
Landspout damages business buildings, tears roof in Franktown, Colorado: "I just feel the building shake"
"All of a sudden, I just feel the building shake," said Shany Muro.
Muro was one of several employees working inside the Wags and Walks Colorado Pet Ranch in Franktown when the landspout damaged neighboring buildings.
"I thought it was just thunder, and my coworker [told] me she saw a tornado heading towards us, and now it looks the way it looks," she said.
Video shared by an onlooker shows a roof flying across the air. Part of the roof landed directly on top of the pet ranch.
"(I) check the camera and I see a roof come over into our yard," said Ricky Martinez, owner of Wags and Walks.
Bob Nicolls, who owns Monarch Investments, says it was the roof on the property he is renting that blew off.
"Employees were working inside the building. No one was hurt," Nicolls said.
Officials with the Douglas County Sheriff's office say seven businesses across three buildings were impacted by the landspout. Much of the damage was on the exterior of the properties, but there were some vehicles that were also damaged by the debris.
"It did seem like it came out of nowhere with no warning at all," said Deborah Takahara, Public Information Officer for the Douglas County Sheriff's Office.
"(I was) shaken up for sure, it's definitely scary," Martinez said. "It's like (a) nightmare fuel kind of thing happening here."
Martinez and his staff say it could've been a much scarier outcome.
"Right before it happened, I was out in the yard, where a lot of debris had fallen," said Muro. "I was out there with some little pugs. If I hadn't gone inside when I did, we all would have been crushed, so that's very nerve-wracking."
While there's still damage to these structures that needs to be assessed, Martinez says they are making sure each pet has a place to go.
"We're trying to see if owners that have emergency contacts can come get their dogs. If they can't, we have a location we're going to move them to temporarily until we can see what's going on here," said Martinez.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
3 hours ago
- Fox News
Minnesota hiker vanishes in Wyoming's Bighorn Mountains, leaving wife 'trying to stay strong' for their kids
A Minnesota hiker has now been missing for more than a week after disappearing in Wyoming's Bighorn Mountains, with his wife saying that she is "trying to stay strong for the kids." Grant Gardner made contact with his wife on July 29 "letting her know he'd made it to the summit" of the 13,000-foot Cloud Peak, but has not been heard from since, according to the Big Horn County Sheriff's Office. The agency launched a search and rescue operation in what it described as "extreme and very challenging" conditions. "He solo hikes, and he's been hiking for over a decade," his wife Lauren Gardner told Cowboy State Daily. "He's used to this stuff, and he's very detail oriented." "It's all definitely surreal," she reportedly added. "And I'm in shock, I think, and trying to stay strong for the kids. This has never happened in all the years he's gone out. He knows what he's doing and has the skills. I'm just hoping right now." The missing 38-year-old is a father of two children, ages 13 and 11, the outlet reported. The Big Horn County Sheriff's Office said Gardner had planned an approximate 3-day hike "through the Misty Moon Lake area, eventually summiting Cloud Peak, and returning to his vehicle completing his journey." Phone records show he reached the summit of Cloud Peak around 7 p.m. on July 29 and sent a text to his wife indicating that "the climb was more taxing than he expected and he was tired," according to authorities. "The late summit of 7:00pm at 13,000 feet was and is concerning due to the lack of visible trails through cliffs, timber line, boulder fields, and other hazards that had to be navigated after dark before reaching clear trails and safe terrain," Big Horn County Sheriff Ken Blackburn said. Police said Gardner's vehicle later was found by searchers in the same parking lot where he began his trip. "The search is rapidly evolving and ongoing in the Cloud Peak Wilderness area. In addition to high altitude and terrain challenges, difficult weather patterns including winds, thunder and lightning storms have made search efforts difficult at various times of the day," the Sheriff's Office said in a search update this week. "Search and rescue teams from South Big Horn County, Sheridan County, Johnson County, Washakie County, and Park County Wyoming along with other rotor aircraft from First Flight of Wyoming, Wyoming Army National Guard, and private aircraft" are assisting in the effort, they also said. "The Big Horn County Sheriff's Office is requesting anyone who may have had contact with Gardner, please report to the Big Horn County Sheriff's Office at 307-568-2324 or the Wyoming Missing Person Tip line on the Wyoming DCI website," police said.


CBS News
4 hours ago
- CBS News
Over 9,000 San Fernando Valley customers face water outage as LADWP crews repair infrastructure
Vehicles began lining up at free bottled water distribution sites in the San Fernando Valley on Wednesday morning after the water supply was essentially cut off as Los Angeles Department of Water and Power crews were conducting emergency infrastructure repair work. Over 9,000 LADWP customers in the Granada Hills and Porter Ranch area are "experiencing water disruptions," according to the agency. The LADWP said emergency repair work was being done Tuesday afternoon at a pump station that connects to a 10-million-gallon water tank that serves the area when "a valve that controls the flow of water from the pump station to a tank serving the area failed to open." As a result, water flowing into Granada Hills and Porter Ranch was cut off. Meanwhile, repair work and water restoration efforts are underway. Crews connected a mobile high-powered water pump to the system in the Porter Ranch area to resupply water to the tank. Repair work to the valve 20 feet underground will happen once crews finish digging to reach it. LADWP said that repairs are estimated to be complete on Friday. The following drinking water distribution sites are open from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Wednesday:


CBS News
4 hours ago
- CBS News
Torrential rainfall that hit Chicago on July 25 only happens once every 1,000 years
The torrential rainfall that pounded parts of Chicago on July 25 was so extreme, it typically occurs only once every 1,000 years, according to the National Weather Service. Midday July 25, a corridor of extreme rainfall developed along a stalled atmospheric boundary on the south side of Chicago. As much as 5.61 inches of rain fell in Garfield Ridge in just two hours. Extreme rain was also observed in Bedford Park near the border with Clearing, where an unofficial gauge measured 5.98 inches in three hours. Such extreme rainfall rates only have a 0.1% chance of occurring in a given year, according to the NWS. This would have once been referred to as a 1-in-1,000 year rainfall event, but the NWS now avoids that phrasing since there is no guarantee it will be another 1,000 years before it happens again. Other communities from far eastern DuPage County eastward through central Cook County recorded 3 to 5 inches of rain in three hours, including Darien, Burr Ridge, Bridgeview, West Lawn and West Englewood. Rainfall of this magnitude is only statistically expected in these areas once every 100 years. This extremely rare rain event comes on the heels of the July 8 storm that dumped 5 inches of rain in less than three hours on a different part of central Chicago -- an event only expected once every 500 years, according to the NWS. "As of July 25, 2025, the 2020s decade has had five extreme rainfall events in central Cook County," National Weather Service Senior Service Staff Hydrologist Scott Lincoln said. This is a marked increase compared to two extreme rainfall events in both the 2010s and 2000s, and one extreme rainfall event in each the 1990s, 1980s, 1970s and 1960s. As global climate change warms Chicago area temperatures, it is leading to heavier rainfall events. For every one degree of warming, the atmosphere holds 4% more moisture. "Multiple lines of evidence suggest that the threshold for 'extreme rainfall' in the Chicago area is changing," Lincoln said. "Analysis of daily rainfall in Chicago indicated that 'extreme' 1-day rainfall early in Chicago's history (1871-1930) was approximately 6 inches, while this value increased to just over 8 inches in more recent times (1961-2020)."