A pickup truck in Sterlington, Louisiana caught on fire after lightning struck it on Feb. 19, according to local news reports.
The strike occurred near U.S. 165 and Louisiana Highway 2. It was close to several businesses, the report said.
Hope Herrington posted footage of the fire on Facebook, saying she is glad the driver was unscathed.
Herrington, who added that she was working her shift at Waffle House, saw the incident unfold.
“I seen the flames and I just took off I said I'll be right back,” added Herrington on social media, according to the local news website.
Her co-worker, Valarie McDonald, called 911 after the strike.
“It was in flame for a few minutes and then while I was on the phone I was like ‘it’s fixing to blow up’ and it did,” said McDonald.
“The flames, it started small, and then all of a sudden just black clouds and [it] went boom,” said Herrington.
According to officials, the lightning hit a stop light before jumping 300 feet, hitting the man’s truck.
Photos posted to local websites showed that the truck was totally destroyed in the fire.
“That’s my first time seeing that like up close it kind of scared me,” said Herrington.
What to Do?
It’s quite rare for lightning to strike a moving vehicle, but when it happens, rubber tires aren’t enough.“In actuality,” the channel writes on its website, “lightning flows around the outside of a car, and the majority of the current flows from the car’s metal cage into the ground below.”
“In essence, a car acts like a mobile Faraday cage,” it said, referring to the grounded metal screen surrounding a piece of equipment.
“Reported incidents and related injuries make it clear that a person inside a fully enclosed metal vehicle must not be touching metallic objects referenced to the outside of the car,” it says. “Door and window handles, radio dials, CB microphones, gearshifts, steering wheels, and other inside-to-outside metal objects should be left alone during close-in lightning events.”
Meanwhile, it recommends, drivers should pull over to the side of the road, turn off the engine, turn on the emergency lights, place “one’s hands in one’s lap,” and wait for the storm to pass. Don’t touch any metal objects inside the car, the organization says.
Sometimes, lightning strikes can do indirect damage to vehicles, namely to its electronic systems.
“In many cases you will not find physical damage,” the website says, adding that it could pose a problem for people trying to access their insurance.