05/20/2026
Southern Ford County tornadoes can be a different beast.
The recent EF-0 tornado near Paxton is a perfect example of how challenging weak, brief, and rain-wrapped tornadoes can be — especially in areas that sit a considerable distance from both the ILX and LOT radar sites.
At the time of the tornado, this was not a classic, well-structured supercell with a strong, obvious low-level circulation. Instead, it occurred within a rain shower embedded along a messy, festering QLCS-type storm environment during the mid-morning hours. On radar, there was only the weakest hint of rotation. The signal was subtle, shallow, and well below what would normally stand out as a clear tornado-warning signature.
The challenge is radar geometry.
Because southern Ford County is relatively far from both nearby radar sites, the radar beam is sampling the storm well above the lowest levels of the atmosphere by the time it reaches that area. That means the radar may not be seeing what is happening right near the ground, where a brief EF-0 circulation can tighten up and touch down. In this case, the rotation was likely occurring below the radar’s best viewing angle.
That puts forecasters in an extremely difficult position.
Issue a tornado warning on a weak, poorly organized signal and risk over warning. Do not issue one, and a brief tornado may still occur. This was one of those “tough call” situations where the atmosphere gave very little advance notice.
Had this tornado not struck Mr. Day’s property and caused visible damage, it is very possible there would have been no record of it at all. No clear video. No obvious debris signature. No strong radar couplet. No classic structure. It may have looked like nothing more than heavy rain, swirling mist, or blowing dust to anyone nearby.
Even a trained storm spotter would have had difficulty seeing this unless they were directly in it. The tornado was heavily embedded in rain and likely very brief.
That is the important lesson.
We can study radar. We can watch trends. We can use spotters, warnings, watches, and real-time weather data. But Mother Nature still has the final say. Not every tornado will look obvious. Not every tornado will come from a dramatic, photogenic storm. Some are brief, messy, rain-wrapped, and nearly impossible to detect until damage is found afterward.
This is why all watches and warnings need to be taken seriously.
Ford County was under a Severe Thunderstorm Watch, meaning the environment was supportive of dangerous storms. While this tornado occurred without a tornado warning, the broader setup was still one where storms had the ability to produce damaging winds, hail, and in rare cases, brief tornadoes.
The takeaway is not fear. The takeaway is awareness.
When storms approach, have multiple ways to receive warnings. Do not rely only on what you can see outside. Do not assume a storm is harmless because it does not look impressive. And during severe thunderstorm watches, understand that the atmosphere is already in a state where dangerous weather can happen quickly.
Weak tornadoes like this are often brief, localized, and difficult to warn for — but they can still cause damage.
Stay weather aware. Take watches seriously. Respect warnings when they are issued. And remember that sometimes, even with the best technology and trained eyes, the atmosphere can still produce surprises.