Monsoon storms leave Phoenix area picking up the pieces
From flooding and toppled trees to huge power poles pushed to the ground, the damage from the storm stretches all across the Valley.
Watch: Monsoon flooding in Scottsdale, Arizona
Heavy rain associated with monsoon storms flooded streets in Scottsdale, Arizona, on Friday.
PHOENIX - Much of the Phoenix area spent Saturday cleaning up after a punishing monsoon storm swept through on Friday.
From flooding and toppled trees to huge power poles pushed to the ground, the damage from the storm stretches all across the Valley, according to a report from FOX 10 Phoenix.
At WestWorld in Scottsdale, tents were ripped, and the Scottsdale Police Mounted Unit barn even flooded, causing police horses to be moved to safety during the storm.
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Monsoonal storms set to soak the Southwest
More monsoon storms are expected across the Southwest, which should help to ease some drought conditions in the region.
El Dorado Park in Scottsdale looked more like El Dorado Falls after the last 24 hours drenched the area. More than three inches of rain fell across parts of Scottsdale at the height of the storm, making it dangerous for drivers and rescue crews.
"We had 18 vehicles that were trapped underneath power lines. We were able to remove 10 of those vehicles and 8 were left behind," Scottsdale Fire Capt. Dave Folio told FOX 10 Phoenix.
Crews worked with APS to kill the power to get people out of their cars safely near Scottsdale and Cactus roads, but even the following day, those roads were shut down where the power lines fell, leaving drivers to find another way around the mess.
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Storm chaser takes iconic images of Southwest monsoon
From massive walls of dust to lightning flashing across the sky, storm chaser Mike Olbinski tells FOX Weather correspondent Max Gorden how he captures stunning images during monsoon season.
"This has been a very busy, active monsoon, as everybody knows. I’ve barely had a couple days off in a row of not chasing, and our drought, there’s a dent in that, so it’s been very, very busy," Folio said.
Storm chasers like Mike Olbinski have been following this monsoon season closely, taking advantage of every opportunity to photograph the power of mother nature in the desert, and reading radar and models to chase them down.
"Where the instability is going to be, what the winds are going to do, where they think storms are going to fire, and it’s pretty amazing how accurate these models are," Olbinski said.