ACTS OF GOD: WHEN LIGHTNING STRIKES
You’re on the seventh hole, and you hear thunder in the distance. What do you do? None of the other players looks concerned, and this is your first day off in months. So you decide to play on. It’s the smart thing to do, right?
Wrong. No one, not even a golfer, is immune to lightning. Lightning kills about 100 people a year, and injures hundreds more, says Michael Cherington, M.D., clinical professor of neurology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine and founder of the Lightning Data Center at Centura Health, both in Denver. Men are four times as likely to get jolted as women, perhaps, in part, because they don’t come in out of the rain. He recommends several ways to lower your risk.
Pick up the signals. Darkening skies, sudden drops in temperature and increasing wind are all pretty good signs that a storm is coming and you ought to head for cover.
Use your ears. If you can hear thunder, you’re close enough to get zapped. You can measure how far away the storm is by counting seconds between the flash of lightning and the thunder-every five seconds equals roughly one mile-but just seek safe shelter immediately.
Follow an 11:00 a.m. curfew. If you’re hiking high altitudes like the Rocky Mountains, get down below timber-line by 11:00 A.M., Dr. Cherington says. “Most strikes occur after this time during the day.”
Seek safe shelter. The safest place during a storm is inside a safe shelter. When indoors, stay off the phone, out of the shower or bathtub, and away from appliances.
Stay away from single trees. If you’re on a golf course or any other open area, do not seek refuge under an isolated tree. The inside of a closed car or van is a relatively safe place to be. If a vehicle or safe shelter is not nearby, run into a forest rather than under a single tree. If you’re outside and you feel your hair starting to stand on end, a lightning strike is imminent. “Get into a catcher’s position, crouching on the balls of your feet, lower your head, and cover your ears,” says Dr. Cherington. “This is a very bad situation that’s best avoided.”
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