Hail Map in Georgia on April 5, 2012

The weather event in Georgia on April 5, 2012 includes Hail map. 9 states and 332 cities were impacted and suffered possible damage. The total estimated number of properties impacted is 0.

Want more than just the map?

Turn this storm into a full workflow.

  • Owner + property data so you know who to knock
  • OnDemand branded weather history reports to win the "did we even have hail?" argument
  • RoofTrace estimate so reps stop guessing numbers at the door

Bought this map? Upgrade within 7 days and we'll credit the $230. (10-15 min setup call)

Hail map in Georgia on April 5, 2012
Hail

0

Estimated number of impacted properties by a 1.00" hail or larger

0

Estimated number of impacted properties by a 1.75" hail or larger

0

Estimated number of impacted properties by a 2.50" hail or larger

Storm reports in Georgia

Georgia

DateDescription
04/05/20124:27 PM CDTOne tree blown down and blocking a portion of lawrence sherrod road.
04/05/20124:25 PM CDTOne tree blown down and blocking a portion of mcgarrh mill pond road.
04/05/20124:16 PM CDTOne tree blown down blocking west church street.
04/05/20124:15 PM CDTFire rescue reported one tree down along midas brantley road.
04/05/20124:11 PM CDTOne tree blown down on west morning street.
04/05/20124:09 PM CDTThe public reported 3 trees down.
04/05/20123:30 PM CDTSeveral trees were reported down from dublin through northeast portions of the county by the 911 call center.
04/04/20129:10 PM CDTQuarter size hail was reported on the north side of rome along highway 27. Half inch hail was reported in the city of rome itself. The hail lasted for about 10 minutes.
04/04/20128:30 PM CDTA local report indicates 1.00 inch wind near TUNNEL HILL
04/04/20128:30 PM CDTA local report indicates 1.00 inch wind near ROCKY FACE

Cities Impacted by Hail Map on April 5, 2012

Please be aware that the storm maps provided by HailTrace include estimates of the number of structures impacted by storms on the specified date. These estimates are derived from data provided by Microsoft, including building footprint data generated using computer vision algorithms applied to satellite imagery. While HailTrace makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of this information, it is not guaranteed and should be used as a general reference only. The actual number of impacted structures may differ from the estimates provided on the storm maps.