Emergency personnel walk by one of multiple utility poles snapped off along Golf Links Road near Mann Avenue in the monsoon storm that slammed Tucson on July 28, 2023.

More than 50,000 customers were without power Friday evening after a monsoon storm slammed Tucson, snapping power lines, taking out massive trees and damaging some buildings. 

Among many other areas, parts of Davis-Monthan Air Force Base lacked power, due to fallen trees and power lines at a Tucson Electric Power substation, according to the base's official Twitter page.

"Some base facilities, including the dorms, have lost power ... Security Forces and Civil Engineering are working to get systems back online," D-M's tweets said. 

TEP's outage map was crisscrossed with a patchwork of the red circles it uses to show outage areas.

Tucson Parks and Rec tweeted, "A lot of areas of Tucson were hit hard by the storm, including our parks. We will be working hard to clean up the damage over the coming days." It posted photos of trees with large root systems ripped from the ground and upended; it didn't say which parks. 

A Tucson police officer crosses Golf Links Road by one of the multiple utility poles snapped off near Mann Avenue in the monsoon storm that swept through Tucson on July 28, 2023.

Numerous Tucson residents also took to social media to post photos of felled trees and large hail throughout the metro area, and to recount rather harrowing descriptions of the storm.

"Major damage to my condo community, from what I hear everyone is safe, but ... I am told a total of 14 of these big trees are down," tweeted a resident in the 22nd and Kolb area.  

"A short, but extremely powerful storm dropped golf ball-sized hail ... and winds splitting a tree in half and knocking 3 power poles to the side, and 2 of them are now leaning against our apartment building near Ft. Lowell and Country Club," another tweeted.  

"Pretty scary ... a nearby power pole was on fire. There was all kinds of popping and zapping going on up and down the street ... then a final zap: No power. Camino Seco & Broadway area," wrote another. 

"Tree completely blocking Cactus Street just north of Prince near Winterhaven." 

"Crazy winds and downed branches" in Sabino Canyon area.

"The most 'WILD' hailstorm I've seen in midtown Tucson in the last 13 years!" 

"Large branch down, some roof damage with shingles lifting ... west side of Bear Canyon, north of Snyder Road."

"We had golf ball size hail around Swan Rd and Ft Lowell."

In one of the numerous areas with power outages, a west-side Albertson's on Silverbell at Speedway stood dark and closed at 8 p.m., with a few trees strewn in its parking lot and the residential streets black around it.

"It was a spectacular, vicious storm," tweeted a resident near Speedway and Camino Seco, adding: "I'm grateful to the folks that are out tonight repairing whatever happened. Be safe, all." 

A monsoon rain and lightning show was captured looking over into the Catalina Mountains. Video by JD Fitzgerald


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