Don Mammoser sat in his pickup Thursday, exhausted and trying to figure out what comes next in the aftermath of a tornado that destroyed barns at his cattle farm in East Eden.
“Rebuild, I guess,” he said.
He was waiting for his insurance representative to survey the damage, and is one of dozens of residents whose property was damaged a day earlier by tornadoes in three Western New York counties.
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One of the barns at Don Mammoser's Farm in Eden collapsed during yesterday's tornado that ripped the roofs off of several of his other barns and caused widespread damage to surrounding homes and trees on East Eden Road, Thursday, July 11, 2024.
The National Weather Service Buffalo Office confirmed four tornadoes, formed by the remnants of Hurricane Beryl, that touched down Wednesday afternoon, battering parts of the southern Erie County communities of Eden and West Falls, Arkwright in Chautauqua County, and near Darien in Genesee County. The weather service also confirmed two more east of Rochester in Wayne and Oswego counties.
Some of the damage was familiar in the region. Uprooted trees on top of cars. Downed powerlines. Utility trucks lining roads.
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Other damage was rare, and stark. Destruction that stretched in pathways up to a mile or more long. Tattered barns and other structures. Shattered windows.
“This thing came through and just ripped everything apart,” Mammoser said.
Mammoser’s son, David – the fourth-generation family member to work the farm – was in one of the barns when the tornado hit, but was unhurt.
Support came quickly.
By the end of the day Wednesday, more than 100 people had stopped by to help. Some corralled cattle that got loose. Others brought food.
“Some people I don’t even know were here,” Don Mammoser said. “But a lot of good friends were here, you know, friends, family and a community were out there.”
Don Mammoser, a third-generation farmer, said his cattle are stressed after the barn collapsed on them during the tornado.
The 700 beef cattle on the 90-acre farm are stressed and compromised, he said.
“They’re creatures of habit. You take care of them the same every day, and their world’s kind of turned upside down, you know? So they’re going to end up with probably losses from sickness and overcrowding and stress because that barn was on top of them all yesterday,” he said.
One animal had to be euthanized, he said, and he is keeping an eye on the others.
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One of the barns at Don Mammoser's Farm in Eden collapsed during yesterday's tornado which ripped the roofs off of several of his other barns and caused widespread damage to surrounding homes and trees on East Eden Road, Thursday, July 11, 2024. (Derek Gee/Buffalo News)
Cory Roehrig had just replaced the windows in his home on East Eden Road, next to Mammoser’s Farm. Most of them were broken by the tornado, and since boarded over. He was cleaning up what he could on Thursday, too.
His shed was blown against a tree, and a piece of another neighbor’s barn flew across the road and landed in one of his trees.
“You know what was funny, I was trying to figure out where these chairs came from,” Roehrig said about chairs in his front yard as his neighbor Steve Bonnes walked over from across the road to greet him.
“My deck,” Bonnes said.
Bonnes said his wife and two children were home and got into the basement “in the nick of time.” The house was condemned, according to a GoFundMe page set up for him and his family.
Eden Supervisor Richard Ventry told The Buffalo News on Thursday that eight houses have been deemed structurally unsafe to enter. The Red Cross helped a couple families, he said, while others stayed with relatives or friends.
“It’s just really the aftermath, the cleanup right now and kind of setting up a plan to help the residents get back on their feet,” Ventry said.
The supervisor declared a state of emergency in the town on Wednesday. He said Thursday it wasn’t yet known yet if there will be any aid available for property owners, as there are government thresholds that have to be met.
“We’re still kind of going out there and assessing everything,” he said. “It’s quite an undertaking to get a handle on all the damage that tornado caused.”
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A truck is buried in debris outside a home on Prospect Road in Hanover on Thursday after tornadoes caused heavy damage in the area one day earlier.
Erie County plans to re-purpose the remaining November storm funds to help farmers who have uninsured losses, spokesman Peter Anderson said in an email. It is the same fund that helped make whole farmers who lost greenhouses in the November 2022 storm that dropped seven feet of snow on parts of the Southtowns.
The National Weather Service Buffalo office by Thursday morning confirmed both the Erie County tornadoes and one each in Chautauqua and Genesee counties.
Meteorologists said spotters saw telltale signs of long pathways with serious circular damage patterns. They did not expect to confirm any more in the region as a result of the severe weather system.
The last confirmed was the twister that touched down shortly before 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Town of Aurora, cutting a swath 400 yards wide and 1.5 miles long over five minutes from West Falls to Griffins Mills. It snapped tree limbs and caused property damage that included tearing a roof and blowing out windows of a modern horse barn on Mill Road.
Winds peaked at an estimated 110 mph, a force matched by a twister that touched down shortly after noon in the Chautauqua County town of Arkwright.
Another whisked through the Genesee County towns of Darien and Alexander from 1:42 to 1:46 p.m., blazing a 50-yard path over a mile that caused tree damage along Halsten and Dodgeson roads. Its winds peaked at 75 mph.
That followed a tornado at 12:40 p.m. in the Town of Eden, with winds reaching 85 mph, the weather service said. Damage from that tornado was reported on Gary Drive, Sauer Road and at the intersection of Jennings Road and Kickbush Gulf, the weather service said.
Jim and Betty Koszuta have lived in their house on Mill Road in West Falls for 33 years. They say it quickly became clear that a tornado was bearing down on them and their neighbors Wednesday afternoon.
“I could see it starting to swirl, and then it got real calm,” Betty Koszuta said. “And then it sounded like a jet plane was coming down the road here, getting louder and louder.”
“I said, ‘Get in the house, get in the basement,’ ” her husband recalled. “Thirty seconds later, we came out and the sun was shining.”
The twister tore shingles off their roof and uprooted several fruit trees. A greenhouse in their backyard was nowhere to be found after they emerged from their basement.
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Wreckage at John McClory's house on Mill Road in West Falls. McClory says the tornado took out almost ten trees on his property
A couple doors down from the Koszutas, John McClory wasn’t home when the tornado came through his property. He said when he got back to his house, it looked “like a bomb went off.”
“I lost about 10 trees, very large trees,” he said. One landed on top of his car after clipping the side of his garage. Lucky for McClory, none of the trees landed on his home.
“It’s going to be a big deal cleaning it all up,” he said. “I’m just glad I wasn’t there when it happened.”
Al SeGool, who lives around the corner on West Falls Road, also found his car underneath a fallen tree, along with powerlines draped across his driveway that came down with it.
“You could hear it blowing,” he said of the tornado. “I looked out the window and it was like a heavy fog. You couldn’t even see through it.”
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These vehicles were in a barn that blew away in the tornado at the Haier property on Route 75 in Eden.
John Haier Trucking on Sisson Highway (Route 75) in Eden lost two barns, including one that had three large tractor trailers used to transport milk in it. The company picks up milk from dairy farms and delivers it to Upstate Niagara Cooperative. They were able to make their rounds Thursday with borrowed trucks.
John Haier’s brother, George, has a dairy farm next door that the tornado didn’t touch.
Haier was in a barn working on a tractor when the tornado hit, but his building did not take a direct hit. He grabbed his dog, Case, and closed the door.
“Seeing our families hard work and everything we put it into this to have it go up like that it’s heartbreaking, but the silver lining is no one got hurt,” said Haier’s son, Matt. “Everyone is safe. Everything that got destroyed can be rebuilt.”
A tornado touched down at the Haier property on Route 75 in Eden, destroying two barns.