts! The charge on the cloud and on the ground is dispersed over a relatively large area.
When the lightning strikes, the lightning bolt is actually a track of ionised molecules in the air. The average lightning bolt carries a current of 10,000 to 30,000 amps! (for only a very short time!). All this current must move from being dispersed over the ground (or cloud) to/from the lightning bolt, so large currents and voltages occur in the ground. The voltage is very high near the strike, and low away from it. This causes "step potential".
Step Potential
Step potential means that if someone touches the ground at two points,
one closer to the lightning strike than the other, an electric current will flow through them.
The closer the lightning strike, or the wider the step between the 2 points,
the higher the step potential, the higher the current, and the more serious the injuries.
So even if not directly hit by lightning, just being close by can result in electrocution
if good care is not taken to avoid the step potential.
Facts and Myths
When struck, people do not glow or "fry to a crisp", but the heart and breathing are often affected.
Only about 30% of people struck actually die, and the incidence of long term disability is low, particularly when first aid is applied promptly.
Lightning can and does strike in the same place more than once!
Worldwide, thunderstorms are producing approximately 6,000 lightning strikes every minute!
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Wait until the storm clears before you enter the water again.
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Do This :
- Seek shelter in a "hard top" vehicle or solid building.
These provide protection by conducting the lightning to earth around you.
- If driving, slow down or park away from trees, power lines, etc. Stay inside metal-bodied (hard top) vehicles or caravans but don't touch any metal sections.
- If far from shelter, crouch alone with feet together, preferably in a hollow.
This will keep you as low as possible without creating a step potential risk.
Remove metal objects from your head and body.
Avoid being the highest object.
- If boating, go ashore to shelter as soon as possible. A bridge or high jetty may offer immediate protection.
- Be sure the mast and stays of a sailing boat are adequately "grounded" to the water.
- If swimming or surfing leave the water immediately.
Keep any clothes on.
- Get your outer clothes wet in the rain to conduct any electricty away from your body.
If your clothes are wet, you are less likely to be seriously injured if struck, as most of the charge will conduct through the wet clothes rather than your body.
Put your hood up so it get wet in the rain and protects your head.
If possible, keep your inner clothes dry for insulation.
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Don't stand near spiky things.
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Do NOT Do This :
- Never shelter under a single tree or a small group of trees.
As the highest point in that area, the tree is likely to be struck.
Being near the tree increases the risk of step potential.
- Don't sit in small structures or fabric tents because the lack sufficient mass to conduct a lightning strike safely around you.
Depending on the method of construction they may even attract lightning.
- Don't fly kites or model aeroplanes with control wires.
- Don't handle fishing rods, umbrellas or golf clubs, etc.
- Don't stand near metal poles, fences, clothes lines, etc.
- Don't ride horses, cycles or drive in open vehicles.
- Don't lie down because of step potential.
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If your clothes are wet, you are less likely to be seriously injured when struck,
as most of the charge will conduct through the wet clothes rather than your body.
Put your wet hood up to protect your head.
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Man Escapes Lightning Bolt Death in Wet Clothes
Published: Jun 30, 2008 by Mike Baron
A Minnesota man by the name of Kent Lilyerd was out in his backyard during a thunderstorm attempting to protect his gazebo from flying away when he was struck by powerful lightning.
Kent Lilyerd, who was wearing a baseball cap with metal buttons, was wrestling with his gazebo when lightning struck one of the buttons on his hat.
The lightning struck his head and travelled through his wet clothes, re-entering through his steel-toed boots. Doctors say if it wasn't for his wet clothes, he'd probably be dead (head-to-toe strikes are the most dangerous).
Kent claims he knew right away that he was struck by lightning: "I knew right away what it was when I smelled it," the welder said. Kent has been shocked a few times due to his line of work, but claims those shocks don't even come close to the shock he got from the bolt.
The nickel in Kent's pocket was blackened after the strike and the bullet in his pocket melted. He could also smell his burnt hair.
On a scale from 1-10 in pain, Kent says it's been an 11.
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