Why Are There No Tornadoes In Europe? | Answers With Joe

Ғылым және технология

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Anybody who grew up in the Midwest is familiar with the threat of tornadoes, but why are tornadoes so prevalent in the American Midwest and not other places in the world? Today we talk with Pecos Hank to learn what causes tornadoes to form and why the United States gets way more of them than anywhere else in the world.
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LINKS LINKS LINKS:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979_Re...
www.weatherwizkids.com/weathe...
scied.ucar.edu/learning-zone/...
www.cnn.com/2021/04/26/weathe...
www.weather.gov/oun/efscale
scied.ucar.edu/learning-zone/...
www.usatoday.com/in-depth/new...
www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/8...
www.accuweather.com/en/weathe...
www.thoughtco.com/worlds-wors...
talkweather.com/threads/torna...
www.sciencefocus.com/planet-e...
www.redcross.org/get-help/how...

Пікірлер: 4 600

  • @sechran
    @sechran2 жыл бұрын

    "The sky can eat your house" - I've never heard tornadoes described like that, but I think I have a fun new weather phrase.

  • @Adrian-zd4cs

    @Adrian-zd4cs

    2 жыл бұрын

    As someone who was born and raised in Alabama.. I agree. Now all I need is James Spann to say it 😳🤣

  • @ventilate4267

    @ventilate4267

    2 жыл бұрын

    They're just vacuuming, not their fault you didn't pick up your toys

  • @ventilate4267

    @ventilate4267

    2 жыл бұрын

    The ground can eat your house in cali

  • @Adrian-zd4cs

    @Adrian-zd4cs

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ventilate4267 now I know what to tell my nephew in regards to his Legos

  • @Adrian-zd4cs

    @Adrian-zd4cs

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ventilate4267 I lived in San Diego for a few years. I'll honestly take my chances here in Alabama 🤔🤣

  • @marek9081
    @marek90812 жыл бұрын

    Being a European, I've heard about tornadoes in Europe maybe a few times in my life. In Poland we've had like 3-5 in the last 20 years, they damaged a few houses... Basically tornado isn't the first thing that comes to mind when you think about natural disasters in Europe. Floods are the most common ones here probably.

  • @mygetawayart

    @mygetawayart

    2 жыл бұрын

    Earthquakes here in southern Italy.

  • @Kavriel

    @Kavriel

    2 жыл бұрын

    From France, and yeah, droughts and floods are usually the most damaging things. There's been a few tempests that damaged stuff, but they are decennial or just about. We almost never get Earthquakes, tornadoes, and don't have active volcanoes that i know of. All in all it's a pretty priviledged place to be in.

  • @mjm3091

    @mjm3091

    2 жыл бұрын

    Also aside floods, fast wind and storms are also the most common disasters, usually around mountains.

  • @psychotropnilachtan8869

    @psychotropnilachtan8869

    2 жыл бұрын

    Czechs had real tornado last year so you might get one in Poland aswell ! Im now little worried every time when storm rolls in. Never though about it like that before last year.

  • @jonahfastre

    @jonahfastre

    2 жыл бұрын

    We had one in Hungary last summer

  • @vojtechjanak9860
    @vojtechjanak98602 жыл бұрын

    We've actually had big tornado (EF4) in the Czech rep. last summer. Six people died, ca 1200 houses were damaged and about two hundred of them had to be demolished. But you are right, it's very rare - disaster this big only happened here eleven times that we know of in the last 1000 years

  • @laurawendt8471

    @laurawendt8471

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s awful, I know there was a tornado in Poland from family a couple of years ago and the people were not prepared because it happen so rarely

  • @rustomkanishka

    @rustomkanishka

    5 ай бұрын

    1200 houses? That too European construction that uses bricks and concrete unlike American homes, which are made from cardboard. Does anyone try to shoot at the storm like Yanks apparently do?

  • @cinnamonflamingo
    @cinnamonflamingo Жыл бұрын

    Back when my family used to live in the UK (We're American and my dad was stationed in the UK in the military), we watched Cars when it came out in theaters. My mom always goes on about when Tow Mater said "I'm happier than a tornado in a trailer park!" and my mom would burst out laughing but the rest of the UK theater was stone dead silent.

  • @kingeddiam2543

    @kingeddiam2543

    4 ай бұрын

    I'm from the UK, and that sounds like the most American joke I have ever heard in my life, I'm not surprised there was such little reaction!

  • @Jellylamps
    @Jellylamps2 жыл бұрын

    Something about the concept of the sky pulling the air out of your lungs so that you hear your own voice as it goes out is just terrifying

  • @mosaicowlstudios

    @mosaicowlstudios

    Жыл бұрын

    I live in Norman, OK, where the National Weather Service is (it's actually about 1/4 mile down the road from my house). Around here we've heard every kind of Tornado story imaginable, especially with Moore, OK being just about 10 miles north. I thought I'd heard it all. But I'd never heard that story of having the air sucked out of your lungs and hearing your own voice howl--you're absolutely right, THAT IS TERRIFYING. Very hard to spook someone from my hometown about a Tornado experience. I'm sufficiently spooked. That's terrifying.

  • @melissapyle7879

    @melissapyle7879

    3 ай бұрын

    The bear in annihilation..😳🙊

  • @gregcampwriter
    @gregcampwriter2 жыл бұрын

    I was in a faculty writers' group meeting near Nashville, Tennessee in 2006 when the safety officer came by to tell us to get under the table. A minute later, the tornado tore through the campus. Light fixtures and ceiling tiles crashed down, and the building went dark. Once the all clear was sounded, I went out to the parking lot to see if my truck was still there among the swirled cars. The college president's car was atop a tree, but my truck was gone. I peered across a field to see a greyish lump of metal a couple hundred yards away and realized that I'd need a ride home. The one bit of good news is that I found out that tornadoes do not sound like trains. They sound like industrial ventilation fans.

  • @icarusbinns3156

    @icarusbinns3156

    2 жыл бұрын

    Doing a project on tornadoes in high school, my partner said, “We have to go outside for this.” Meaning: what a tornado sounded like to her. She explained it was one sound she’d never forget, and then proceeded to give voice to something like an avalanche roar and the Nazgul’s unholy shriek. She said she’d heard it as a small child, and was pretty sure the scream was her mother, screaming at the storm when it nearly yanked my classmate from her mother’s arms. Why they were out and caught by the storm, she did not share. Just the sound.

  • @shellylloyd1458

    @shellylloyd1458

    2 жыл бұрын

    A few years back a EF-0 went through the apartment complex I lived in about 6 am. It woke me up because it sounded just like a freight train going right though the apartment corridor. Thankfully it only did minor damage. I have been though some slightly larger tornadoes, but those were during hurricanes and I could not hear anything different other than the general sound of storm.

  • @FiMcFord3580

    @FiMcFord3580

    2 жыл бұрын

    The one I was in that went thru down town slc some 20+ years ago really sounded like a freight train going thru to me and just about everyone else that described it lol

  • @dragonace119

    @dragonace119

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah back when my house got nearly ripped down the middle by a tornado, the sound is the one thing that just never leaves your mind.

  • @desirefama5964

    @desirefama5964

    Жыл бұрын

    To me it did sound like a freight train. Not a train you hear these days, but a very angry runaway locomotive freight train that’s howling. Think Thomas the tank engine on steroids in a roid rage induced Wild West howling contest.

  • @madelinedick9676
    @madelinedick9676 Жыл бұрын

    When I was 10, I moved to a 12th floor apartment in park slope, New York. I moved from Minnesota, where tornadoes are relatively common. I had never experienced one at the time, however, and was deathly afraid of them. About 4 months into living in Brooklyn, a tornado went through our neighborhood. Keep in mind, again, this was the middle of Brooklyn with lots of pretty tall apartment buildings. One person was killed, but other than that there was hardly any damage done. I still can’t really believe that actually happened.

  • @goldenhate6649

    @goldenhate6649

    Жыл бұрын

    Steel frame construction is pretty resilient to tornados. Won’t deal with a true ef-4 or ef-5 (you know, the ones the government doesn’t f up the ratings for). In Joplin missouri, the tornado wrapped a steel ibeam around a tree

  • @shadowcruiser874

    @shadowcruiser874

    Жыл бұрын

    I waited my entire life fo that moment kzread.info/dash/bejne/qHdk1NF-m86xm7Q.html

  • @Acidlib

    @Acidlib

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve never been to New York, but just trying to imagine a tornado in the built up areas of Chicago or areas of Manhattan and the outer boroughs I’ve seen second hand seems insane. I’ve actually seen several different tornadoes in the distance while driving through or staying in rural areas near where I grew up and also had one that sadly killed a few people that went right through my tiny hometown, but if you were more than a block away the damage was quite minimal or nearly nonexistent and we were lucky enough to live on the other side of town. I hope no large tornadoes ever come in contact with scyscrapers, but I wonder how smaller “five over one” type apartment building would fare against tornadoes without the steel frames that larger high rises usually have, especially considering how prevalent that building type has gotten in mid size American cities and suburbs these days.

  • @ThePatchedVest

    @ThePatchedVest

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Acidlib Five-over-ones are awful architecturally even beyond planning for tornadic activity. That said, a EF4 or EF5 driving straight through the heart of a dense major metropolitan area like Chicago, Minneapolis, New York or Toronto - and not just skirmishing the suburbs or scuffing some buildings - is Hollywood nightmare fuel to be sure. Thankfully, the odds are astronomically low if just because of how small these areas are in comparison to how large supercell storms tend to be.

  • @boejudden9011

    @boejudden9011

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ThePatchedVest it did happen in Minneapolis

  • @MigotRen
    @MigotRen Жыл бұрын

    As it happend, there actually was a F2 tornado here in germany in the summer and it was pretty close by in the city of Paderborn. later that day a friend of mine told us that her friend that lives there actually lost their roof and had to stay with her.

  • @bluepotato1354

    @bluepotato1354

    Жыл бұрын

    Was in Germany when that happened, not far from Paderborn! We thought it was going to hit us at first but it passed by. We certainly saw it forming though

  • @ViewThis.

    @ViewThis.

    Жыл бұрын

    That was the first thing that came to my mind when I read the title of this video. Tornadoe in Germany. Odd, but they do happen there too.

  • @notsoberoveranalyzer8264

    @notsoberoveranalyzer8264

    Жыл бұрын

    Edit: When I was a kid I thought Quicksand, Terrorists, Snipers, Tornados and Volcanos were going to be major fucking problems.

  • @davehilling3944

    @davehilling3944

    Жыл бұрын

    I was in Turkey in the last 90s and there was a tornado it didn't last long and was lucky if it was above an F1 but i watched it walk down the runway at the air force base I was at. I was also stationed at Wichita falls TX and yeah it was pretty much every night at times we had tornado warnings.

  • @manub.3847

    @manub.3847

    Жыл бұрын

    An average of 20 to 60 tornadoes occur in Germany. Our European tornado route often travels from France via Benelux to northern Germany and Poland. (The newspaper Der Stern had a report on the subject)

  • @stevewood8914
    @stevewood89142 жыл бұрын

    I had no idea that we in the UK had the most tornados per square mile. Though when they happen they tend to be weak and short lived. Media reports are like "A tornado is reported to have struck a street a Coventry. One shaken resident went out to investigate and was nearly hit by a falling roof tile. Several rooves were damaged by the freak weather event, but no one was injured".

  • @BillyTheKidder

    @BillyTheKidder

    2 жыл бұрын

    “A dust bin was knocked over in Chastbury..”

  • @carterjones8126

    @carterjones8126

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@BillyTheKidder By jove, what disaster has befallen our street. My wheelie bin has moved 5 feet from my house!

  • @Cleeeer

    @Cleeeer

    2 жыл бұрын

    Haha!

  • @Hollylivengood

    @Hollylivengood

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@carterjones8126 I wonder why they are so weak. Not to complain, I'm glad for you guys. Maybe because the amount of land they travel across is less. In Missouri they've got a good hundred miles to churn over before anything changes. In the '80s this guy was interviewed in his back yard that was completely torn up, and he said, "We're all fine, we all made it to the basement, but I have two new cars in my yard that I've never seen before."

  • @pieterveenders9793

    @pieterveenders9793

    Жыл бұрын

    The Netherlands has the highest tornado density per kilometre actualy, with the UK coming in second.

  • @thebonesaw..4634
    @thebonesaw..46342 жыл бұрын

    I've been through two tornados. The first one occurred when I was about 14 years-old. It literally formed about a half mile from our house, so we had absolutely no warning *(in fact, the tornado sirens didn't go off until it was about a mile past our house).* We had a tornado spot inside our house, but no one had time to get in it. I was reading on Reddit some people talking about how you could tell if the tornado was heading towards you, and someone said that, if it looked like it was standing still, it was coming at you (or going away), and if you could see movement, then you _"could be certain"_ that it was headed away from you. Yeah... *NOTHING is for CERTAIN, when it comes to a tornado.* The tornado that hit us traveled north of our house, and was only 100 yards or so from us (literally eating our neighbor's house - they were both at work so, no injuries). Then, about 20 seconds later, the tornado turned and looped back in the opposite direction on the southern side of our house *(as though it had dropped its keys and was going back to look for them).* 15 or 20 seconds after that, it looped back and retraced its path back over our neighbor's house (it literally circled our house - and the whole time it just kept sucking shingles off our roof (the only damage we took, except for a really nice elm tree my mom had planted on the northside a couple years previously - we never saw it again). No one was killed... quite a few injuries though. The second tornado occurred when I lived in Virginia. Like the first, we had zero warning before it decided to stroll up our street. I lived in a really quaint, old neighborhood in our town. I was the only one home (because I worked third shift), but I recognized the sound with only about 10 seconds to spare. We had a room for our boiler (we had radiators in the house) that served as our tornado/hurricane room. I went there. Almost as soon as I got there, it passed our house. It jumped the street next to us, flew over a small wooded area then came back down in a retail area and killed one person. I went outside to survey the damage. As it had come up the street, it started lifting in order to jump over the road I mentioned. My house had zero damage, but we lost 3- or 400 singles. *My neighbor, whose house was only 10 feet from mine, had a cedar tree rammed through her front wall.* The neighbor beyond her had part of their roof torn off and other exterior damage. The neighbor beyond them had zero roof and virtually all their top floor furniture was gone... *The next house was completely gone... there was just a slab.* All of the houses past that looked similar until you got to the other end of the street, which mirror imaged the damage on my end. As I said, I worked third shift... I was almost the only person home, everyone else was at work. Additionally, all the kids were at school, which was on the opposite end of our street and took zero damage. *Had the tornado hit only 30 minutes later, all those kids, including my six year-old daughter, would have been walking home or riding the bus directly where the tornado touched down* (I shudder to think that almost every kid could have been killed... making us one of the unluckiest neighborhoods ever - it would have been horrible).

  • @garethfuller2700

    @garethfuller2700

    2 жыл бұрын

    As far as the first bit- yeah, while tornadoes *generally* have a set behavior (tend to move in a particular direction), anyone claiming they "always do X" is full of it. One case study in "Tornado that went against most/all norms" would be the 2013 El Reno tornado. Give that a look - 2.6 mi wide, and it gets worse from there...

  • @danelynch7171

    @danelynch7171

    2 жыл бұрын

    Jesus. You sure are getting alot of miles out of those couple little storms...

  • @THEmickTHEgun

    @THEmickTHEgun

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s crazy

  • @thebonesaw..4634

    @thebonesaw..4634

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@garethfuller2700 -- Yeah, I've been a subscriber of Pecos Hank for a couple of years now (he's incredible, I love the stuff he does with all the animals too). I like tornado videos so I've seen the El Reno twister from about 20 different chasers. Additionally, the company I used to work for did paintless dent repair, and my job was to literally chase hail storms and help set up shops for us in areas that were hit. In fact, my company had an advertising deal with Twistex (the team who regretfully lost three chasers that day). That was a really bad day.

  • @oldmech619

    @oldmech619

    2 жыл бұрын

    I strongly believe in safety. I hear that storm shelters are not cost effective in saving lives. I am sure Amazon wear houses could have built a lot of storm shelters. I believe fear factor is well worth the price. Tornadoes are scary as hell and shelters feel good. Just knowing that they are there is a good feeling. Thanks for sharing.

  • @magiv4205
    @magiv42052 жыл бұрын

    Living in Switzerland (but anyone I know in other European countries says pretty much the same thing), tornados have always been this fantastical, far-off and exotic natural disaster that I heard off in stories like the Wizard of Oz, and I knew they existed and were bad, but never really thought about how they impacted real people. I was only in my late teens when it slowly dawned on me how incredibly real of a threat they are when I saw certain pictures of tornados in the US and learned about not just the scale of the destruction, but also how frequently you guys have to deal with them. To think that for many people in the US, tornado drills are something completely normal is wild to me. In Europe, we're also mostly spared from Earthquakes, and those that do happen often don't really affect us. Not only because they're far weaker in general so we often don't even notice them, but whenever a slightly stronger one does happen, many of our houses are so solidly built that we can just shrug it off. In most of Europe, floods and, in southern Europe, droughts, are by far the most destructive natural disaster, and in Switzerland specifically, small earthquakes can cause avalanches - and those are a very real threat that can bury a village in a terrifying instant. Our houses thus need to be built to last, so they don't just get swept away. If your house gets buried in an avalanche with you in it, you have a pretty good chance of making it out alive because the rescuers have alot of time to dig you out of there, and with any luck, you have enough air to last you several days. If our walls were made of plywood like in the US (no disrespect lol), you'd be crushed flat by the rubble before you knew what hit you. Avalanches are not something that I've personally witnessed (except in the news), but flooding is rather common, and I remember the Great Alpine Flood of '05 like it was yesterday. I was only 6 then, but I remember how all of us kids helped stack the sandbags by our school and other buildings, how the firemen rowed their boats through the streets that were filled knee to head high, depending on where you were, the ducks swimming next to them to keep them company, and how we played pirates on the benches next to the lake, the bench being our pirate ship, completely surrounded by water. More importantly, I remember many of the people I know who lost almost everything they owned in this disaster, and how we spent the rest of the year cleaning up the destruction and pumping the water out of the first floors and cellars. Thankfully, at least in Switzerland, only 6 people actually died, but in surrounding countries that were also hit, many were less lucky. It's quite a surreal memory to me, because I viewed much of it through the lens of a child - plus, my family's house was along a hill so we were personally spared from the worst. In comparison to yearly strong tornadoes, this might not seem like that much of a big deal, but I believe it was thanks to our solid infrastructure that even most of those whose homes were hit the worst were able to rebuild and repair them eventually instead of being compmetely displaced. Without those solid foundations, things would have been much, much worse and many more people would have died.

  • @intheshell35ify

    @intheshell35ify

    Жыл бұрын

    Tapping "read more" on this comment is a bit of a commitment.

  • @YouTubeSupportSucks

    @YouTubeSupportSucks

    Жыл бұрын

    Please learn paragraph breaks

  • @magiv4205

    @magiv4205

    Жыл бұрын

    @@KZreadSupportSucks fixed it for you :)

  • @personagenerator

    @personagenerator

    Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact, lighter and more flexible construction is more likely to survive an earthquake. Any concrete or masonry must be reinforced (rebar) to be deemed safe and pass code in California. Even in a 6.5 magnitude quake when I was a kid, almost all of our wood frame construction houses were perfectly fine despite roads and sidewalks being broken up and cracked apart and older concrete buildings being completely leveled. The only houses that weren't okay were shifted on their foundation or had damaged foundations. Also, you want to avoid post and beam construction for houses in earthquake areas as it's heavier and harder to reinforce for the kinds of stresses put on the joints between beams. It's all about prioritizing the right construction method for the environment.

  • @Lea-is-sleeping

    @Lea-is-sleeping

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately we have horrific floods, droughts, earthquakes and avalanches in North America too. I'm unfortunately live in a place by the Rockies that has floods and avalanches plus destructive blizzards, snow squalls and tornadoes. In fact we had a horrific flood 9 years ago that killed many people and destroyed thousands of homes and buildings (and an even more destructive last year, just one province over from me). I guess at least I'm lucky that where I live, at least, we're too far up to get Hurricanes here, and earthquakes are rare. The point is, weather is just more extreme in North America than most places in Europe; which sucks, but I would never live anywhere else. You take the bad with the good! :)

  • @lynneperg6853
    @lynneperg6853 Жыл бұрын

    Not too much to say. I live in SW Michigan and we don't get tornadoes real often. I've been in 3 or 4 here in my hometown. Once we we were driving down the freeway and a rain wrapped funnel formed right over the car. It lifted the vehicle off the ground twice. We felt it bounce each time it dropped it. When I was a young woman one skipped over our house, bye bye chimney, this one came in the night. There were regular drills in the schools so we knew where to go and how to behave. As a young mother my town was hit by an f-3. Three killed and much damage, a church was hit, it was brick and the only thing left was the foundation. Nothing else was ever found, even the bricks were gone. Once you have had a close encounter of the twister type you don't forget it. People who are traumatized by a f-0 or a f-1 will hopefully never live through a bigger one. I saw the damage that a f-5 did. Weather personnel were warning that if you wanted to survive, find a shelter or get below ground. It looked like a mile wide vacuum cleaner went through. To this day I won't buy or live in a home without a basement or shelter.

  • @aperson1

    @aperson1

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone who lives in California where tornadoes almost never happen, the statement "we don't get tornados real often" next to "I've been in 3 or 4" was quite the experience to read, hah.

  • @spacecat8511

    @spacecat8511

    Жыл бұрын

    I had to live in a home that didn’t have a basement (far too much limestone, you had to blast dynamite to make foundations so despite the frequent storms nobody really bothered unless they had “walk in basements” on hillsides with new construction), and insult to injury, no place to shelter-long hall, every room had a window (even the bathrooms), NO interior rooms, NO closers big enough to stick a family + pets. Yeah. It gave me cptsd that’s only getting better in that respect after moving someplace that isn’t EVERY Storm Is Severe Thunderstorms (and capable of staightline winds flattening everything or tornados). NOW I have a basement. Because NOW it’s SANDY Soil so it’s easy for folks to have one. And the thunderstorms here are…kinda a joke. As a child in my homestate that I lived until 3 years ago? It was common enough for the house to sound like it was in a vacuum with an utter ROAR of wind outside, with the pressure feeling like your head needs your ears to pop. Or quite literally have walls of water dumping from the sky, and realizing you lost a tree; the rain was too thick and loud to hear it crash. Or hear a tree closer to the house bending and snapping and make the house shake as it landed parallel to the hall you and your parents tried to shelter in, hoping it will not fall on you FUCK not having at the very least an interior bathroom with NO WINDOWS to use as a storm shelter. It is my no1 requirement for an apartment-I’ll invest in high quality screws and locks and a cricket bat THANKS

  • @fancypoliwag3979

    @fancypoliwag3979

    Жыл бұрын

    Northern Michigan here, we have only had two watches in my home town. Aka, no tornado ever came, yet we got to see a super cell once. Kinda dope. One dropped in Gaylord last year. First time I've heard of a tornado in N MI like ever.

  • @cannedcobras2893

    @cannedcobras2893

    Жыл бұрын

    also SW Michigan here, and Ive also been in a couple of tornadoes. I remember hard rain, losing power, then several trees falling on the house and car. they're surprisingly very quick. Our deadliest tornado was an F3 that killed 5 people, but I know there was an F5 in Flint in 1953. Cant really say much else ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @dylanisntvibing

    @dylanisntvibing

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm from southeast Michigan, or Rochester Hills. I've pretty much never gotten any tornadoes that touch down in my life. I mean, the area where I live is pretty hilly and forested, hence the name. Only just last summer in 2022, a tornado touched down not too far from my city. I think it went past and ended up near Flint, then subsided as usual. Other than that and a couple other bad storms that didn't result in a tornado, I'd say the weather is sort of calm other than some storms occasionally.

  • @Randomconsiderations
    @Randomconsiderations2 жыл бұрын

    When I was a kid, we lived in a mobile home. A tornado hit one night. It lifted our house off the ground a few feet before slamming it back down. It also ripped the roof off of the back half, sending pieces of it all over, including through the windows of neighbors' houses. It was the middle of the night and, being in the middle of the country, there was no warning siren or anything to alert us sooner. Not that we had anywhere else we could go, anyway. Anyhow, no one was hurt fortunately. I somehow managed to sleep through the whole thing, only realizing something must have happened the next day when all my toys that were on a shelf were now on the floor. It's probably for the best I don't sleep THAT soundly anymore. The next day when our landlord came out to help clean up, he and my step-dad spent a good hour or two rocking back and forth a 2x4 from our roof that had impaled the ground, blunt-end first, into the dirt about 2 feet.

  • @chewy99.

    @chewy99.

    2 жыл бұрын

    A tornado just happened without warning? Nobody even heard it?

  • @howdareyouexist

    @howdareyouexist

    2 жыл бұрын

    A tornado just happened without warning? Nobody even heard it?

  • @spaceisalie5451

    @spaceisalie5451

    2 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed your comment

  • @Zanybandz123

    @Zanybandz123

    2 жыл бұрын

    A tornado just happened without warning? Nobody even heard it?

  • @danevertt3210

    @danevertt3210

    2 жыл бұрын

    A tornado just happened without warning? Nobody even heard it?

  • @uptown3636
    @uptown36362 жыл бұрын

    When I was 6, I was living in Louisiana and a tornado hit my small town and damaged our house while we were in it. We lived on a big lot and lost 45 trees in that one storm. The chimneys made an awful noise like a train was about to hit our living room. Before taking shelter, I saw the twister rip two trees out of the ground and throw them an unimaginable distance. It sucked a concrete slab from our carport out of the ground and deposited across the street in a field. The only fatality was our next door neighbor's dog, who was crushed by debris. After the storm, I walked outside and the smell of sawdust was incredibly strong. There was no sawdust, it was the smell of trees that had been ripped apart. That odor still brings me right back to that day 30 years ago.

  • @chestersnap
    @chestersnap Жыл бұрын

    I grew up in central Florida which also gets a lot of tornadoes and every time a storm comes through (so daily for about half a year) you just look at the clouds to check the color and to see if you could spot any funnel clouds forming. Before I started at the local university I went to, a tornado came by on Christmas and completely destroyed a couple of buildings. While I was going there, a microburst blew out a couple of windows in the building I worked in but we were never hit by a tornado.

  • @2kdegenerate708
    @2kdegenerate7082 жыл бұрын

    When I was 3, and I actually remember this day, my mom was picking me up from daycare in Little Rock Arkansas, a tornado touchdown across the street and almost took out the daycare. There was a basement that all the kids and parents hid in and I remember leaving and see all the trees and street lights thrown everywhere. 3 years later I was living in Paris Tx and a tornado hit outside of town which was on my bus route. See that again reminded me off how little we were in control of nature.

  • @Blate1
    @Blate12 жыл бұрын

    Tornado alley story - when I was in middle school, we were having football practice in a field, and a funnel cloud started forming directly over our heads. We all panicked and started running, but luckily the funnel dissipated before it touched ground. Needless to say, we still decided it was probably best to cancel practice for the day.

  • @zulimi

    @zulimi

    2 жыл бұрын

    Was there any other weather to hint at it's pending formation?

  • @Blate1

    @Blate1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@zulimi It was cloudy and felt like a storm was brewing, but there wasn't any lightning yet and just a light drizzle of rain, which is why practice hadn't yet been called off

  • @zulimi

    @zulimi

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Blate1 That is scary. It can come out of nowhere from mild weather.

  • @Hollylivengood

    @Hollylivengood

    2 жыл бұрын

    That was wild. Where was that at?

  • @lynk8951

    @lynk8951

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@zulimi hi, another child of the tornado alley here. The sky will take a greenish hue on as well. Though it can be difficult to tell sometimes. What's weird (and a bit scary) is they can come out of nowhere as well. I remember there being days that everything seemed fine in the morning but a tornado will show up just a couple hours later. Alot of people I knew would just keep an eye on the different wind fronts, because you need a cold and hot one clashing for a tornado. The news will even say that it's got the perfect ingredients for a tornado so be prepared just in case.

  • @anniejuan1817
    @anniejuan18172 жыл бұрын

    "If you're in a mobile home, go literally anywhere else." Yes! My family and I have joked for decades that mobile homes have a target on the roof that only tornadoes can see.

  • @NicimakiClips
    @NicimakiClips2 жыл бұрын

    Weather nerd here. Very great and informative video. However, the part with europe has some flaws ( as well as middle east). The first flaws are with the reports. Europe averages 700 tornado reports each year, based on ESWD Data. Two highest was 2021 with 975 reports & 2017 with 915 reports. Although most of them are tornadoes over water, it's still counted in the frequency and total reports. Another flaw was the UK part. In 2014, ESSL released a climatology of tornado reports in europe, reported to ESWD. In that climatology, germany has the most tornadoes per area, with 50 - 100 tornadoes per 10.000km2, expanding across the west side of germany into belgium and netherlands. Another 50 - 100 tornadoes per 10.000 km2 area was noticed in the german/czech republic border and another in south-west. The UK had 20 - 50 per 10.000 km2 at highest. That's equal to denmark, poland, france and many more. The average with 20 - 50 can be argued. Although it's the estimate, a more likely number is 15 - 20, as that's the typical amount reported in a year to ESWD from the UK. Most of the tornadoes are weak, but in reality, most are across the world (incl us). For example, if you compare the 15 - 20 a year in the UK to certain states, the frequency in terms of weak and strong tornadoes close to be the same. Europe have its own alley as well. Another flaw was related to middle-east. Although it is true to some extent, turkey should be excluded there. ESWD has recieved a total of 645 tornado reports from turkey, as of today, march 8. In january, 2019, a cyclic supercell produced 11 tornadoes in the antalya area, claiming the lives of a few. Highest rated being rated F2. ESWD also counts report in certain nations in eurasia, here under the surrounding areas in the med area. Cyprus has seen 141 reports. bonus facts: regarding the russia part at 8:55. That area that see the most tornadoes in russia is of course the european part of russia The part where you never heard about massive tornadoes outside the US can be explained. Most don't know what i call "the hidden tornadoes", as a reference to the fact that they're not heard about often. Palluel, france F5 tornado in the 1960s is a good example. The Holstebro, denmark high-end F3 tornado of 1962 or the Fårvang, denmark high-end F3 tornado of 1963 can also be used as an example. They're put in their own language for tornadoes, making it quite un-noticable for people to read. Denmark it's skypumpe, sweden it's tromb, germany it's windhose. , netherlands it's windhoos, poland it's trąba powietrzna. They're the same thing.

  • @bloviatingbeluga8553

    @bloviatingbeluga8553

    2 жыл бұрын

    Legend. Thanks. I've been to the Antalya area. I thought they couldn't have any because of the mountains. You learn more every day!

  • @dominikklein602

    @dominikklein602

    2 жыл бұрын

    Man, I wanted to look smart and link a Wikipedia article on Wirbelstürme in Deutschland, and then there is already a scientist explaining everything better than I could ever imagine. Where do I go now to try to appear smart?

  • @MetalFan10101

    @MetalFan10101

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dominikklein602 School

  • @tremors536

    @tremors536

    2 жыл бұрын

    Pretty sure you are why Joes eye twitches. But good info.

  • @huskytail

    @huskytail

    2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent. Very well summarized and explain, thank you!

  • @henny__
    @henny__2 жыл бұрын

    Not only America and Bangladesh have had EF/F5 tornadoes. France, Germany, Canada, Italy and Russia also had several in their history. There also are some suspected cases in Poland and China, for example. Europe sees an F4 tornado every few years, and an F5 tornado every few decades. Parts of Europe such as the UK, the Netherlands and northern Germany have more tornadoes per square kilometer than the US. Especially in europe's tornado alley (ranging from France, the BENELUX-countries, Germany and Poland all the way into western Russia) aswell as in China, tornadoes get as strong and huge as tornadoes in the US and regularly cause dozens of injuries and deaths.

  • @bodombeastmode

    @bodombeastmode

    Жыл бұрын

    Most of those tornadoes in Europe are not long-tracked, violent ones though. Since 1950, all but 3 F5's have been in the US.

  • @henny__

    @henny__

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@bodombeastmode Thats true, most torneadoes in europe aren't long-tracked. Powerful tornadoes in europe usually travel somewhere between 5km (3mi) and 40km (25mi). However, there are exceptions. The frequency of F5 tornadoes in America is way higher. Which is somewhat logical since there are more than three times as many tornadoes here every year as, for example, in Europe. In addition, ideal conditions regularly prevail in America, which is the absolute exception in Europe. I certainly didn't want to discredit America as the number one tornado country, but tornadoes in other specific parts of the world shouldn't be underestimated.

  • @13_cmi

    @13_cmi

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I was thinking of Canada each time he said that. They had that skinny little f5. Those crazy violent little tornadoes are the coolest. You can see straight to the heart of them where the winds are the most violent because they don’t have that crazy width of weaker winds that hide it all. This is neat stuff

  • @desirefama5964

    @desirefama5964

    Жыл бұрын

    I had half my roof ripped off in the Netherlands when I still lived there. Freak tornado came through, took half my roof tiles with it, and then proceeded to flatten an entire farm on the other side of the lake down to its foundations. That was the first tornado I had ever even heard of in the Netherlands, and I was born and raised there. This happened I guess maybe 7-8 years ago? From my experience we mainly had nasty “northeastern” storms that would wipe out half the coastline if not the entire coastline way up in to the dunes. But that’s a storm you actually go out to watch. My dad would drive us down to the coast and we’d sit in the car just watching these giant waves crashing in to the dunes. We wouldn’t be in any immediate danger like tornado chasers are, but I still wouldn’t recommend taking a walk in that weather as you could easily get overpowered by a wave and drown.

  • @annebell565

    @annebell565

    Жыл бұрын

    they may be labelled storms, UK got bad 'storm' in 1987 ...

  • @eddiedonlin8936
    @eddiedonlin89362 жыл бұрын

    "Sailors to your mom" - LOL So perfect!

  • @victoriacarter7426

    @victoriacarter7426

    2 жыл бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣

  • @karlsteffen7804

    @karlsteffen7804

    2 жыл бұрын

    I love this guy hahahaha

  • @andrewbecerra550

    @andrewbecerra550

    2 жыл бұрын

    My dad is former Navy... this psychic son of a

  • @eddiedonlin8936

    @eddiedonlin8936

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@andrewbecerra550 I'm former Navy, as is my wife...we both died laughing at this line. 🤣

  • @dsperber3680

    @dsperber3680

    2 жыл бұрын

    As a retired sailor I approve of this message.

  • @MFLimited
    @MFLimited2 жыл бұрын

    There was a “ tornado” in Coventry last fall. Messed up some roof tiles on some houses. It may have tipped over a transit van, but they think that might have been some of the local kids. Nobody was injured. But, apparently that was the biggest UK tornado in decades.

  • @eekee6034

    @eekee6034

    2 жыл бұрын

    My family used to go on holiday in a static caravan site in Selsey Bill every year for about a decade. There was one change in the entire time; the old caravan we used to rent was replaced with a newer better one. (But the new one still had Pong. That was good.) A few years after we stopped going, (which was also a few years after I'd learned all about tornados in the US,) a tornado ripped through it. Seeing the pictures was very, very surreal.

  • @dwaynetherockjordan3296

    @dwaynetherockjordan3296

    2 жыл бұрын

    Selsey Tornado of 1998 is the biggest In the past few decades I believe

  • @13_cmi

    @13_cmi

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bet everyone in the uk freaked out about this

  • @holyflowerpots1400

    @holyflowerpots1400

    2 жыл бұрын

    There was one in King's Heath in Birmingham in 2005 rated as F2 (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_Birmingham_tornado)

  • @billynomates920

    @billynomates920

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@holyflowerpots1400 remember that one!

  • @desirefama5964
    @desirefama5964 Жыл бұрын

    I live in Illinois. Last year we had a tornado rip through our town. My property backs on to a main road. The tornado basically went across that road behind my house, and left my neighborhood untouched. The neighborhood on the other side wasn’t so lucky. I ended up with a random tree in my front yard and pieces of a roof or multiple roofs in my back yard. No damage to my house though. Or even to my trees. To this day I have no idea who’s yard that tree came from, but I’m just glad it didn’t land on my roof because that was a big old oak tree. And as my house is an old ranch house built in the 50’s, that tree would’ve gone right through my whole house and destroyed it. So yeah, it landed in my front yard, it did some minor landscape damage and some minor damage to my front step. Nothing some grading didn’t fix, and the plants grew back in fine. But it was a surreal situation. It happened late at night. It must have been around 10-11 pm when the siren went off and then my phone went off too. My husband was just getting ready for bed, and I yanked him out of the bedroom and dragged him and the dogs in to our mud room. It’s literally the ONLY room in the house that doesn’t have windows. We sat there with our animals and phone chargers. The rain started coming down, then the lightning started. Couldn’t see it, but you could feel the whole house shake with each strike. Then the hail started, and that was louder than the rain. The wind picked up. And then it got eerily quiet and all of a sudden it sounded like a freight train barreling down. I could feel the whole house moving, heard the joists groaning under the strain. The dogs also went very quiet and basically sat on us. Even the cats came and hid with us and the dogs rather than in their hiding places. Then the power went out. Our phones started blaring again. By this point it was basically barreling past our property. The tornado sirens outside were going off, but you couldn’t even hear them at this point anymore over the sound of this runaway freight train coming past. The sirens went off about 4-5 more times on our phones. It was very surreal and scary. At first my husband was a little blasé about it, but now that we’ve gone through our first “big one” (it wasn’t that big but it was plenty big for our European senses lol), he does react more promptly to hearing the siren going off and is more serious about it. For me, this was my second tornado. First one was when I was on vacation in Texas when I was 18, and I had to hide in some random persons shelter at their house. When I tell you those people DRAGGED me in to their storm cellar when those sirens went off, I’m not even close to kidding. They didn’t know me from Adam, nor I them, and they just went “nope, you’re coming to hide in here! You ain’t dying on our watch Missy!” Still grateful to those people. So I had a bit more experience with what a tornado can do than my hubby. Safe to say he learned a valuable lesson that day. If I run to the basement and yell “NADER! Get in the basement NOW!” you get your behind in the basement 😂

  • @BobDeGuerre

    @BobDeGuerre

    Жыл бұрын

    I've lived in Southern Illinois at the edge of the Shawnee National Forest since 1970 and I've been through my fair share of tornadoes. We also get hit by the remains of hurricanes- Isaac being a not so recent example that downed aa lot of trees on the western edge of the SNF However, the May 8th Derecho of 2009 was the most destruction I've ever seen- we were fortunate not to have lost our roof, and that utilities were restored in our area in about two weeks.

  • @karimecolettadominguez

    @karimecolettadominguez

    Жыл бұрын

    Also from Illinois! However we are usually spared the nastier tornadoes due to being up north

  • @jayroger7612
    @jayroger7612 Жыл бұрын

    We get em here in Ontario as well, mostly little ones but its enough of a risk that we had tornado drills growing up. I had a weird obsession with tornadoes as a kid, i think i watched wizard of oz too young and figured "welp guess i have to be prepared to save my family from a tornado"

  • @differentfins

    @differentfins

    Жыл бұрын

    I was working near Ear Falls, ON in 2009 when that F2 killed three men from Oklahoma staying at a fishing camp. The sky that night was insane and still hard to believe.

  • @oilersridersbluejays

    @oilersridersbluejays

    Жыл бұрын

    We have tornadoes quite often in Saskatchewan as well as in Alberta and Manitoba. Really, we are just a continuation of the US Great Plains.

  • @User31129

    @User31129

    Жыл бұрын

    Well if you continue the US-Canada border out west in a straight line east, basically 90% of Ontario's population is south of there. So makes sense (I live in Metro Detroit)

  • @TeamLarry
    @TeamLarry2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for increasing my existential dread about supervolcanoes

  • @Milk-ni1qh

    @Milk-ni1qh

    2 жыл бұрын

    And sailors around our moms

  • @jaredf6205

    @jaredf6205

    2 жыл бұрын

    The biggest natural disaster threat potential for the US is probably a super earthquake in the Pacific northwest. The tsunami caused by it could kill millions.

  • @LukeSumIpsePatremTe

    @LukeSumIpsePatremTe

    2 жыл бұрын

    On the bright side, you only die once!

  • @RyanGoertz916

    @RyanGoertz916

    2 жыл бұрын

    How much did that account cost?

  • @sketcharmslong6289

    @sketcharmslong6289

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah at least you'll go out with a bang

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache2 жыл бұрын

    This makes me grateful that I've never experienced a tornado my whole life, and I'm not planning to.

  • @adryncharn1910

    @adryncharn1910

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have never experienced one, and after watching all those storm chaser videos by Pecos Hank, I hope to never experience one in the future.

  • @alexandernichols413

    @alexandernichols413

    2 жыл бұрын

    We can’t all be so lucky.

  • @pamelaneibuhr6959

    @pamelaneibuhr6959

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are everywhere, guess I am too if I’m seeing you again.

  • @pamelaneibuhr6959

    @pamelaneibuhr6959

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adryncharn1910 try living in tornado ally. That’s why I have a basement.

  • @izzmus

    @izzmus

    2 жыл бұрын

    I experienced one tornado.... and I was camping in a friend's RV. I was actually wandering around outside wondering what was going on and then the wind started beating the rig around and I figured even though an RV is a tornado magnet, it was still safer than being outside.

  • @54BiZZuRKS
    @54BiZZuRKS2 жыл бұрын

    I’m from Texas and my grandfather used to tell a story about coming outside after a tornado and finding an intact tire wrapped around the base of a fully grown tree. I’ve personally been through three tornadoes outside, a couple under a bridge and one I was in a ditch when I went over me.

  • @zZWolfyZz
    @zZWolfyZz Жыл бұрын

    Ive been in an alarming number of tornados honestly but the big one was that f5 in joplin a few years back I was on a road trip with my dad and we knew from experience that shit was not right so we put the hammer down and got the hell out of there mustve been doing a hundred and ten at a few points and when we felt safe we started stopping traffic that was going west twoards the shit moat of the people we stopped didn't even realise what was going on ive still got a few pictures of the tornado out the back window of the car and I couldnt get the full width of it in the shot but hey I'm here so life goes on eh

  • @stefanolacchin4963
    @stefanolacchin49632 жыл бұрын

    I'm from Venice (Italy) and in 1970 we had a freak tornado that hit the lagoon at peak force and literally lifted and threw a waterbus full of people, killing 21 on the spot. Unremarkable if not for the setting I guess but you know... Tornadoes in Europe, we do have them.

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow4482 жыл бұрын

    I remember being on vacation in the summer of 1974, visiting relatives in Ohio. I was just a teenager but we drove through a town that had been hit badly by tornadoes during the previous April. The town was called Xenia. The tornado was a F-5. Multiple schools and commercial buildings were destroyed. The sight of 150 year old oak trees torn out of the ground was incredible. I believe the damage was so great that the federal government instituted new weather warnings and improved safety warnings in response to the damage caused by the tornadoes that touched down that April day across the Midwest.

  • @barry99705

    @barry99705

    2 жыл бұрын

    My mom and aunts helped clean up after that one. I was born 5 months later in Xenia. Xenia has been hit three times now if I remember right.

  • @stephenhurd1489

    @stephenhurd1489

    2 жыл бұрын

    Dannnnng your old !I'm kidding ...don't hate on me

  • @stevengiallourakis5816

    @stevengiallourakis5816

    2 жыл бұрын

    That is the story we were told up in the Cleveland area as kids. Still remember all the tornado drills.

  • @miask8er

    @miask8er

    2 жыл бұрын

    I had an ex named Xenia lol

  • @RealBradMiller

    @RealBradMiller

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'll never forget the tornado outbreak in 2011, driving through what looked like giant scratch marks and destroyed homes on my thirty minute highway trip home. I thought for sure my house and my dogs were gone. They were a little shook up, as was I, but safe and sound.

  • @Skarry
    @Skarry Жыл бұрын

    My wife and I were huddled under our stairs during one of the few tornadoes to come through Chicago. She was 7 months pregnant. Our son has always been terrified of tornadoes even though we've never talked about them and he's never experienced even a watch. He'd ask every night before bed if there'd be a tornado. We had him in therapy for it from age of 7 to 10.

  • @ArianaCobriana
    @ArianaCobriana2 жыл бұрын

    An EF-5 I learned about only recently took place in Elie Manitoba back in 2007, was a pretty interesting thing to hear about

  • @lemonadecupcakes
    @lemonadecupcakes2 жыл бұрын

    I grew up with tornadoes my entire life. Once we were in the basement of my grandparents' farm house and their feral barn cat (who ran at the sight of people) passed her kittens to my grandpa through the tiny basement window. The tornado pulled up into just a funnel cloud when it went over the house, but I remember looking out of the window up into some swirling, terrifying, dark clouds before being snatched away by my dad and covered up. The second one happened the day after Joplin was destroyed, they were south of us. I was working at a preschool when we had to get classrooms full of children into bathrooms etc... I was at the front desk when a mother pulled in to pick up her children. I ran to the foyer to open the doors so she wouldn't have to key in her code because a funnel cloud was over the building across the street and heading toward us. She was clueless and didn't understand my gesture to hurry up. How can you be that f*&#ing ignorant about tornadoes when you live in KANSAS?! The siren was going off LITERALLY on the property. (it's fun for the infant room teachers when that goes off every month for testing) The third one happened to my Aunt and Uncle. Their neighborhood was actually hit by a tornado. We happened to be visiting grandparents shortly after and drove over to see the damage. It was some of the weirdest shit I have ever seen. Since it was in the boondocks of their state, they had a television antenna. It was wrapped around a small balcony on the second floor off of the main bedroom. The blown glass hummingbird feeder hanging from it didn't have a crack or chip. We saw someone's boxing ring tangled up in the top of a tree. Another family's breakfast nook table and two chairs were lifted out of the house and dropped perfectly in a stream like some wildlife creatures were going to have their morning coffee there.

  • @ZztiffanyloveyouzZ

    @ZztiffanyloveyouzZ

    2 жыл бұрын

    Did the barn cat survive? Also what happened in your uncle and aunt’s area was fascinating and cracking me up

  • @pumkin610

    @pumkin610

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don't believe it I can believe the last part though

  • @josi4251

    @josi4251

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pumkin610 I can believe it all. Lifelong experience with tornadoes and runs to the basement (when there was enough of a warning). Animals can behave VERY differently in the face of a natural disaster, and the mothering instinct in cats can overcome any fear. I've heard stranger stories.

  • @makinka0cp
    @makinka0cp2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video. It just so happens, that we had a tornado in Europe last summer. Cause covid was starting to get boring I guess. We rarely have tornados in Czechia and they usually are up to F2 and don't occure in populated areas, do most people don't even know about it. Just imagine the shock, when F4 tornado goes through seven villages destroying everything in its way. It felt unreal. Whole republic got together to aid the effected area, it was truly heartwarming. My family lives nearby, my brother-in-law is a voluntary firefighter and helped to remove debris, consequentially received medal. There is a ton of footage too, cause most people didn't recognize the danger. Who would have thought. One video truly speaks to me, there is a woman talking to her husband while taking the video, she sound like an averige neighbour saying "look, how the trees are bending, wow, it looks just like in America" and stuff. As if she is watching a movie. And then she goes silent for a second as it occures to her, it's indeed a tornado and it's happening right now to her and her family. She just silently says: "I think it's comming our way" and then her husband rushes her to the basement. It's really hard to watch. Six people dies that day, up to 300 were injured and many homes were destroyed. In our small, safe country most people never heard of.

  • @Seraphus87

    @Seraphus87

    2 жыл бұрын

    Considering how solid Czech architecture tends to be, the pictures of that particular tornado's aftermath were pretty scary, somewhat reminiscent of older pictures of towns that the Red Army had taken in the later part of WWII.

  • @The_ZeroLine

    @The_ZeroLine

    2 жыл бұрын

    There is an absolutely amazing video of that tornado. Maybe the beet video of a tornado I’ve ever seen, which is so ironic since no one was expecting it and there are no chasers there while tornado alley sometimes 100+ people at once chasing tornados with cameras permanently recording.

  • @gl15col

    @gl15col

    2 жыл бұрын

    Tornadoes are just utterly random, they skip around like a stone on water and do things to the land that are hard to wrap your mind around.

  • @remigrant7082

    @remigrant7082

    2 жыл бұрын

    Prošel jsem tornádem, které se vám loni stalo v ČR. Vracel jsem se ze Srbska. Nic tak hrozného jsem v životě neviděl a to jsem přežil dvě války.

  • @irena4545

    @irena4545

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yep, that was a shocker, absolutely unreal. IIRC, there was a newspaper article stating that the last tornado of this size was recorded in 10th century - a millenium ago! That really drives home how rare this occurence is, and I do hope we have another thousand years to go without one. Some students of our school are from the affected area, all of their class went to help. The solidarity that people exhibit at such moments is something I am indefinitely grateful for, as it restores my hopes for the humanity.

  • @gaslitworldf.melissab2897
    @gaslitworldf.melissab2897 Жыл бұрын

    LUCKY MICHIGAN: For some reason, even though Michigan is in the Midwest, we don't get hit that often. I don't know if being in a basin has anything to do with it, but if one gets in, it gets trapped and that's bad news. Of course, we do get the high winds associated with tornadoes heading in our direction or happening near us.

  • @PullingWrenches
    @PullingWrenches Жыл бұрын

    When he mentioned an EF-5 tornado outside of the US, I thought Joe was going to talk about the one we had in the next town over in Elie, Manitoba, Canada but luckily no injuries were reported

  • @oilersridersbluejays

    @oilersridersbluejays

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s what I was thinking of too. I’m next door in Saskatchewan and we get tornadoes too as well as in Alberta. The Edmonton tornado in 1987 was a very destructive one. I’ve personally seen two tornadoes here in Saskatchewan. It makes sense that we get them here. We are just a continuation of the US Great Plains. It’s hot and dry, and when a cool, humid air mass rolls through, you are getting a hell of a thunderstorm, and a chance for a twister.

  • @rudivanaarde8952
    @rudivanaarde89522 жыл бұрын

    "The sky can eat your house" Dude, best, line, ever.

  • @joelspaulding5964

    @joelspaulding5964

    2 жыл бұрын

    Almost: " Like sailors to your mom" surpasses it.

  • @ProjectDarkWolf
    @ProjectDarkWolf2 жыл бұрын

    7:53 "...but, they're very small." So back when I was in late secondary school in England, myself and my friends were out on the playing field and for a few seconds I have my back turned to them as I pick up a ball. I then hear, 'Look, that's a tornado!' and when I turn, there's nothing. My friends all insisted that one had formed only a hundred feet away before dissipating again. So yes, they're not just small: you can almost literally blink and miss them.

  • @mattos4203

    @mattos4203

    2 жыл бұрын

    I saw one once. It moved a few crisp packets and made someone lose the page in the magazine they were reading.

  • @et76039
    @et76039 Жыл бұрын

    The first time I was actually in a tornado was in the desert of southern New Mexico, at an Air Force base we were living on, 1972. Someone pulled the fire alarm while we were in the base theater, and when the exit door was opened we heard the classic roar of a thousand freight trains. Kids started screaming, and a couple of my friends ran to the parking lot and hid next to a car. It touched down in the parade grounds in front of the theater. Pulling that fire alarm was a foolish move; we would have been safer inside, and possibly have been primly unaware. This past spring, I was in my house looking out my back window when I saw the shingles from my roof flying into the yard and getting stuck in trees and the chain link fence. It was an F1 tornado that briefly touched down at several points near the DFW Airport. Quite capriciously, it would damage one or two houses at a time.

  • @docferringer
    @docferringer Жыл бұрын

    Damn Joe, you were on fire with the wit in this one! Back when I lived in the Florida Keys we would pop outside if the winds were low enough (I mean flying debris is less of a worry when you can stand in the road and see two oceans). Of course living on an island, we could see plenty of waterspouts, sometimes several at a time...sometimes in a circle around us. (Like I said, 2 oceans.) Still wasn't a bad place to live as a kid.

  • @garrettscheuerman612

    @garrettscheuerman612

    Жыл бұрын

    He absolutely was! Except for the waterspout part lol

  • @mminteresting

    @mminteresting

    Жыл бұрын

    I totally read ‘poop outside’ which had a whole different visual to your paragraph 😂

  • @JonnyGlessnerStormChasing
    @JonnyGlessnerStormChasing2 жыл бұрын

    As a storm chaser AND a Joe Scott fan, this was the best upload in a long time. Love seeing the shoutouts to Hank, too! Great guy

  • @Chris47368

    @Chris47368

    2 жыл бұрын

    Neat! I'm going to explore your channel now, I will likely subscribe too!

  • @vancel35
    @vancel352 жыл бұрын

    So my "tornado story" was when I was in high school. I think I was in 11th grade. A storm came through, the power went out, everyone was in the inner hallway of our double-wide mobile home. I was looking out the front door (northwest facing) to see what I could see. The lightning was like a strobe light, the wind was loud, and all of a sudden two 15' tall juniper trees a little bit uphill from our house layed over sideways away from each other and the tiny saplings were being pulled out of the ground as I watched stunned. I realized I needed to hide, so I ran inside the wrong direction, turned around and ran towards the hallway where everyone else was and I tripped over a bed frame in the middle of the living room and got punctured by those super long furniture staples (destroyed the furniture, btw). The tornado bounced over our house, but the damage to the houses around us was weird. The single-wide uphill from us had a truck with a boat on its trailer under a car port... the boat detached from the back of the trailer and was upside down on top of the car port. We had a weird basketball backboard that was an entire sheet of plywood mounted to a telephone pole cut in half so there were two poles buried about 3 feet in the ground. It was pulled straight up and laid over. The holes didn't have any twisting damage, they were just empty holes. Some of our shingles were damaged, and we had to have a tarp over that part of the roof for a bit.

  • @elizabethclaiborne6461
    @elizabethclaiborne6461 Жыл бұрын

    I can’t remember ever having a tornado in the City of New Orleans, until a shortly after Katrina. It imploded all the window glass in my brothers house into the house as it passed, everyone was asleep and woke up to noise and flying window glass. Amazingly no one was hurt. Had to get a garden rake to start removing the broken glass.

  • @bickyboo7789

    @bickyboo7789

    Жыл бұрын

    I was told you want to leave a couple windows open if a tornado is heading your way so the pressure differential doesn't make windows or sometimes the whole house implodes.

  • @EASYTIGER10
    @EASYTIGER10 Жыл бұрын

    Here in the UK, tornadoes and Earthquakes are strangely similar: We get small but "feelable" ones regularly but not that frequently (ie every few years for earthquakes and a few each year for tornadoes). They rarely do serious damage. And the one thing you can guarantee is people saying "I didn't know we got tornadoes/earthquakes here"

  • @jimmynesbit1803

    @jimmynesbit1803

    5 ай бұрын

    As a kid in the north of the uk I seen a few little tornados usually you wouldn’t notice if it wasn’t for the leaves and crisp packets swirling around. You would think that we would get worse storms since it’s constantly windy and rainy and terrible weather in general but I suppose the lack of heat spears us

  • @seanamous
    @seanamous2 жыл бұрын

    Not only was I a block from the bowling green tornado in December (saw it from my back door) but my dad was a sailor. I feel targeted 😂

  • @waxfur5129

    @waxfur5129

    2 жыл бұрын

    The sailor part cracked me up 😆

  • @illig4912

    @illig4912

    2 жыл бұрын

    So you experienced a tornado from a distance that not what joe asked.

  • @superbeast8373

    @superbeast8373

    2 жыл бұрын

    My mother's apartments got hit by that tornado. Tore an entire side off of her building.

  • @globohomoenjoyer69

    @globohomoenjoyer69

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@illig4912 well, a block away is a lot closer than I would want to be to a tornado lol

  • @seanamous

    @seanamous

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@superbeast8373 I believe it, There are huge parts of town that still look like it hit yesterday. Hope all of your people were okay.

  • @maddon4984
    @maddon49842 жыл бұрын

    I remember the 87 tornado in Edmonton. It was the single most terrifying thing I've encountered thus far in my life. Baseball size hail and twisted trees 3' in diameter like they were spaghetti noodles. It was close to a mile wide if I'm not mistaken.

  • @agenericaccount3935

    @agenericaccount3935

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was like 3 when it happened. Grandpa was working at Canada Packers that day. Safety guy. I think he probably saved a few lives. As he told it a lot of the workforce was standing in the parking lot gawking as it rolled in. Bullhorn “GTF inside lmao”. Lost to time now, so is he. Hopefully we don’t have another any time soon.

  • @pookus_423
    @pookus_423 Жыл бұрын

    7:05 This is absolutely true. I grew up and currently live in Birmingham Alabama and as a kid, we would maybe have a tornado every one or two years, but recently we’ve been getting multiple strong tornados a year, sometimes multiple in a month.

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon2 жыл бұрын

    Hey Joe, I just went through an entire afternoon watching tornados popping up in Texas. Sometime last year (I think) there was a tornado in Czech Republic. It was close to where a friend of mine lives. He said it was very bad. And I understand what you're saying - I grew up just outside of Lubbock. Luckily I have never actually been through a tornado. I lived in California for a few years and actually went through a weak earthquake (it didn't even wake up my dog, who was sleeping on the floor). But earthquakes are still the worst because you get no warning. With weather forecasting these days, you usually get at least some amount of warning before a tornado. I love Pecos Hank. He is awesome.

  • @jacobbaumgardner3406
    @jacobbaumgardner34062 жыл бұрын

    I grew up peacefully in a little town in East Texas until 2015, when we got our own Big One. The town hadn’t been hit by one since WWII and I never thought we’d be seriously hit by one as the area was on an elevated plateau, so Tornadoes have to climb up to get to us. Well an F-IV decided to come say high. It crossed over I-20 and blew a hole through our town, destroying 30% of all buildings, killing two people (and elderly couple, their dog stayed with them and survived). I lived a couple miles east of the town, and remember dead silence, no wind, and a black wall of cloud so high you couldn’t see the top, just stretched into oblivion. At about 8:50 a powerful wind hit us, howling away. My dad yelled to get inside and we sat in the bathroom for 3 hours, waiting. The next morning I saw three helicopters flying over the town, and we lost cell service and power for 3 days. My mum was in the UK at the time and saw it on BBC News, freaked her out for sure. School got blown away, as well as an entire neighborhood flattened, and was never rebuilt. Lots of support from neighboring towns for years after, a new school was built. Go strong Van, Tx.

  • @RichardSmith-ot3zk

    @RichardSmith-ot3zk

    2 жыл бұрын

    I remember that one and seeing some of the aftermath. I was visiting my hometown of Sulphur Springs during the 2015 day after Christmas outbreak. It was one tornado after another heading towards us. They all veered off but it was a pretty nerve-wracking afternoon.

  • @PeregrinesFury

    @PeregrinesFury

    2 жыл бұрын

    I live less than 30 miles from Van. There has definitely been an increase van zandt cou nty.

  • @blackhawk2591
    @blackhawk25912 жыл бұрын

    I am from Bangladesh and I've read about that tornado when I was in High School but I never expected it to be the deadliest Tornado ever recorded thanks for the info

  • @aeroslayer7676
    @aeroslayer76762 жыл бұрын

    You could do an entire video on the dreaded April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak that affected multiple states but hit Alabama hard. I remember that day vividly…..I was in middle school and still remember when all the doors burst open while we huddled in the hallway with our heads down. When it was over and we finally got to leave, the church/neighborhood that was about 100 yards away was devastated. My buddy who lived in one of those houses found his couch on the school football field as they were taking us out on buses.

  • @johntaggart979

    @johntaggart979

    7 ай бұрын

    I suspect that Terrible Tuesday tornado system was the inspiration for the events in the movie "Twister", a great if scientifically fanciful watch.

  • @arkayanon
    @arkayanon Жыл бұрын

    I have slept through every tornado that's come nearby overnight, including one that wrecked everything less than a hundred yards from the mobile home I grew up in. But, BUT, the slightest noise IN my room, like an adolescent opossum, will wake me up.

  • @vendettaakasimplyizumi6728
    @vendettaakasimplyizumi67282 жыл бұрын

    I grew up and still live in Germany, and my parents always told me tornadoes don't happen in Germany Everytime I saw a tornado documentary as a kid. I told them they could always happen but they wouldn't be strong and they didn't believe me. Last year we had two tornadoes in Germany that made it to the news and even though they are nothing compared to the ones in America, I was right! Now they listen to me with the probabilities of things. Thankfully we weren't hit and we donated to the people whose houses were destroyed. Keep safe everyone!

  • @gingerman5123

    @gingerman5123

    2 жыл бұрын

    Look up "London tornado of 1091".

  • @chdreturns

    @chdreturns

    2 жыл бұрын

    Germany had an F5 in the 1700's.

  • @theexchipmunk
    @theexchipmunk2 жыл бұрын

    While not very common, there are some areas in Germany do get relatively frequent tornadoes, for European standards that is. I lived in Nettetal , which is in an area that would see a tornado capable of doing actual damage about once a year. And every few years one of those would flatten a few farms and kill a few people. Thankfully, so far none ever hit any city or village in that area.

  • @TheCangar

    @TheCangar

    2 жыл бұрын

    As a German, I have never heard of this! I knew every now and then water spouts would exist but I didn't know we have tornadoes on land. Crazy

  • @theexchipmunk

    @theexchipmunk

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TheCangar m.kzread.info/dash/bejne/aKuJ0NeRoL2Yp9o.html This is one that happened in 2018 pretty close to where I lived. That was an F2. Thankfully it did not really hit anything and only took a few roof with it and injured few people.

  • @TheCangar

    @TheCangar

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@theexchipmunk oh wow thanks! "it's coming directly towards us!" "on no the car!" lol most German thought ever :D the commenter is great!

  • @manlymcmanface9932

    @manlymcmanface9932

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TheCangar Duisburg 2004. Ripped right through the city center and I was in the middle of it. Took maybe half an hour and afterwards the city looked like a war zone. All the trees were uprooted, cars smashed and many roofs were gone. Fortunately nobody got severely hurt. Good thing our houses weren’t made of cardboard.

  • @davidhenningson4782

    @davidhenningson4782

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@manlymcmanface9932 Cardboard?!... No man... here in North America we built with OSB and other engineered wood products 😌 designed to leave voids for survivors when the Earth shrugs or gawd vacuums... only good ol' American quality here...

  • @Xainfinen
    @Xainfinen Жыл бұрын

    Tornadoes have been appearing more frequently in France, last October we had an F3 with 57mph wind hit a village and cause a lot of damage. Fortunately there was no loss of life but and few people lost their roof.

  • @gtThree

    @gtThree

    8 ай бұрын

    A tornado with a 57mph wind would be a EFU-U or basically the lowest ranking for a tornado. An EF-3 would be 136-165mph with severe damage.

  • @Xainfinen

    @Xainfinen

    8 ай бұрын

    @@gtThree Ok.

  • @TheLeonidas989
    @TheLeonidas989 Жыл бұрын

    This tornado video was easy to understand. I’m happier than a Tornado in a trailer park.

  • @RolandjHearn
    @RolandjHearn2 жыл бұрын

    As an Aussie that lived in Dallas for five years with my family I remember the community concern that went with the tornado sirens. It seemed surreal, until one day we had a touchdown (and that the NFL type) in our town of Frisco. That same day there was a series of touchdowns all the way to Fort Worth were it took out quite a few windows in the downtown area. My oldest daughter then only about 9 or 10 was traumatised by the experience enough so that when we returned to Australia if my daughter heard a siren she would be on the verge of tears. BTW in Australia there we have a word for them that originates in one of the aboriginal languages. We call them a "Willy Willy." But you are correct it is very rare that a tornado here is remotely like one that is the norm in tornado alley.

  • @johnbarton7168

    @johnbarton7168

    2 жыл бұрын

    Armidale nsw October 14th last year !

  • @johnbarton7168

    @johnbarton7168

    2 жыл бұрын

    Plus we had a smaller one west of Armidale about a month ago. Touched down for about 5km long and about 500m wide path of destruction.

  • @princeendymion9044

    @princeendymion9044

    2 жыл бұрын

    I had heard about dust devils and willy willies in Australia before but growing up in school you always thought that they were something that happened in the outback. Then I think two years ago was the first time I ever heard of a tornado ever hitting an Aussie town, then we had another one last year. Coupled with the sudden earthquake that hit us down here in Melbourne I swear we're running out of luck when it comes to the weather, we use to have it so good, aside from the heat, rain and occasional cyclone

  • @MrDCPatterson

    @MrDCPatterson

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sydney often gets "hook ecchos" on radar, but they are always rain wrapped and reported as "damaging winds." Australian meteorologists didn't pay any attention until a visiting US weather expert saw the tornadic signature on the radar while visiting. Going back through the recordings in the 80s and 90s (when this occurred) there were dozens of hook echos. Located between the Blue Mountains and the Pacific, Sydney is possibly a mini Tornado Alley.

  • @aidanmargarson8910

    @aidanmargarson8910

    2 жыл бұрын

    It may become a thing, there are the blue mountains then the land to the west which somewhat mirrors the geography of the states, at the moment I assume the southern ocean is too cold to generate things but time will tell?

  • @silasharmon3775
    @silasharmon37752 жыл бұрын

    As someone who lives in Kansas, when we hear that there is a tornado around, we immediately go outside and try to find it. Also I didn't notice until you mentioned it but tornados here have been getting more uncommon.

  • @Speckadactyl

    @Speckadactyl

    2 жыл бұрын

    In my lifetime Greensburg is the only big one that’s happened here in the state, that entire town pretty much was leveled, it was hard to look at the news. I’ve never understood the appeal of going outside to watch when the sirens go off but that stereotype is 100% real

  • @SpectraStarShooter
    @SpectraStarShooter3 ай бұрын

    I was born in Waco and grew up all in and around Dallas, I feel you Joe. And I now live in California, far from serious earthquake radius, and I enjoy watching Pecos Hank knowing I am safe and sound.

  • @Kc.Bronco.91
    @Kc.Bronco.91 Жыл бұрын

    As a lifetime resident of Kansas and Missouri, I feel it's necessary to let you know that tornados can't get you if you're looking directly at them. They're kinda cowardly like that. I've never met an individual that lost a staredown

  • @pleadinsanity621
    @pleadinsanity6212 жыл бұрын

    We had a big tornado rip through a small town close to where I live just a couple months ago. It was very strange how selective the damage can be. Driving through the town, we had seen a house absolutely destroyed with the trees ripped in half. But the house next door just 75 feet over looked like nothing happened. Crazy stuff

  • @idontwantahandlethough

    @idontwantahandlethough

    2 жыл бұрын

    Right?! It's insane how it can TOTALLY DESTROY one side on the street.. but then somehow the other side is [comparatively] pristine! Wonder how that happens... is it the inherent randomness of fluid dynamics, or something else entirely? I'm sure somebody knows!

  • @billnyethescienceguy4502

    @billnyethescienceguy4502

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@idontwantahandlethough I’d assume randomness of fluids but I can’t be sure I’m not a weatherman

  • @nanoflower1

    @nanoflower1

    2 жыл бұрын

    That could be due to the size of the tornado. If it's small enough you can see that damage be localized to only the path the tornado follows. It's easier to see it with a big one like came through just north of Atlanta back in the late 90s. It left a clear path of destruction where you could see buildings and trees flattened as though someone had come through with a huge bulldozer knocking a path a hundred feet wide or for what seemed like miles. While everything to either side was relatively undamaged (just some things knocked over.)

  • @TweezersUnlimited

    @TweezersUnlimited

    2 жыл бұрын

    I can already tell Plead is talking about Dec 10-11. That thing ripped concrete slabs out of foundations and shattered said concrete. Still waiting on the deserved EF5 rating....

  • @pleadinsanity621

    @pleadinsanity621

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TweezersUnlimited Yes! Dec 10th New melle/Defiance MO. Stated as EF3

  • @kyleroberts3439
    @kyleroberts34392 жыл бұрын

    "California has Earthquakes.....but here the sky can eat your house!! " I spat my drink out 🤣🤣

  • @fennten8338

    @fennten8338

    2 жыл бұрын

    lmao same im in cali and thats been my thinking my whole life

  • @samuelbarrett1082
    @samuelbarrett1082 Жыл бұрын

    I grew up in a suburb of Chicago and my parents always told us of the tornado that ripped through town when they were kids. Very dramatic and tons of those crazy stories came out of it. Like 2x4s coming through walls, the white out conditions and the sound of a freight train going through your back yard, and whole houses getting sucked away where it looked like they had just poured a foundation..... I never saw any but we had many warnings and green skies growing up. Not sure why, but the clouds would always be very low, fast moving and green. It also gets suspiciously quiet. Too quiet. All rain and wind would stop for a time. That's about the time our parents yelled at us to get inside and into the basement.

  • @postpunk6947
    @postpunk6947 Жыл бұрын

    Poland here, last years are totally MAD for my country when it comes to tornadoes. Total destruction, wind 250-300 km/h, there are always tornadoes and hurricanes (called "orkan" here), but last 10 years are more intensive than ever. Even in February, in winter with negative temperatures.

  • @tanzanos
    @tanzanos2 жыл бұрын

    Pekos Hank is a musician, a scientist, an animal lover and above all a gentleman. I cannot wait for you to interview him. Thanks for the upload.

  • @Kanitoxx

    @Kanitoxx

    2 жыл бұрын

    Only the mention of this wonderful man made my day better

  • @bzuidgeest

    @bzuidgeest

    2 жыл бұрын

    Interviewing is a skill. Leave it to channels that have a talent for that.

  • @Kanitoxx

    @Kanitoxx

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bzuidgeest I know that it's your opinion and it's OK to say it... But, oh for the gods, what a bad opinion.

  • @bzuidgeest

    @bzuidgeest

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Kanitoxx yes it's my opinion and I still like the videos on the channel. But if you have ever seen the best interviewers work then you must understand that Joe and the one from RMC channel and many others are just not in the same league... But if they want to try, that's fine by me. Keeps them from getting bored with the main content 😀

  • @Kanitoxx

    @Kanitoxx

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bzuidgeest yeah, interviewing is a skill, but no one is born with it fully developed, you have to hone it with practice. And what better practice than interviewing people? Your first complete denial is what made your opinion a bad opinion... I want Joe to interview all kinds of people. Even if he's not that good at it

  • @DJaquithFL
    @DJaquithFL2 жыл бұрын

    *"Microburst"* .. that's what they called it when half the homes in my area, Lexington, KY, in the 80's were damaged with so much insulation blown everywhere that it looked like a pink snowstorm. No one lost their life, thank God. I remember the police cordoned off the area and I had to prove with my driver's license I lived there. It was surreal.

  • @grantkendrick277

    @grantkendrick277

    2 жыл бұрын

    A microburst is a real thing and is different from a tornado. I work at the Atlanta airport and the other week we had a microburst here that grounded all flights for a couple hours. They typically don't cause any damage to anything on the ground but are deadly to aircraft.

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 жыл бұрын

    Got caught outside in a couple of microbursts, literally went from 60 MPH to 0 in seconds, with the chassis pushed against the rubber stops. Felt like the hand of an angry god pushing the vehicle down. One was a station wagon, the other a full size Ford service van. The latter requiring my unthreading a tree from the grille and driveshaft. Basically, it's a cloud falling on you, bringing the air with it. Had a tornado chase me out of Huntsville, AL back in the early '80's, one trying to form over my head at Ft Indiantown Gap (strong winds blowing through the gap in the three mountains disrupted it, after it drifted north past the three mountains, it touched down and wiped out a farm) and some touching down in our parish, one touching down after we left a town in Texas. Frankly, I think our ancestors fouled up when they stepped off of the battlestar... ;)

  • @jdruin1

    @jdruin1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not tornado related, but I dated someone that had a private plane crash in their yard while they were at work. She definitely had to show ID and other proofs of residence to get home. I think they ultimately didn’t allow her home for a couple of days cause plane parts in her driveway or something

  • @KaiserMattTygore927

    @KaiserMattTygore927

    2 жыл бұрын

    Tornadoes are the reason why I even know what Insulation was, when I was a kid at the end of the 90's we literally saw that shit all over the place after the may 3rd tornado that wrecked moore OK.

  • @spvillano

    @spvillano

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@KaiserMattTygore927 I learned what insulation was in the '70's, during the energy crisis, when I helped Dad install it throughout the house. Around 2013, we had an energy audit of the house and despite a cracked window, they found no improvement in insulation was possible.

  • @edim108
    @edim108 Жыл бұрын

    In Poland there have been like 5-6 big tornado outbreaks in the last 20 years. The biggest one I can think of was last year in February in Kraków during a week of massive storms in Poland. It ripped apart several buildings, torn roofs of a couple dozen and even killed a some people. Another major one was in 2017 in Bory Tucholskie. It carved a half mile wide corridor through a forest and landed straight on a camp ground, killing two girls, trapping several children in debris and wounding 29 people overall. There was also a tornado outbreak in southern Poland in 2008 with multiple F3 tornadoes that killed 4 people and injured over 50. Overall tornadoes aren't that common here, but storms are. We've been getting some pretty hectic storms in the last 10 years like the one in 2017 that caused the tornado in Bory Tucholskie. It went through the whole country with 75-90 mph wind and massive rainfall that caused floods, and overall it caused some 14 million USD in property damage... We've been getting hurricane level winds pretty much yearly these past decade, we've been getting heatwaves, droughts, floods, and tornadoes have been popping up more.

  • @mschaefer4656
    @mschaefer4656 Жыл бұрын

    In the early 80's, a tornado came within 1/4 mile of our house in Missouri, then demolished a large trailer park by the river. My school bus route normally picked up kids from that trailer park - except for the morning after the tornado. It picked up the two of us on our hill then just continued on to school after that, when normally it was packed - very surreal for an elementary school kid. One thing very few people mention is just how long it takes to clean up/rebuild afterwards. Trailers were picked up and tossed in that storm, reduced to matchsticks or piles of rubble. For months afterward, my school bus drove through that carnage, picking up the few kids from the luckier trailers that were damaged but not destroyed. I hid from the tornado sirens under my father's sturdy old desk that night - same desk that I'm tying this on. Still remember the unsettling feeling riding that half-empty school bus, looking out at the remains of people's homes.

  • @jamesgaston2745
    @jamesgaston27452 жыл бұрын

    The best analogy I've heard to describe the difference between a watch and a warning is that during a watch you have all the ingredients to make a cake and have started mixing them. In a warning the ovens preheated and the batters in the pan

  • @audiooddities9982
    @audiooddities99822 жыл бұрын

    I've never understood Midwest thought patterns on that as well, I grew up in Southern California, and my wife is from the Midwest,.so when I first met her family send people from that area, they're like " How does it feel to be safe from all those earthquakes?" My wife was super afraid till she felt her first quake and she barely noticed it, she thought it was a big truck going by our house

  • @ArtisticlyAlexis

    @ArtisticlyAlexis

    2 жыл бұрын

    Growing up, we moved throughout the Midwest, so I had experienced a lot of bad storms, but my first Earthquake happened a few months after my dad's job moved us to Taiwan in 1999. My 1st quake was a 7.6 magnitude! I couldn't believe how long it lasted, the ground felt like jello, being stuck alone on the 4th floor of our townhouse in the middle of the night. Left huge cracks in the wall & caused a lot of damage all over the country. I didn't sleep for days, because every time I tried, there was an aftershock. Was a bad introduction to quakes!

  • @TopDedCenter1

    @TopDedCenter1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Midwesterner here. I think quakes and tornadoes are equally frightening. When I lived in FL for a couple of years, they regale you with hurricane stories. I wasn't impressed. They forecast those suckers days in advance.

  • @barongerhardt

    @barongerhardt

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think in either direction the problem is only the big ones tend to make the news and have movies made about them. The vast majority are small and only cause minor, if any, damage.

  • @Gentlyjack1

    @Gentlyjack1

    2 жыл бұрын

    The most ground shake I've ever felt was caused by a cargo train driving by at speeds just a couple feets away (about 10ft away), while walking with a group.

  • @jobes8315

    @jobes8315

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone whose lived in both areas I would say it probably comes down to area of effect, I lived mid west for 20 years and was never impacted by a tornado even though they have hit the towns i lived in, but an earthquake will affect the entire area, so at that point its a gamble of whether it'll be a big one or not, either way it'll hit you, the tornado not likley only possible

  • @pamcake958
    @pamcake958 Жыл бұрын

    When I hear the word, “Tornado,” I instantly think of the scene in “Twister” when the E-F5 tornado rips through the drive-in theatre in the blackness of night. I can’t imagine hearing the tornado coming at you but you can’t see it. Truly terrifying.

  • @IceFox606
    @IceFox606 Жыл бұрын

    I live in the UK (Scotland specifically) and I had no idea we even had tornados, even little ones! You learn something new everyday I guess lol

  • @YeetLord666
    @YeetLord6662 жыл бұрын

    I grew up in Georgia, and I remember one time when my dad and I were going fishing and I wanted to ride in the back of the truck bc it was so hot out, like 94 degree deep south summer day. It started to hail, which is a consequence of the super hot moist air rising high up into the clouds and freezing, creating a vortex. When it does that, you figure out where you need to be, because most of the time it means there will be a tornado. My mom always told me a story of a tornado that seemed to break up like 50 yards from our home. She grabbed my brother and I and she threw us in a bath tub and put a crib mattress on top of us. Luckily it disappeared before hitting my house, but I remember seeing the gap in the pecan orchard across from my house when I was growing up.

  • @citizenno.0332

    @citizenno.0332

    2 жыл бұрын

    was this around ringgold?

  • @coldmexican288

    @coldmexican288

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Citizen No.0 Ringgold gets a lot of tornadoes doesn't it? I live like 20 mins south on I-75 and I'm glad we haven't had any tornadoes in a while

  • @YeetLord666

    @YeetLord666

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@citizenno.0332 no, like 5 hours south in Albany

  • @citizenno.0332

    @citizenno.0332

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@YeetLord666 oh ok, i was just curious. my grandparents live in ringgold and they had a tornado a few years back and i can still see its path on the side of the hills

  • @citizenno.0332

    @citizenno.0332

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@coldmexican288 not that i know of i know they had a bad one bout ten years ago

  • @ArthurPekarsky
    @ArthurPekarsky2 жыл бұрын

    My first tornado I remember being in was when I was about 6-7. I was born in Kansas City, MO and I lived in an apartment complex. I remember being terrified of the winds and my big sister held me while I was likely screaming and crying when all of a sudden, a huge boulder the size of about a beach ball came crashing through the window. My main memory from that day was just being in shock of how a big rock that size could have been lifted by nothing but wind and hurled through the window. No surprise to me now, but at the time it was crazy to me to see it move entire cars and tear down trees, etc. I know that it had come from about 50 yards away cause it was this big painted rock that lined the driveway entrance to the development. I have been back to visit since and have pictures. That's how I know the approx. distance because this happened in the 80 's and I was really young. It's a force like no other I have ever seen and I moved to the east coast where I grew up and have seen my fair share of hurricanes since and even got trapped in one about 25 years ago, but they don't even scare me the way tornados do. I also when I was visiting family there in the summer of '94 (Gladstone, MO actually just on the outskirts of KC). I was a teenager and I took my brother's bike out for a ride, when I noticed the sky got dark, the wind got completely calm for a moment, and the next thing I knew I was getting pelted with hail larger than golf balls, they were so destructive they were busting people's windshields on their cars and leaving huge dents in them as well. It was followed with tornados too, but I hauled a** back to my brother's house. I have never seen a twister with my own eyes and don't really want to. but I've seen quite a bit of footage of storm chasers and amateurs and these things devastate entire towns. Screw that. I feel bad for all those people that have lost everything being in their direct path, with nowhere to hide.

  • @gl15col

    @gl15col

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's the randomness that's so bad. You can track a hurricane pretty accurately now, but twisters still pop up like jack-in-the-boxes out of basically nowhere and then skitter across the land with no rhyme or reason...

  • @shadrielv7113

    @shadrielv7113

    2 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if that's the same tornado storm from my story in KC - also in the 80's lol :D

  • @suey-suitu
    @suey-suitu Жыл бұрын

    Born and raised in Oklahoma. I've dealt with tornados every year for 29 years. To this day, I will always remember the one tornado that actually hit our house when I was just 6 or 7 years old - We were able to get into a basement and I remember my mom on top of me, with her friend on top of her, and her friend's husband on top of all of us. It was SO loud, and I could hear glass shattering, wood cracking, and the wind all at the same time. Right before it was over, a plank that was covering a small window in the basement flew off of the wall and hit the wall on the other side of the basement. Definitely terrifying, and we're lucky to have made it out safely.

  • @venusthebenus
    @venusthebenus27 күн бұрын

    I survived the Joplin tornado! We were at a hotel in Joplin for some school thing with my sister when the storm hit. Because our hometown is in an area that never actually gets tornadoes due to the elevation and the Missouri River, we weren’t worried initially when we finally heard the tornado sirens start going off. Then we remembered that we were not, in fact, in our hometown, we sought shelter in the hotel closet and bathroom. It sounded like a freight train roaring through town and it made me terrified of storms until mid high school. Not only were we lucky enough to survive, but we were lucky enough to still have a house to go back to once it was all over.

  • @TheExplorder
    @TheExplorder2 жыл бұрын

    Omg Pecos Hank is awesome! His "Tornadoes of (year)" videos are always solid gold and absolutely worth checking out!

  • @jakubp.6987
    @jakubp.69872 жыл бұрын

    Fun fact : We had EF4 tornado last year (24/6/2021) right in the middle EU. And yes, its "one for 1000 years thing".

  • @jukicdalibor

    @jukicdalibor

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, actually 6/24/2021 in Czech Republic...one of a kind :)

  • @lemmypop1300

    @lemmypop1300

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jukicdalibor No, it's 24/6/2021. There are only 12 months in a year ;)

  • @jukicdalibor

    @jukicdalibor

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lemmypop1300 I know, dude :) I'm from Croatia. I wrote the dates the USA way because I guess the others wouldn’t understand. Cheers and all the best !!!

  • @nescius2

    @nescius2

    2 жыл бұрын

    you are all wrong with those silly dates ;~) it was 2021-06-26 (the superior ISO 8601 with sorting included)

  • @lemmypop1300

    @lemmypop1300

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jukicdalibor Kako si mogao da ti iz Hrvatske počiniš takav ustupak američko-imperijalnom nazadnjačkom sistemu? EU se vrti u grobu... ovaj, glasno negoduje :) Metric & day first dates all the way!

  • @campkohler9131
    @campkohler9131 Жыл бұрын

    In the '90s I was sent to Las Vegas to install some replacement telecomm electronics damaged in a tornado at the Chevron distribution yard. A worker had borrowed a neighbor's brand new pickup to drive to work, and the tornado picked up a three room mobile trailer used by ARCO, carried it over a nearby 3' barbed wire fence and set it squarely down on the pickup, smashing it flat and reducing the trailer to bits of insulation. luckily nobody was in the trailer at the time. Can you imagine having to tell your neighbor what happened? The replacement trailer had wires from the roof alll around it anchoring it securely to the ground, something nobody had previously foreseen as a necessary precaution.

  • @Hartleymolly
    @Hartleymolly Жыл бұрын

    I live in MS, tornado alley. Our weather is very unpredictable. For example, the low was 9 degrees, the high was 70 😯. Tornadoes are terrifying, we live in tornado alley. I’ll never forget one that hit the neighbors house, but went over our house. I will never forget the sound. It’s truly like a train, times 1 million. It last for only a second, but something you don’t forget. My husband is Russian, his family is still in the mother land. When the in-laws come visit, they don’t understand what an actual tornado is. It’s so unknown to them that when a siren goes off, I have to explain that getting in the car, to go to tj maxx, is not a good idea.

  • @mikeyoung9810
    @mikeyoung98102 жыл бұрын

    Growing up in eastern Kansas in the 60's we had weekly storm systems during spring and fall which were usually severe but over time this changed and now we hardly see severe weather and the weather patterns have shifted to Missouri (we are 30 miles from there).

  • @lawrencepsteele

    @lawrencepsteele

    2 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Atchison in the late 60s-early 70s. I don't remember too many tornado warnings. However, when I lived in Topeka in the early 70s I remember tornado warnings every week.

  • @nicholaskeding9574
    @nicholaskeding95742 жыл бұрын

    The big one here was Black Friday, July 31, 1987. F4 tornado ripped through Eastern Edmonton, destroyed a good quarter of industrial property, ripped through a trailer park. Killed 27 people. The story I always remember is a steel foremen being sent out to the yard to inspect something just before the storm hit... No one ever saw him again, or his remains

  • @hardcoreherbivore4730

    @hardcoreherbivore4730

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yup, I was in Sherwood Park at the time. It was coming right at us before it died out. Can recall watching the bushes in our backyard getting torn from the ground and my mother said “basement now!”.

  • @cranberry_cree.ations4249

    @cranberry_cree.ations4249

    2 жыл бұрын

    My mom still talks about this I wasn't born yet but my older sisters were. I think they were living in the Kensington area at the time.

  • @rosieleaverton
    @rosieleaverton Жыл бұрын

    My family lives near the edge of Tornado Alley in SD, and we don't get tornados often, but if we do, we have a basement with food and water stored up and my parents taught me and my brother when we were young that if we hear those sirens, we get our pets down to the basement, grab any necessary items or special belongings, and book it. The closest I've ever been to having a tornado that I can recall was just this summer. We didn't get a tornado super near us (I think it was a town or so away), but it hailed, which made the sky go a sickly green color. I sat and watched it out a window for a minute or two, spellbound but horrified. I've never seen the sky legitimately green before or since.

  • @danhnguyen-fn9eb
    @danhnguyen-fn9eb2 жыл бұрын

    Grew up in Northern Illinois during the 1960's. Had to get to the basement many, many times. One time in 1966 or 7 during school hours we were in the basement and you could hear all of the glass in the house shaking as the funnel cloud went overhead. Maybe 20 minutes later the funnel cloud came down and hit a nearby town striking a hospital and a grade school killing several. Many years later I met and became friends with a fella who should of been at that school when the tornado hit but he was at home sick that day. He said that they too went to their basement and their home was severely damaged. And he showed me a tree in their yard where you could see the end of a telephone receiver sticking out of a tree. That tornado embedded the receiver into the tree and the tree grew around it nearly covering it all up. In 1985 at Ft Hood, Texas out on field maneuvers training was stopped and we were ordered back to our camp and a nearby ditch. Watched in amazement as 6 or 7 funnel clouds passed overhead. They were all lined up as if in a formation. Texas was fortunate that day as none of those made it to the ground. But we soldiers got to ride out the trailing storm sitting in our M113's. I was a driver and discovered that my hatch leaked pretty bad. Oh the fun old days.

  • @imabbi8550
    @imabbi85502 жыл бұрын

    From the UK here. There’s an area of the sea off the east of England called The Wash, my grandad was a fisherman and he’d tell me the stories of encountering water spouts in that area of the sea. He said it would happen a lot often than you think! 🙂

  • @matthewyabsley

    @matthewyabsley

    2 жыл бұрын

    We have more tornados per square mile in the UK than the USA. Last time I checked the UK was in Europe, lol.

  • @sarkybugger5009

    @sarkybugger5009

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@matthewyabsley Scrolled down looking for this comment. I was going to post the exact same thing. It's only the size of them that's different.

  • @matthewyabsley

    @matthewyabsley

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sarkybugger5009 - God's wrath is bigger in America :-p

  • @Butterpants1987

    @Butterpants1987

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@matthewyabsley we mean it when we say everything is bigger in america

  • @Butterpants1987

    @Butterpants1987

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@matthewyabsley tbf theres not a lot of square miles in the UK

  • @OnePolishMoFo
    @OnePolishMoFo2 жыл бұрын

    I've seen dozens of tornadoes personally. For me the "big one" was the Joplin, Missouri tornado of 2011. It was an F5. Nearly a mile wide. 200 mph winds. I also saw one in Kansas on my way to Colorado. It wasn't particularly large though. It was less than a mile away to the south of the highway while I drive west. Lasted for probably 15 minutes.

  • @fanushkah

    @fanushkah

    2 жыл бұрын

    The entire time I was watching this I was just thinking about the Joplin tornado. I was scared shitless of tornados before that, but the coverage of the aftermath of that on ky3 solidified my fear of them forever.

  • @The_ZeroLine

    @The_ZeroLine

    2 жыл бұрын

    Probably one of the top 3 most famous tornadoes ever.

  • @paulh1567

    @paulh1567

    2 жыл бұрын

    Was on 7th street when it hit.

  • @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849

    @russellszabadosaka5-pindin849

    2 жыл бұрын

    Oh man, even I’ve heard of the Joplin, Missouri tornado and I live in New York and never seen one in my life. I hope to keep it that way.

  • @brianmcmanus4690

    @brianmcmanus4690

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was in Arkansas that year, Joplin was something else man.

  • @billkipper3264
    @billkipper3264 Жыл бұрын

    As a teenager living in southern Missouri we had a tornado hit the small town I lived in. It ripped part of the roof off of the high school and destroyed a bunch of homes, both in town and in the surrounding area. Two things I remember is that out in the country the tornado hit a house, jumped over a stand of trees and landed on another house about a quarter mile away. My home, while undamaged, had a splinter of wood about a foot long or so driven lengthwise into one of the panes, cracking but not breaking the glass.

  • @tomkelly8827
    @tomkelly88272 жыл бұрын

    I live in Ontario, Canada, 2 hours from Ottawa. A nearby town was destroyed by a tornado. Everyone was ok, a big cut was the worst thing I heard of even though hundreds of homes were destroyed, all the 200+ year old white pines were ripped apart, The hardware store had pallets of shingles in bundles blow across the road, their roof blew off, my friends little cousin was in his crib when the house blew down on him but the corner of the house stood up over his crib and he was ok...so many stories from that day. My friends dad was driving and his car was picked up and floated 1/2Km backwards and landed on the wheels...

  • @hollybyrd6186
    @hollybyrd61862 жыл бұрын

    I live in Oklahoma and work in Moore. Here we're intimately aware of tornadoes. I lost everything to a F3.

  • @josephawatson

    @josephawatson

    2 жыл бұрын

    I live in Moore as well, Its been close a couple of times. So far I haven't lost anything yet. Last one got within .8 miles pretty dang close. I hope you were able to recover.

  • @jameslovallo9603
    @jameslovallo96032 жыл бұрын

    Grew up in California, moved to Texas. I've always been more terrified of tornados than earthquakes. Maybe because I've been through several small earthquakes and not any small tornados

  • @kansas3332

    @kansas3332

    2 жыл бұрын

    Come up here you'll see them all the time it's normal

  • @piratekit3941

    @piratekit3941

    2 жыл бұрын

    If you grow up in the midwest, you get the really apathetic people who will mow their lawn while a tornado is VISIBLE in a field a short distance away (I'M LOOKING AT YOU, ALBERTA MAN). Sometimes you can clearly have a warning they are coming and go chill in the basement, and you can go stare in awe at them safely.... it's those fast and unexpected ones you have to watch out for.

  • @tunadog1945

    @tunadog1945

    2 жыл бұрын

    The best time was when my wife and I had to scramble to our car during a company softball game. We watched the port-a-potty in front of us just fall down and pop up like a bowing person a dozen times. Totally wild. I wish I had pulled out my phone to record it.

  • @jacobduncan2142
    @jacobduncan21423 ай бұрын

    I'm from Central Florida originally, and growing up, we had small tornadoes come through quite frequently. I luckily never had one come over where I was living, but I did have a teacher who got caught in her car as a tornado ripped through her neighborhood. A large tree limb landed on her vehicle, injuring her severely and pinning her inside. Luckily she pulled through, but we had a substitute for the rest of the school year. We didn't get to see her in the hospital, but she made a surprise visit to the school (in a cast and wheelchair) on the final day of the semester. Quite a sweet moment.

  • @lindaashbrook6789
    @lindaashbrook6789 Жыл бұрын

    When I was 13 yrs old my family visited my Aunt and Uncle in Colorado Springs. My cousin and I went downtown to see the "Killer Bees" movie at the theater. Half way through, the movie stopped, lights came on and they ushered us to the lobby where my dad and my Aunt were waiting for us. When we asked why we were being picked up early my dad pointed outside to the funnel cloud in the distance. When we left the lobby it was super windy and the air felt very different. I was so glad we were going away from the tornado when we left.

  • @mh7915
    @mh79152 жыл бұрын

    I’m from Birmingham, Alabama and tornadoes are definitely going up. Our tornado stories are from April 25th-28th of 2011. We had 15 E4 and E5 tornadoes and 250+ tornadoes just on the 27th. I remember hearing the news on my dad’s hand held radio (we didn’t have power). It sounded like a war zone. Neighbors were pulling people out of ruble with missing limbs. They had to bring in cadaver dogs at one point to try and find all the missing people.

  • @qatestbrian1
    @qatestbrian12 жыл бұрын

    I lived in New England for most of my life, which oddly has some serious tornadoes. Until around 2010 the 5th deadliest tornado in history hit Worcester Massachusetts. But my tornado story takes place on the 4th of July in Maine. Yup, Maine. I was something like nine or ten so it would have been around 1973 or 1974. I was at summer camp up in Maine with my older brother and sister. It was a hot summer day and we were all excited for the barbeque and fireworks scheduled for later in the day. I was standing on the porch of the cabin I was assigned to and heavy clouds rolled in. We had been hearing booms of thunder off in the distance all day, or so it seems as I remember. The rain started and the lightening flashed as the explosions of thunder got louder and closer. I remember the rain pouring down in ferocious sheets and as I watched the downpour inched from a horizontal deluge into a horizontal spinning sheet of water before my eyes. I did not know what I was seeing so I watched amazed until a counselor came out and took me into the cabin. That was when things turned bad. A roaring came from outside like the world was grinding itself apart and then we heard the trees begin to fall and crash onto the cabins around ours while the thunder crashed and the lightening painted the world in the cold white light like looking into the flash on a camera as it goes off. The storm lasted a while, I'm not sure how long now but it felt like a long time. After the sounds of destruction and wind abated we were allowed out of the cabin to see a world that looked post-apocalyptic. The ground was covered more by fallen trees than bare patches of grass. The big pines had crushed several of the cabins. My sister, I found out after the storm, had been struck by lightening as it shot out of an outlet, went through her arm leaving 2nd and 3rd degree burns in its wake, and finally stuck the metal frame of the bed she was standing in front of. Evidently standing in front of that metal bedframe probably saved her life because the lightening took that as a path to ground instead of travelling through her body, which almost certainly would have killed her. The worst tragedy was one of the camp staff who was in the nurse's cabin when a tree crushed the structure and killed him. We spent the rest of camp, I think it was four days, in shock. They had all of us send post cards home and would not let us tell our parents about the storm. They checked the cards to make sure we didn't give any indication of what happened. Agassiz Village and I just looked it up on line and the place is still there. www.agassizvillage.org/ We were all poor kids so maybe that's why they got away with not telling our parents? Anyway, that is my tornado story.

  • @RogueChewbacca
    @RogueChewbacca7 ай бұрын

    I know I'm late, but +1 for Pecos Hank (love his channel!). Growing up in Wisconsin and now living in Minnesota, we're not strangers to tornadic storms (though certainly not like TX/OK/KS) I've had a few close calls though thankfully have avoided being in a tornado. A friend of mine however was ripped from her Mother's arms when she was an infant. They found her some time later, bundled up and unharmed in a field. To hear her or her Mother tell the story is one of the wildest things. I can only imagine what that experience was like.

  • @marty0063
    @marty00632 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been in one tornado and near another one and helped clean up after it. I grew up in Central Texas, so they weren’t as common there, but we did know of their dangers, and that it was possible for us to have some. I don’t remember the tornado because I was too young, but my mother told me that she was reading us a bed time story when she heard something that sounded like a train. We took shelter as best we could, and thankfully it wasn’t that big of a tornado. We were never sure if it actually touched down or not or just for a second or two because we lived on 10 acres in the country. The only damage was to my mom’s rose bushes and blowing the freshly finished plaster dust all over our house from the rock walls. Thinking about it now, it was probably really good that we lived in a solid rock house. The other story was from a small tornado that hit one evening in a nearby town where my grandparents lived. They lost all their big trees, but the house was still okay. A house down and across the street looked fine on the first floor, but the second floor was twisted and missing part of the roof. The little old lady who lived there had slept through that happening to her house and woke up to the devastation. The tin walled old style dance hall next to my grandparents’ house was totally destroyed except for the stage. It was a small tornado, and hit a very small town and sparsely populated area, so there weren’t that many injuries.

  • @spxdesu
    @spxdesu2 жыл бұрын

    Had a tornado here in northern Germany. Heard of it back then but never thought much of it. Years later I moved to an apartment and then found out that that tornado happened right here. Damaged neighboring buildings and destroyed lots of cars of the Porsche store across the street. And then there was even a flooding.

  • @hearmeout9138
    @hearmeout91382 жыл бұрын

    I’ve actually been “hit” by 3 tornadoes, one (EF-3) of which severely damaged my home. The other two were small but still frightening. I think that Europe’s saving grace is the Alps and Carpathians. Any air being advected from the Mediterranean into continental Europe experiences isentropic lift when it crosses the mountains and this squeezes most of the moisture from it. The warm moisture of the Gulf and the Mediterranean are necessary for the energy that rises in updrafts to create supercells that are strong enough to generate tornadoes. Spain, southern France, Italy, and Greece are wide open to that warm, moist Mediterranean air and cold continental air also gets the drying treatment which makes it very inviting for rising parcels of surface air that cause supercells.

  • @paxhumana2015

    @paxhumana2015

    2 жыл бұрын

    Let us also not forget that the waters of the Atlantic Ocean that face western Europe, unlike the eastern seaboard of the USA, are not fed by tropical warmth, which is why you all rarely, if ever, get hurricanes, and that the Mediterranean, Tyrrhenian, Adriatic, Ionian, Aegean, Alboran, Balearic, and Black Seas are not enough warm water moisture, let alone a strong enough source of warm water currents, as well as air, to override the frigid waters of that part of the Atlantic Ocean, as well as the Arctic Ocean, the Bay of Biscay, the Celtic Sea, the English Channel, the Irish Sea, the North Sea, the Baltic Sea, the Gulf of Bothnia, the Norwegian Sea, the Barents Sea, the Kara Sea, Skagerrak, Kattegat, the Gulf of Finland, the Gulf of Riga, and a whole bunch of smaller bays, as well as freshwater lakes, rivers, streams, creeks, and a whole bunch of frozen tundra, as well as the winds and temperatures that accompany them as well.

  • @hvadskalvihedde2512

    @hvadskalvihedde2512

    2 жыл бұрын

    that’s a good explanation tbf However most strong tornadoes happens north of the alps especially in poland, germany, france, belgium & netherlands Even denmark have up to 15 tornado reports a year

  • @hearmeout9138

    @hearmeout9138

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hvadskalvihedde2512 I’m thinking that tornadoes in Northern Europe are likely a result of strong shear with limited instability. Dixie Alley gets a lot of this type of tornadoes in winter and they often reach EF3 and even EF4 strength. I don’t expect dew points above 60F to occur often in Europe but latitudes above 50N probably have some hellacious 850mb winds.

  • @Hollylivengood

    @Hollylivengood

    2 жыл бұрын

    You might have something there. I've been through a bunch, but where I live at now we have Signal Mountain on one side, and a lot of low hills on the other, and we have had tornados literally swing around Red Bank and hit in Chattanooga. Several. Yay mountains.

  • @13_cmi

    @13_cmi

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve never been hit by one. The closest was 3 miles for me. And I had zero warning of it so I slept right through it. It wasn’t up to an ef3 at that point but still freaky. Just a small change in wind somewhere down the line and that would’ve been on top of me and I would be very dead. A few years before in 2019 there was a 1.5 mile wide tornado that went somewhere around 10 miles nor the of me. I checked on google maps and the only damage I saw was a big chunk of forest taken down because the latest data was a year later. Nobody died in both but they always cry about it and call it a tragedy. If you take storms seriously and don’t convince yourselves the tiny itty bitty mountains that are east of you will stop tornadoes coming from the west you are wrong. Get to shelter during tornado warnings and you’ll be fine.

  • @ryanwing936
    @ryanwing9362 жыл бұрын

    My parents were living in downtown Ralston on The Night of the Twisters in 1975 3 years before I was born. Like sitting ducks, they were driving home from the grocery store at the time and witnessed an F4 tornado take out the entire Ralston Bank as they drove by it, right as the tornado sirens went off... a little late but, also, never too soon. The F4 scored a direct hit on the vault and money went flying all over the town. My parents made it back to their apartment no richer than they started (to the utter detest of my younger brother and I). It's good that they lived in the particular building they did, as it was the only building in their apartment complex that didn't receive considerable damage

  • @differentfins
    @differentfins Жыл бұрын

    We get quite a few tornados in Canada but it seems like they often occur later in the summer, as if tornado alley shifts north. I was working in NW Ontario in 2009 where a F2 tornado happened. I remember going to gas up the work truck the following morning and the gas attendant telling us a tornado ripped through a fishing camp and killing 3 men! The 3 were from Oklahoma believe it or not. They travelled from Tornado Alley to Canada to get killed by a twister.

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