Toilet explodes after powerful lightning bolt zaps through ceiling
An apartment in Oklahoma is missing an important fixture after a one-in-a-million lightning strike zapped through the ceiling during powerful thunderstorms this week.
A bolt of lightning struck an apartment complex east of Oklahoma City as waves of severe thunderstorms rolled across the southern Plains on Wednesday.
While lightning hits buildings all the time, this particular bolt made a beeline for the toilet. You’d have to see it to believe it. Photos of the aftermath reveal a distinct char mark on the ceiling directly above the singed and shattered commode. Watch the video above to see the stunning aftermath.
Thankfully, nobody was injured in the freak incident. New tenants planned to move into the vacant apartment the following morning.
That wasn’t the only ill-placed lightning strike in Oklahoma on Wednesday.
The National #Lightning Detection Network detected 5 strokes hitting the Best Western. They were grouped into two individual strike points. One strike point had high metal and non-metal damage potential, the other strike point had moderate continuing current probability. #OKwx https://t.co/PJHvxeTiy2 pic.twitter.com/VuxIJSgNaG
The National Chris Vagasky on Twitter: "The National #Lightning Detection Network detected 5 strokes hitting the Best Western. They were grouped into two individual strike points. One strike point had high metal and non-metal damage potential, the other strike point had moderate continuing current probability. #OKwx https://t.co/PJHvxeTiy2 pic.twitter.com/VuxIJSgNaG / Twitter" Detection Network detected 5 strokes hitting the Best Western. They were grouped into two individual strike points. One strike point had high metal and non-metal damage potential, the other strike point had moderate continuing current probability. Chris Vagasky on Twitter: "The National #Lightning Detection Network detected 5 strokes hitting the Best Western. They were grouped into two individual strike points. One strike point had high metal and non-metal damage potential, the other strike point had moderate continuing current probability. #OKwx https://t.co/PJHvxeTiy2 pic.twitter.com/VuxIJSgNaG / Twitter" Chris Vagasky on Twitter: "The National #Lightning Detection Network detected 5 strokes hitting the Best Western. They were grouped into two individual strike points. One strike point had high metal and non-metal damage potential, the other strike point had moderate continuing current probability. #OKwx https://t.co/PJHvxeTiy2 pic.twitter.com/VuxIJSgNaG / Twitter" Chris Vagasky on Twitter: "The National #Lightning Detection Network detected 5 strokes hitting the Best Western. They were grouped into two individual strike points. One strike point had high metal and non-metal damage potential, the other strike point had moderate continuing current probability. #OKwx https://t.co/PJHvxeTiy2 pic.twitter.com/VuxIJSgNaG / Twitter"
According to local news station KFOR-TV, another intense bolt of lightning hit a Best Western hotel in Oklahoma City early Wednesday morning. The strike’s smoky damage forced officials to evacuate the hotel of more than 100 guests until they could extinguish the fire and secure the building.
WATCH: THESE LIGHTNING SAFETY RULES COULD SAVE YOUR LIFE
Lightning is a distinct hazard even to folks who are nestled indoors during a rollicking storm. Even though the risk of being injured by a bolt of lightning indoors is minimized with modern safety regulations, stronger bolts can still come through a building’s pipes and wiring.
Stronger bolts can even blow through windows, walls, and ceilings, as we saw with Wednesday’s unfortunate bathroom incident.
A lightning strike around 7am is responsible for this damage at Double Springs (Winston County)... photos from Shannon Preuitt pic.twitter.com/qiVOyiAIIO
A lightning strike around 7am is responsible for this damage at Double Springs (Winston County)… photos from Shannon Preuitt James Spann on Twitter: "A lightning strike around 7am is responsible for this damage at Double Springs (Winston County)... photos from Shannon Preuitt pic.twitter.com/qiVOyiAIIO / Twitter"
— James Spann (@spann) James Spann on Twitter: "A lightning strike around 7am is responsible for this damage at Double Springs (Winston County)... photos from Shannon Preuitt pic.twitter.com/qiVOyiAIIO / Twitter"
Homes and businesses report significant damage from lightning strikes every year. Some of those strikes inevitably find their way indoors. NBC New York reported in June 2017 that a man in Rochester, New York, was injured by a bolt of lightning after it hit the sidewalk outside, jumped through a light switch, and struck his hand while he was sitting at his desk.
Thumbnail courtesy of Unsplash.