User @Blayne90095403 tweeted: “Gorilla hail!!!! ….Keller TX,” sharing a video of the downpour in Keller, Tarrant County of the Dallas-Fort Worth area. The video has had over 6,000 views since it was first posted Thursday.
Hailstones managed to push through the roof of one home in Uvalde County in southern Texas, according to photos shared by user @vortexrfd. “One of many giant hail stones that came through the roof of my friend’s house this evening in Sabinal, Texas,” the user tweeted along with the images.
A tornado warning was issued Wednesday evening in parts of Tarrant County following severe storms in portions of north and central Texas.
User @squirtyyy shared video footage of his car surrounded by broken pieces of glass. “Tornado storm shattered my window!!! IM F***ING PISSED,” the user tweeted alongside the footage.
Another video of the damage shared by the user showed the top part of the back window was smashed through. Large holes were seen in the remaining portion of the window, while the glass roofing was also shattered.
Christopher Nunley, the chief meteorologist at KAGS in Texas, shared an image of a car windshield in Fort Worth shattered by hailstones. “These photos were sent to me from Fort Worth! #TXwx #Hail #DFW #DFWwx,” he wrote in a post sharing the images.
User @scottvickers01 shared an image of another car window in Keller damaged with large holes, tweeting: “My neighbor’s car…still w paper tags! #keller #tarrantcounty #hail.”
On Wednesday, the National Weather Service (NWS) Fort Worth warned of “damaging wind gusts up to 70 mph” and that “large hail upwards of 2 inches” could be possible.
A 3-inch hailstone was reported north of Fort Worth, near Keller. NWS Fort Worth tweeted Wednesday evening: “One of the larger hailstone reports we received this evening in Tarrant County!”
Around 34,000 power outages were reported across south and central Texas, including nearly 14,000 in Bexar County (the county seat of which is San Antonio), according to the PowerOutage.US website, at the time of publishing on Thursday.
At 12:13 a.m. local time Thursday, NWS Fort Worth said “no warnings are in effect at this time” across north and central Texas, while a Tornado Watch was in place until 2 a.m. CDT Thursday.
A Tornado Watch indicates “tornadoes are possible in and near the watch area,” the NWS explains.
A Flash Flood Watch is in place through Thursday morning across portions of north and central Texas, the weather service added.
A Tornado Watch is in effect in parts of south central Texas until 5 a.m. CDT Thursday, the NWS said. They include the following 28 counties:
AtascosaBanderaBastropBexarBlancoBurnetCaldwellComalDewittDimmitFayetteFrioGillespieGonzalesGuadalupeHaysKarnesKendallKerrLavacaLeeLlanoMedinaTravisUvaldeWilliamsonWilsonZavala
The Tornado Watch is in effect until 5 a.m. CDT Thursday in the following south central Texas cities:
AustinBanderaBastropBlancoBoerneBurnetCarrizoSpringsCrystal CityCueroFloresvilleFredericksburgGeorgetownGiddingsGonzalesHallettsvilleHondoKarnes CityKerrvilleLa GrangeLlanoLockhartNew BraunfelsPearsallPleasantonSan AntonioSan MarcosSeguinUvalde