Most Powerful Forces on Earth: Lightning | Fatal Forecast | Free Documentary

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Fatal Forecast: - Lightning - Deadly Forces of Nature | Disaster Documentary
Fatal Forecast: Floods - Deadly Forces of Nature: • Most Powerful Forces o...
Lightning. It’s one of nature’s most spectacular and potentially deadly displays. It is unpredictable, powerful, and strikes with unfathomable frequency. While natural disasters such as earthquakes and cyclones may claim more lives annually, the effects of lightning strikes can last a lifetime.
While reduced lightning seems like a good way to mitigate its destructive forces, life on Earth would be severely threatened. Without any lightning at all, life would cease to exist. Advances in warning systems and tracking devices are helping scientists save lives, but they still aren’t one hundred percent foolproof. The best course of action still remains to be weather-aware and to head indoors when thunder roars.
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Пікірлер: 325

  • @FreeDocumentary
    @FreeDocumentary8 ай бұрын

    Lightning. It’s one of nature’s most spectacular and potentially deadly displays. It is unpredictable, powerful, and strikes with unfathomable frequency. While natural disasters such as earthquakes and cyclones may claim more lives annually, the effects of lightning strikes can last a lifetime. While reduced lightning seems like a good way to mitigate its destructive forces, life on Earth would be severely threatened. Without any lightning at all, life would cease to exist. Advances in warning systems and tracking devices are helping scientists save lives, but they still aren’t one hundred percent foolproof. The best course of action still remains to be weather-aware and to head indoors when thunder roars.

  • @maxboya

    @maxboya

    8 ай бұрын

    Stop inserting repeated clips. Annoying as heck

  • @nocancelcultureaccepted9316

    @nocancelcultureaccepted9316

    8 ай бұрын

    It’s not the battery technology that we need to come up, it’s the recreation of lightning.

  • @reedalaxander8487

    @reedalaxander8487

    8 ай бұрын

  • @baneverything5580

    @baneverything5580

    8 ай бұрын

    I still have headaches and chronic pain and brain/nerve issues from two lightning strikes that knocked me unconscious and another that knocked me across the room into a wall.

  • @JasonCameron-Harris

    @JasonCameron-Harris

    8 ай бұрын

    🎉 3:11 🎉🎉🎉😂❤😮

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier74217 ай бұрын

    For those of us who really miss those "Discovery Channel" style cable TV shows.

  • @5funnyCats

    @5funnyCats

    2 ай бұрын

    I believe this is the majority. Hopefully Discovery and History Channel execs read the comment sections and take tallies of the views each type of show receives on KZread and they adjust programming accordingly.

  • @josephastier7421

    @josephastier7421

    2 ай бұрын

    @@5funnyCats The programing was so bad we canceled our cable subscription. "Did ghosts fight in the Civil War?" "The science of mermaids!"

  • @5funnyCats

    @5funnyCats

    2 ай бұрын

    @@josephastier7421 Ikr? It became a junk channel full of bs. It seems to be the way all the really good channels go. Remember when MTV actually played music, had VJs and live performances instead of a bunch of crappy "reality" shows that aren't real at all?

  • @josephastier7421

    @josephastier7421

    2 ай бұрын

    @@5funnyCats My cable company asked why I was canceling and I said "lack of content" and they didn't argue.

  • @thatguy9110

    @thatguy9110

    Ай бұрын

    I watched it when I was a kid so I know exactly what your talking about!! It’s just not the same anymore.

  • @chrisking4212
    @chrisking42127 ай бұрын

    My grandpa was struck by lightning twice in his life. He was a rancher in Oklahoma. The first time he was taking a nap under a tree in a pasture and a storm rolled in while he was sleeping. The tree got struck and hit him. The second time a calf got separated from the herd during a storm. He was carrying the calf and he got hit by a side strike that jumped off of the fence he was walking next to. He survived both strikes, obviously, but had memory problems afterwards.

  • @grip2617

    @grip2617

    6 ай бұрын

    When people get older they have memory problem. With or without lightning.

  • @brodylanetx

    @brodylanetx

    4 ай бұрын

    Villain origin story

  • @lim8581
    @lim85815 ай бұрын

    "Electrifying" is the word that comes to mind after watching this documentary. It reminds us of the sheer power and beauty of lightning while highlighting its potential dangers. Thanks for the awe-inspiring journey through the world of nature's electric marvel and the reminder to stay weather-aware.

  • @Tropicalpisces
    @Tropicalpisces5 ай бұрын

    These are wonderful documentaries. Thank you for letting me happily geek out. 💗

  • @cher8005
    @cher80057 ай бұрын

    Chris Vagasky is an excellent ambassador for lightening science; articulate and thoughtful, his contribution to this film was noteworthy. I now have a much firmer grasp of the dynamics of all forms of lightening and am grateful for this insight.

  • @goosenotmaverick1156
    @goosenotmaverick11568 ай бұрын

    I worked on a house that got a side-flash from a tree. It blew wires out of the walls, fried their backup generator, all after jumping from a tree nearby the house, to a gutter downspout, then to the house itself, a sliding door frame nearby, and then into the wires running under it, blew them right out of the floor underneath it. It was WILD

  • @drew-shourd

    @drew-shourd

    8 ай бұрын

    wow, crazy!

  • @goosenotmaverick1156

    @goosenotmaverick1156

    8 ай бұрын

    @@drew-shourd we do a lot of lightning strike work honestly, we see some interesting stuff!

  • @Thomas-yy6rm

    @Thomas-yy6rm

    8 ай бұрын

    My ex boss said, We don't do Lighting.😮

  • @Thomas-yy6rm

    @Thomas-yy6rm

    8 ай бұрын

    It strikes 270,000 miles an hour.😮

  • @baneverything5580

    @baneverything5580

    8 ай бұрын

    I`ve seen damage like this in yards where roots exploded along with sprinkler systems and water pipes. I still have headaches and chronic pain and brain/nerve issues from two lightning strikes that knocked me unconscious and another that knocked me across the room into a wall.

  • @theBeastcub
    @theBeastcub2 ай бұрын

    I used to be excited about thunderstorms until there was a strike nearby, loudest thing I've ever heard, now my love for them comes with a side of nervousness.

  • @IamJay
    @IamJay8 ай бұрын

    Another great documentary. Love this one.

  • @mickgatz214
    @mickgatz2148 ай бұрын

    Extrodinary Documentary. 👍 I learnt a great deal...

  • @edwigcarol4888

    @edwigcarol4888

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes... current ground reaching up to 700 meters, got it😫... shelter.

  • @markreynolds8275
    @markreynolds82758 ай бұрын

    Thank u for this documentary I have learned so much about lightning.

  • @kylesmith2604
    @kylesmith26048 ай бұрын

    I had my neighbors house get struck by lightning, it went right through the house down the middle of the master bedroom where they were sleeping and were unscathed, and the roof did catch on fire but was put out. I was scared of any thunder for probably 12 years after that and for some reason that fear turned to fascination when I saw ball lighting rising from a cloud while on a plane. Been obsessed with natural disasters/storms ever since then.

  • @Thomas-yy6rm

    @Thomas-yy6rm

    8 ай бұрын

    Won't be like the song " I've been hit by Lighting ".😮

  • @heyitsvos

    @heyitsvos

    8 ай бұрын

    Why'd you have their house struck like that? Did talks break down and that was the last straw?

  • @michaelmontgomery-4047

    @michaelmontgomery-4047

    8 ай бұрын

    That's really cool thanks for sharing

  • @banescualexandru4518

    @banescualexandru4518

    7 ай бұрын

    American problems caused by cardboard houses!

  • @emmadeofsteel

    @emmadeofsteel

    7 ай бұрын

    Hahaa, was about to ask the same thing! Don't tread on this guy! :d@@heyitsvos

  • @eastfrisianguy
    @eastfrisianguy3 ай бұрын

    Thunderstorms and lightning are fascinating. I remember a storm in 2008, I woke up one day in early June at 5:20 a.m. with sunshine and heard very intense, but quiet thunder. I was literally stuck to the bed because it was so warm and there was condensation on the frame of the window, as I live in northern Germany in a very flat area, I could see a black wall far in the distance. The air seemed to shimmer and vibrate every time there was thunder in the distance. It was all so bizarre, I had never experienced an early morning thunderstorm at 21c and such high humidity. My mother was in hospital and my father was already at work, I went downstairs and just entered the living room and the cat jumped past me at face height, at the same moment the dog jumped into my arms and half a second later a bolt of lightning cracked with a deafening noise in our garden, less than eight meters away. In bright sunshine. It took another 20 minutes for the thunderstorm to arrive and I've never experienced such an intense storm, it lasted almost two hours. I now live in an area where thunderstorms almost always pass to the north or south, which I think is a bit of a pity.

  • @DJSLANKMAN

    @DJSLANKMAN

    11 күн бұрын

    That’s crazy, they do say animals have a heightened sense to storms early

  • @loud865
    @loud8658 ай бұрын

    One time i was trying to demo a panel at a remodel in a commercial strip mall and the door was locked that had the disconnect to turn the power off the panel and it was a 480 volt so i was being careful and had all the branch circuits removed and all the neutrals and grounds and took all the breakers out of the panel to where the only wire remaining was the #4 bare solid from the ground rod system outside. It was landed on a ground bar on the bottom of this can and it was super old they never make them like this anymore and the ground was coming in from the top of the can and it was thunderstorming outside and if you have ever seen a #4 bare solid wire its not exactly the easiest to bend and move around in a tight spot so i had my needle nose pliers on it trying to push down to remove it from the ground bar it was landed in when all the sudden a big explosion just blew up in my face. My hand looked like it was cooked in a pizza oven. All of the hair on my body was standing up and had that static feeling across it and my hand was in so much pain and i couldnt understand what happened i was extremely careful and couldnt remember fn up at any point then we saw other people coming out of the active stores in the strip mall and they said lightning struck right outside the building and their panel had made a huge bang and thats when i realized i got hit by lightning right in my face. Eyebrows still dont dont grow right and my hair has been grey since i was 28 years old.

  • @DJSLANKMAN

    @DJSLANKMAN

    11 күн бұрын

    Damn bro!

  • @erdvilla
    @erdvilla8 ай бұрын

    This year we had a lightning so strong that have been decades since the last time I felt one similar. It struck 2.5 seconds away (because that was time the thunder took to arrive) but it was massive. The ground shook for well over 20 seconds, very similar to a 3.5 earthquake, everything vibrated. Not even those that strike in the 1 second perimeter have that energy. I could only imagine how that powerful one would've feel if it hit the lightning rods across the street or at the teather behind my house.

  • @stevorules1820

    @stevorules1820

    8 ай бұрын

    Do you mean it struck 2.5 miles away because the thunder came 2.5 seconds later? If I'm not mistaken every second equals 1 mile approximately. Regardless that a huge lightning strike. Causing an "earthquake" like behavior.

  • @erdvilla

    @erdvilla

    8 ай бұрын

    @@stevorules1820 2.5 seconds, I know it sounds strange to measure distance in time but with lightning is kinda intuitive because you see the flash and count for the thunderclap to arrive. I think it is 1 second = 340 meters.

  • @WarmSouthernSmiles

    @WarmSouthernSmiles

    8 ай бұрын

    Because I’m a Floridian, I know this, which I copied from the National Weather Service: “If you count the number of seconds between the flash of lightning and the sound of thunder, and then divide by 5, you'll get the distance in miles to the …” You know it’s close when the flash and the thunder is at the same time. I’ve seen lightning hit on 3 occasions and if I close my eyes, I can still see the ball of light and sparks.

  • @razorbloodstains1

    @razorbloodstains1

    8 ай бұрын

    And here I was thinking I was crazy because I've also experienced earthquake-like thunder, was so scary, this was 20 years ago now!!!

  • @bluegold21

    @bluegold21

    8 ай бұрын

    WTF are you on about? Lightning does not shake the ground. Abd a strike 2.5 seconds in sound distance away is half a mile away.

  • @lisaortiz635
    @lisaortiz6358 ай бұрын

    I hiked up Half Dome in Yosemite…the storm came up fast & I headed down the metal cables & it started raining 1/2 way down…the granite was slippery like glass…I went down as fast as I could so I wouldn’t go the fast way down the 3000 ft drop on either side of me & was just at the bottom of the cables when the hair on my arms & head started sticking up & I swear my metal fillings started vibrating…then the lightning struck the top of Half Dome when I had just come off the cables…I got blown onto the ground & 2 hikers w/hiking poles went to the ground as well…I got up after a few minutes when I stopped shaking, vomited a few times & could finally stand up, shakily & couldn’t hear because of the ringing in my ears…I still couldn’t hear & my ears were ringing for the whole 17+ miles back…I ran almost the whole way back from the adrenaline & my ears still ring.

  • @susanm7888

    @susanm7888

    8 ай бұрын

    There's a show about some hikers who got struck by lightning on half dome, they were trying to hide from it in a cave but still got hit multiple times and a couple of them didn't make it 😢.

  • @michaellee6489

    @michaellee6489

    7 ай бұрын

    I have also climbed up that cable ladder so I know EXACTLY what you are talking about. Im sorry your experience was ruined by such an event, Yosemite is sooo beautiful. Thank goodness you were basically ok!!! Take care!

  • @BroccoliHead7

    @BroccoliHead7

    2 ай бұрын

    I wasn’t hiking but a lightning bolt hit near me when I was driving at night and my eyes went white and I started freaking out

  • @user-sm6bp5cf6t
    @user-sm6bp5cf6t12 күн бұрын

    The narrator is hitting us with the words!!!👍 Paradoxically!! Nice!

  • @TomMannis
    @TomMannis7 ай бұрын

    Excellent documentary.

  • @CT-vm4gf
    @CT-vm4gf8 ай бұрын

    6 million lightning strikes a day, that’s crazy.

  • @malectric
    @malectric7 ай бұрын

    At about 8 minutes, my guess about what happened to the reporter is that a high current was induced in the shaft of his umbrella which travelled through his arm to his feet and the wet concrete he was standing on. I have seen a neon connected between a small whip antenna on my garage roof and ground flash when nearby strikes occurred - and most were cloud-to-cloud. If I ever travel overseas again, Lake Maracaibo is top of my bucket list of places to visit. Speaking of travel, A plane trip I took to America in 2001 (several months before 9/11) gave me a 35,000 foot view of a lightning storm which occurred at night somewhere over the Pacific ocean. I was lucky enough to get a once-in-a-lifetime glimpse of a sprite above the distant cloud. A momentary red bubble in the upper atmosphere with a bluish tinge at the bottom; it lasted only a fraction of a second. My window seat paid big dividends.

  • @NTL00
    @NTL007 ай бұрын

    Thank you for a great documentary ❤

  • @AsteriETERNAL
    @AsteriETERNAL7 ай бұрын

    Excellent 👌Thanks!👍

  • @JPinthe719
    @JPinthe7198 ай бұрын

    I had a lot of close calls with lightening growing up here in Colorado and my house has been hit. In 2006, I was fishing at a large reservoir and being a NOAA weather spotter, I went to the car when a storm came in. After the storm passed, I waited 30 minutes before I went back down to my fishing pole. I thought I was in the clear. As soon as I picked my pole up...the last thing I remember was the brightest blue flash and that was all I could see. Along with the loudest sound I have ever heard. I got up and ran to my car, surprised I was not dead. To this day, I don't really have any ill health effects outside of the loss of most of the hearing in my right ear. My doctor said I probably should have died 🙏.

  • @Twobarpsi

    @Twobarpsi

    8 ай бұрын

    Incredible story!

  • @rjampiolo32

    @rjampiolo32

    7 ай бұрын

    must have hit the ground right next to you. without touching you.

  • @cosmosrunner2468
    @cosmosrunner24688 ай бұрын

    I experienced the worst lightning and thunder at a ranch in Buenos Aires, Argentina. the windows close to shattering, house shook, and you had to cover your ears the thunder was so loud, like a bomb. It was terrifying and amazing at the same time.

  • @justinwalker4475

    @justinwalker4475

    8 ай бұрын

    i would loved to have experienced that lightning fascinates me

  • @Tropicalpisces

    @Tropicalpisces

    5 ай бұрын

    Just like YHWH. Terrifying and amazing at the same time.

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms7275 ай бұрын

    It’s beautiful above the clouds as well as below 🎉

  • @user-bt6tl7xr5c
    @user-bt6tl7xr5cАй бұрын

    Thank you for making this video accessible

  • @nancysmith2295
    @nancysmith22954 ай бұрын

    I appreciate this documentary. I have had several questions answered without finding valid resources online.😊

  • @keepingitreal3180
    @keepingitreal31807 ай бұрын

    One of the most powerful forces is wicked people in high places!!

  • @Jen-rose76
    @Jen-rose762 ай бұрын

    I LOVE YOUR CHANNEL!! I grew up watching shows like yours. I have almost watched every natural disasters video. I found you a day ago can’t stop watching!! I had subscribed but somehow lost touch!! Anyway THANK YOU REALLY makes me feel calm and relaxed even tho it’s horrible things in the videos it helps me to see I am not crazy, global warming is real!! 😢 ❤❤

  • @bobgarske9579
    @bobgarske95798 ай бұрын

    This movie is well-produced can really ought to be public learning

  • @Mr.Plant_man

    @Mr.Plant_man

    7 ай бұрын

    It's not a movie, and what the hell are you trying to say??

  • @janakasanjaya6926
    @janakasanjaya69268 ай бұрын

    Thank you

  • @a_radom_user794
    @a_radom_user79428 күн бұрын

    Intriguing. Ty

  • @jasminejeanine2239
    @jasminejeanine22398 ай бұрын

    The most recent volcano that erupted in the Solomon islands topped any record prior. There were more lightening bolts there then the entire world.

  • @zanb35
    @zanb357 ай бұрын

    Lighting is fascinating to watch. Almost hypnotizing!

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields68528 ай бұрын

    Walking on a path along the beach in south Boston I'm passing by a tree, looking right at it, at that moment s bolt hit the tree 5 feet from my face, my body recoiled drastically, I was blinded for a few seconds, just like a double barrel shotgun fired in my face, I said I'm sorry God and thank you God. 🙏

  • @sagarah8217
    @sagarah82178 ай бұрын

    My fav force of nature, lightning

  • @edwigcarol4888

    @edwigcarol4888

    7 ай бұрын

    My favorite energy of nature: life!

  • @sherry8894
    @sherry88948 ай бұрын

    I love to watch lightning but I would rather see it from the window inside the house lol

  • @rabbitsonjupiter6824

    @rabbitsonjupiter6824

    8 ай бұрын

    I agree! Far safer to enjoy the display whilst indoors! ⚡⚡

  • @TTomky
    @TTomky5 ай бұрын

    I was struck by lightning July 7th 2020. My memory loss is significant. Neurologist says I have 5 to 6 years max before my coordination is so bad I won't be able to walk or speak. It should have killed me so every day is a bonus. I'm happy still being here.

  • @williebeamish5879
    @williebeamish58798 ай бұрын

    I think we may be in for increasingly violent electrical storms. Seen a few spectacular and continuous strobing lightening storms lately the like of which I've never seen before.

  • @bluegold21

    @bluegold21

    8 ай бұрын

    For every rise of 1 degree Celsius in global temps lighting incidents increase 10X.

  • @AKUSUXs
    @AKUSUXs7 ай бұрын

    I've had multiple joint replacements and spine fusions. I wonder what happens if I or someone with joint replacement(s) were to get hit?

  • @susanm7888
    @susanm78888 ай бұрын

    When I was a teenager, some friends and I had a lot to drink and decided to go for a night swim in the pool. While we were swimming, the sky just opened up, lightning striking all over the place, wind blowing, and for some reason (drunk) we didn't get out, we just kept swimming, didn't get struck, but it was a crazy adrenaline rush. Don't do it, it's dumb, we were just lucky nothing happened.

  • @tobyziemba6852

    @tobyziemba6852

    8 ай бұрын

    Did that too buddy nothing crazy

  • @nickinurse6433
    @nickinurse64338 ай бұрын

    I live in a MHP in AZ , we have palm trees all over. They get hit all the time yet rarely split or fall over. I've always wondered why this was as the other trees just blow up n die.

  • @miecunt3524
    @miecunt35248 ай бұрын

    I live in Florida and I've personally seen the damage lightning strikes can do to various objects. One being a horse, as you can imagine it wasn't good. Split it right in half and I use the word "split" lightly but it was most certainly in two separate pieces. Worst smell of my life.

  • @Mr.Plant_man

    @Mr.Plant_man

    7 ай бұрын

    What part of Florida? I'm born and raised in Marion county, Florida. Born in 1990

  • @GTKJNow

    @GTKJNow

    3 ай бұрын

    Yeah in a Jane Eyre novel

  • @SupportTheArts-yo8ox

    @SupportTheArts-yo8ox

    Ай бұрын

    omg, that's traumatic! Poor horse!

  • @jl-xs6ud
    @jl-xs6ud2 ай бұрын

    The four gardeners under the tree was hilarious 😂😂😂 I watched it five times 😂😂😂

  • @pamelabateman9211
    @pamelabateman92118 ай бұрын

    Fantastic video. I learned so much!!

  • @andymcneil7085
    @andymcneil70858 ай бұрын

    Fascinating stuff. Great post.

  • @nataliemscrzysxycoolharris
    @nataliemscrzysxycoolharris8 ай бұрын

    When I was a child, I either had to sit or lay down during a T-storm. I remember a bad storm coming and I was in the den at my Grandparents house. I was flipping thru a World Book Encyclopedia when a boom sounded. Seconds later an off tv came on 😳I took off running! Could it have been that tin roof that caused that? That tv had to be plugged/unplugged for awhile. 😂

  • @danielnorman8595
    @danielnorman85957 ай бұрын

    And that's why you should never have your IP number set static.

  • @mridulpandey6646
    @mridulpandey66465 ай бұрын

    Have watched this already

  • @anthonyguarino4242
    @anthonyguarino42428 ай бұрын

    I get used to thunderstorms many times in FL during childhood, NY and PA.

  • @brandonmccain2297
    @brandonmccain22975 ай бұрын

    At the mouth of the Mississippi river when they roll in its mesmerizing

  • @widiaprianto
    @widiaprianto8 ай бұрын

    Can we store the lightning's energy?

  • @Kingtrollface259
    @Kingtrollface2597 ай бұрын

    I go fishing in all weather's, I use a metal frame umbrella type tent with rubber ground sheet ,perfect Faraday cage

  • @kentb8621
    @kentb8621Ай бұрын

    I grew up on a lake in central Fl which is one of the lightning capitals of the world. Twice I was in a car when a sudden storm rolled in that was so severe it was almost impossible to drive. The first time I pulled off the freeway and 10 ft from my car the speed limit sign got struck by lightning… on another occasion I was driving down the road and saw a telephone pole get hit and the transformer exploded and it looked like a massive flash of green plasma. Honestly tho besides the spectacle of it all the sound is by far the most frightening part. All that energy and violence that seemingly erupts out of nowhere. Growing up there seeing lightning strikes was so common that we took it very seriously. Glad I didn’t get fried

  • @sharongoodsell9341
    @sharongoodsell93417 ай бұрын

    Farmers have been struck from lighting banceing off the ground , if your unlucky enough while closing a gate , my mate weighed 140 KLS and it really knocked him over , survived

  • @5funnyCats
    @5funnyCats2 ай бұрын

    Lightening travels at half the speed of light; how interesting. I assumed it traveled at the speed of light or damn near. You really do learn something every day...if you only try.👍

  • @cherielk1975
    @cherielk1975Ай бұрын

    The weather from a volcanic eruption is strange, we experienced it Hawaii.

  • @retard_activated
    @retard_activated8 ай бұрын

    9:30 Yikes! The way they all just fell.... 😭🥺

  • @edwigcarol4888

    @edwigcarol4888

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel released to read one comment on that sad accident by a sensitive person able of sympathy There are horrible comments on that from deeply sick people laughing.. "may they experience an electrocution through lightning." that is what the wives and children if these men could wish.. i hope they could recover with no lifelong damage..

  • @retard_activated

    @retard_activated

    7 ай бұрын

    @@edwigcarol4888 💖💖💖

  • @richardstephens3642
    @richardstephens36426 ай бұрын

    This reminds me of a lightning storm over Medford Oregon in the early 2000, huge bolts were striking the ground and average of once a minute, and would hold contact for almost a full minute

  • @FreeDocumentary

    @FreeDocumentary

    6 ай бұрын

    😮

  • @mdrofiqul780
    @mdrofiqul7808 ай бұрын

    বিউটিফুল পার্কের ভিডিও তৈরি করে সবচেয়ে সুন্দর সুন্দর পার্ক বিদেশের পার্ক আমাদেরকে দেখান

  • @stew904
    @stew90414 күн бұрын

    I remember a lightning stuck a tree next to the house, skimmed around it, bounced off and hit this cable wire on the side of the the house. Blew out the electricity, the phone lines & even forced one of the TVs to turn on with a white screen (clearly blew it out) was scary af of how Loud the thunder bang was.

  • @WellNowLetsSee
    @WellNowLetsSee7 ай бұрын

    I love me a good lightning storm, but what average house uses 10 billion to 1 trillion watts of power in a month?

  • @summerdreams7949
    @summerdreams79498 ай бұрын

    Love watching thunderstorms but where i live in the uk we barely get any. Always misses us😭

  • @bluegold21

    @bluegold21

    8 ай бұрын

    The UK gets loads. I live in the South East and we get them pretty regularly on a yearly basis. And their frequency is on the rise. A heat dome called the Spanish plume is usually the cause of the big ones.

  • @user-mh7qk1ei7b
    @user-mh7qk1ei7b2 ай бұрын

    Free documenteri beautyful trafeling lightning clowdy

  • @BonnieCassler-dx6sd
    @BonnieCassler-dx6sd3 ай бұрын

    Growing up in Florida, I've seen more than my share of lightning . When my eyes aren't covered,that is.

  • @philrabe910
    @philrabe9107 күн бұрын

    5:10... I was 8. We were camping at Acadia National Park, but had to go outside of the park for pay showers. It was a very flimsy arrangement of cheap metal stalls, and midway through bathing a bolt hit close enough in the vicinity that I got a good jolt. I ran out in my towel demanding a refund but the man just laughed at me.

  • @pamelaself1298
    @pamelaself1298Ай бұрын

    This was great ! I love lightning. I used to think if I was struck I could escape my depression that was & is again suffocating me. Sad & ridiculous I know.

  • @phillipquinley9684
    @phillipquinley9684Ай бұрын

    I love lightning. I know someone who was once told that it's not the lightning that kills you, it's the thunder. Lmao.

  • @SH3RIFF187
    @SH3RIFF1878 ай бұрын

    A house close by had lightning come down the chimney and blow the stack and surrounding walls outs

  • @diannadima7082
    @diannadima70827 ай бұрын

    Are people with a Pacemaker more susceptable lightening strikes?

  • @sawtharlay3141
    @sawtharlay31412 ай бұрын

    🙌Ast🙌

  • @oClimadeMaceio
    @oClimadeMaceioАй бұрын

    Brazil is the world leader in lightning strikes

  • @NateMartin-ot9dk
    @NateMartin-ot9dk7 ай бұрын

    I've worked in the tech field for over twenty years putting in security, camera, computer, fire, telephone, cable, sprinkler, and video, and sound systems into homes, businesses, and industrial buildings. I've seen lightning melt 10 square feet of cinder block concrete, and I've seen a house that took a direct hit that only caused a electric dishwasher to malfunction only during a certain cycle. And the home had a lightning rod that did its job. I've also seen lightning enter a house through the phone system and where the wires turned down wards into the walls, the electricity exploded out of the phone wires and into the framing of the house and caused a small fire in the attic. Would have been worse, but the homeowner had a butler service and the butler ran up with two fire extinguishers and put it out. Because I have seen warehouses and other homes that burn to the ground from lightning strikes. People really don't think about it until it hits something very close to them, or the person themselves.

  • @russianyrush5365
    @russianyrush53658 ай бұрын

    Im from jamaica.i remember that football incident like it was yesterday

  • @EyeoIsis
    @EyeoIsis2 ай бұрын

    "If we had no more lightning, we would die". That statement is never explained.

  • @nathanmitchell2216
    @nathanmitchell22167 ай бұрын

    I am living in a situation similar to your lightning prediction. Believing the strike when it appears will be as great as those recorded in this description.

  • @paulwheeler9572
    @paulwheeler95723 ай бұрын

    When I was 13 we boy scouts were playing capture the flag on an old cow pasture with barbed wire fencing surrounding it. An intense thunder storm came up and several of us boys were struck by ground lightning. I remember lying on my back trying to catch my breath like at the wind had been knocked out of me and my whole body hurt. Our parents never found out and the effects lasted for about 2 days.

  • @whoever6458
    @whoever64582 ай бұрын

    I went to the jungles of Peru and, on the first night I was there, I was taking a bath and it sounded to me like someone upstairs in the hotel was constantly rearranging the furniture. I kept wondering why someone who that much arranging of furniture in a hotel. When I got out of the bathroom after my bath, it turns out that a big thunderstorm had rolled in as it got dark and that the noises I was hearing were all thunder. It's crazy because it was a hot, clear day before the sun went down.

  • @benbuckley3239
    @benbuckley32397 ай бұрын

    The atmospheric river from Hawaii to California use to be called the pineapple express, Decreasing magnetic field higher levels of electric in the upper atmosphere with charged particles almost a constant from the sun Every thunder storm for hundreds of miles become neutral when honga tonga errupted, highiest erruption to be recorded in the satellite era and it was actualy a submarine volcanic erruption

  • @benbuckley3239

    @benbuckley3239

    7 ай бұрын

    Global warming 😂😂 Record cold and cold weather crop losses as increased since 2016 & climate change - climate as always changed, The desert in africa was once green, medi eveil warm period, ice age , little ice age , younger dryas - to prove climate change is natrual not man made Also climate gate proved people were paid to alter the data to make the past records seem cooler than they were to push a narrative now, C02 is plant food, the biggiest green houses actualy pump c02 in them to increase yeilds Xrad radar and haarp can effect storms maken them stronger or weaker,

  • @june88888
    @june888888 ай бұрын

    sasuke got to use it....

  • @KhaiNguyen-nn5ue
    @KhaiNguyen-nn5ue8 ай бұрын

    Sợ nhất là cơn thịnh nộ của mẹ thiên nhiên.

  • @russianyrush5365
    @russianyrush53658 ай бұрын

    9:42 bomboclaaat⚡🌩

  • @Emoji-ch8xu
    @Emoji-ch8xu3 ай бұрын

    ia mesin nya jadi jeckpot terus lah

  • @diannadima7082
    @diannadima70828 ай бұрын

    My home in Nothern California was struck by lightening it moved my TV and shook my whole house. I don't know if me and my son absorbed any of the strke. My whole house was gi ving off electricla static. After watching this I wonder if my son and and were affected by this stirke.

  • @MM-ig1iv
    @MM-ig1iv3 ай бұрын

    Lightening scares me more than anything.. like at 9:42 I've had it strike pretty close to me a couple different times caught out walking home right before a storm. It was maybe 15 ft away.. but nothing has ever scared me as bad. I thought i was dead. It's no joke. Now anytime I'm forced to have to run to my car in a storm like after work or something.. I'm moving very quickly! hoping I don't somehow mentally harness it directly at me!? We're a perfect conductor for it.

  • @yousifatobiya7279
    @yousifatobiya72798 ай бұрын

    The summary of climate change is easy. It is the change of humidity in atmosphere, which produce between the (land)and the(seas & oceans) on the other hand... Occurring of rains, snow, storms, and floods at time and in unexpected places, confirm my theory(the change in the directions of winds)which must be balanced... How to reduce the heat of the earth and atmosphere? We must supply the earth with a natural cooling places... Results: ---------- 1- To balance the water vapor which produces between the( ground)and the(seas and oceans )... 2- To balance the pressures of the air in the atmosphere... 3- To balance the directions of winds which caused the climate change... 4- To control upon the storms and harricans... 5- To revive the the first theory of climate change (dynamic horizontal movement). 6- To balance the percentage of gases forming the atmosphere. NOTE :The lack of water vapor is of land not of seas and oceans... These studies had completed and sent on July 26th 2000... Yousif A Tobiya Forcibly displaced

  • @michaelmartin2486
    @michaelmartin24868 ай бұрын

    That is one oily dude, I would be worried about the hydrocarbon grease conducting electricity

  • @mitchellschaff6520
    @mitchellschaff65203 ай бұрын

    LIGHTENING, THE WINGED SERPENT OF THE MAYA.

  • @yousifatobiya7279
    @yousifatobiya72798 ай бұрын

    Abstract : The energy that dominates the earth is very great, some of it is natural, like the heat of the sun and volcanoes, and some of it is human action, by cutting down trees, without replacing them and cultivating in their place... There are five forces that control or dominate the planet... 1- The first theory (horizontal dynamic movement) and its end... The occurrence of storms, rain, floods and snow, at unexpected times and places, is because of the expiration of this theory, which needs to be balanced... 2- The second theory (vertical dynamic movement) and its end... This movement or force controls or dominates the earthquakes, earth cracks, drying up of rivers and lakes, earth openings, mountain collapses, and the emergence of drinking water springs on the ground... It becomes out of control... These phenomena increased due to the end of this theory... The third theory: it is water that rotates the earth... The fourth theory: the Earth's axis of rotation has tilted 2° degrees... The fifth theory: The Earth has a new orbit... These studies had completed and sent on July 26th 2000 YOUSIF A TOBIYA FORCIBLY DISPLACE

  • @Tropicalpisces
    @Tropicalpisces5 ай бұрын

    The Invisible Rainbow by Arthur Firstenberg.. history of electricity and humans.

  • @user-wt7ec1pb7u
    @user-wt7ec1pb7u3 ай бұрын

    When thunder roars i head OUTDOORS 🤣

  • @SupportTheArts-yo8ox

    @SupportTheArts-yo8ox

    Ай бұрын

    That's a VERY smart thing to do!

  • @user-wt7ec1pb7u

    @user-wt7ec1pb7u

    Ай бұрын

    @@SupportTheArts-yo8ox NOT all of us are scared of it .... unlike some cowards.

  • @SupportTheArts-yo8ox

    @SupportTheArts-yo8ox

    Ай бұрын

    @user-wt7ec1pb7u it's not about being "scared", it's about safety. It's not safe to be outdoors, especially by a tree or on the water or playing golf, etc, during a lightning storm. Folks have been seriously injured or k*lled.

  • @user-wt7ec1pb7u

    @user-wt7ec1pb7u

    Ай бұрын

    @@SupportTheArts-yo8ox omg GET OVER it! .... YOU DO AS YOU WANT & I WILL DO AS I WANT OK... & i LOVE Swimming in a nice river doing a good storm...

  • @SupportTheArts-yo8ox

    @SupportTheArts-yo8ox

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-wt7ec1pb7u no reason to be upset

  • @whoever6458
    @whoever64582 ай бұрын

    The elastic on your clothing can also lead to burns because it will melt into your skin. This is something they warned us about in the fire department. You also can't wear your glasses if you're going to enter a structure that's on fire because they will also burn you.

  • @James-miller
    @James-millerАй бұрын

    I didn’t like lightning before this video, it’s cool to watch and I’ve seen dry lightning but why add thunder snow into the mix that sound terrifying 😭😡

  • @tanthiennguyen9308
    @tanthiennguyen9308Ай бұрын

    Die Ozone Loch wird immer kleiner werden, dann können Sie jeder Hochschule & höher Gebäude in der Luftfahrt & Wasser Speicherung sparen können....................................! Einfacher zum Erklärungen ohne Kolission Schädlichkeit....................

  • @tomshoot
    @tomshoot5 ай бұрын

    Aaaaah our beautiful Wi-Fi Tesla coil ... ^^

  • @Emoji-ch8xu
    @Emoji-ch8xu3 ай бұрын

    satu kali turun dengan taruhan berapa aja 5 kerang stop

  • @yousifatobiya7279
    @yousifatobiya72798 ай бұрын

    The occurrence of stoms,rains,ice, and floods at times and in unexpected places,confirms my theory the end of the (dynamic horizontal movement )which needs to balance and it sill under control to balance... But about earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, sinkholes, tsunami, dry lakes and rivers, flow of water from the mountains and hills,explodeand of eyes water from the ground, formation of new mountains or islands, collaps of mountains ,and cracks on ground,& ,& ,&,they are out of control or balance... Note :The earth will become like Venus... Yousif A Tobiya Forcibly displaced

  • @janellehoney-badger6525
    @janellehoney-badger65253 ай бұрын

    What about birds & animals?

  • @jack86
    @jack866 ай бұрын

    in 1990, my uncle dies instantly in the ricefields, struck by lightning while operating tracktor.

  • @jchrg2336
    @jchrg23362 ай бұрын

    just make something that proppels in a positive way forward for humanity as long as lighting strikes under that 1ATM

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