BRITISH GUY Reacts to SCARIEST Tornado moments caught on camera...

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  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2024
  • this video TERRIFIED me, these top 10 tornado moments caught on camera were crazy to see..
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 383

  • @barrettson1028
    @barrettson1028 2 місяці тому +23

    I’m about to get geeky here for a minute. Underworld talks about the Elie-Manitoba tornado, but he never talks about how weird that tornado actually was. It was like no other. Most tornadoes just move in one straight direction Northeast. But this tornado, it was as if it was sentient. Like it was an actual “thing”. It moved across the farmland with a mere amount of strength, suddenly making a 90 degree turn South, hitting the highway and overturning a semi before it made another 90 degree turn Eastward toward a mill as if it was targeting it. As it reached the mill, it reached EF-2 strength and hit it head-on. But as if it wasn’t satisfied with its work, it looped back around and hit the mill again. It then turned South again, then turned East again, headed directly for the edge of a neighborhood South of town at weaker strength. As it looked like it was going to miss them as it went down the street, it then made another loop directly over the last houses at the street. Immediately shooting up to EF-4 and EF-5 strength. After hitting the houses, it then turned South and headed out of town, but not before doing a loop on itself one last time before dying out. In the end, the tornado was originally rated as EF-4, but was changed to EF-5, after an ominous video taken by an onlooker surfaced, showing the tornado as it lifted an entire house in one piece, and tossed it hundreds of yards away. This tornado changed direction five times, and looped back on itself three times. Every time it wasn’t hitting a structure, it traveled at weaker strength like it was preserving its strength until it reached a structure.

    • @helenmckeetaylor9409
      @helenmckeetaylor9409 Місяць тому +1

      Man... they didn't sound American??? You haven't heard of people emigrating 🤨

    • @potatolee4473
      @potatolee4473 День тому

      Thank for talking about these things are real an f ing scary too

  • @mitchellgildea254
    @mitchellgildea254 3 місяці тому +191

    Ham and cheese sandwich? Missed opportunity to call it a funnel cake

  • @882center
    @882center 3 місяці тому +118

    The absolute worst thing about a tornado is that it can Take out 3 blocks of houses side by side.. boom boom boom. Then it can leave one house perfectly fine. No scratches, no dents. You just never know if your house is gonna be the house. I've seen this happen over and over.

    • @Amandaarford83
      @Amandaarford83 3 місяці тому +3

      My parents house got hit really bad a few years ago and my dad got in his truck to check on all the neighbors and it woke them all up because not a single one of them were hit or even knew it happened.

    • @MoeRon-ry2zr
      @MoeRon-ry2zr 3 місяці тому

      It, thankfully, happened to me and my family in the EASTER, 2020 Chattanooga (Tennessee, USA) tornado. Two doors down our neighbors had the rear of their house destroyed. Our house was spared completely. In neighboring areas ...total destruction it was a F3 almost an F4.

    • @htewing
      @htewing 3 місяці тому

      There's a house near where I grew up that CONSTANTLY attracted all the (admittedly weak, as this is in Maryland) tornadoes. It never took out the house, but it wreaked havoc on their trees/shingles/siding/windows all the time. Just that one house. My theory is that it was kind of in between hills on one of the "normal" tornado paths in the county, so it just sort of got funneled over there. But who knows?

    • @burninsherman1037
      @burninsherman1037 2 місяці тому

      Yeah. Shit is insane. Luckily, haveng had any touchdown where I'm at for a bit, but we have quite a few that've been way too close. Last one here was rain wrapped, but my family and I were a few towns over and could see it from there. Luckily, it just kinda hopped over most buildings, tore up alotta trees, and twisted apart the cell tower up on the highway.

    • @razrv3lc
      @razrv3lc 19 днів тому

      If anyone’s wondering how/why this happens, it’s because we’ve learned that tornados are actually made of multiple internal vortices swirling around one another and when one of those vortices hits something, that tends to be where the worst damage happens. It’s not just one wall of wind like most people think. If I’m remembering correctly, Ted Fujita was the first person to theorize that this was the case due to the damage surveys after a tornado in Texas in the 70s.

  • @Figueroact
    @Figueroact 3 місяці тому +13

    Our prep for tornadoes…..
    1. All photos are saved to the cloud along with artwork etc that we want to keep.
    2. All serial numbers for all electronics are recorded and uploaded to the cloud.
    3. We take pictures every 6 months from each corner from each room and open drawers etc. easier for insurance adjusters.
    4. Everything is in the cloud outside of certain documents. I keep one copy of all our government documents and other copies of credit cards etc at the security safety box at the bank and one at home.
    Otherwise we just make sure we have food, water, batteries, a handheld radio, etc and go to our basement and hope we don’t get hit. If it happens we are as prepared as we can get. That’s all we can do.
    Southwest Kansas is where I live. Sirens go off all the time. 😂😂😂

    • @Amandaarford83
      @Amandaarford83 3 місяці тому +1

      Yup I knew as soon as I started reading this you had to be in Tornado Alley. I live in Arkansas so not as bad as the Midwest but we have tornado sirens going off frequently enough to have the drill down pat 😂

  • @Anjalena
    @Anjalena 3 місяці тому +3

    Ryan Hall, Y'all, Reed Timmer and Pecos Hank are great channels to watch to learn more about tornadoes. Ryan is a meteorologist who employs storm chasers and other meteorologists during tornado and severe thunderstorm outbreaks to basically Now-cast them. It's an amazing watch but usually very long streams of 8 to 12 hours but you'll learn a lot about how all this works.
    Reed is a loud, boisterous character but entertaining to watch. His vids would be great drama for the channel. He recently got INCREDIBLE drone footage of a massive F4 with many smaller vortices wrapping around it. GORGEOUS storm but I think it did massive damage.
    Pecos Hank is probably my absolute favorite chaser because he tells amazing stories, plays a guitar occasionally, stops to rescue animals, and people of course, during his chases.

    • @AllStraysAreWelcome
      @AllStraysAreWelcome 2 місяці тому +1

      Skip Talbot, too

    • @Anjalena
      @Anjalena 2 місяці тому

      @@AllStraysAreWelcome Thanks for the addition. I love watching chases.

  • @Nightclaw42
    @Nightclaw42 2 місяці тому +2

    0:59 To answer your questions: Basically tornado's start when warm, moist air and cool dry air collide with each other and start to swirl in the sky. As it go faster and faster it will start to move the clouds forming whats called a "hook" that can be seen on radar. As the air continues to spin, the cooler air it starts to move downward, kinda like water in a drain with the warmer air moving upward until "touchdown" where the swirling air is now connected from the storm above to the ground below. That giant "tumbleweed" is the dirt and dust being kicked upward from the warmer air giving the tornado a visible form. So while it looks unconnected, in truth there is an entire funnel there, but about half is almost invisible because the dirt hasn't finished making it's way upward and the clouds haven't finished making their way down. The drill bit tornado (7:25) really shows how that looks when you can get the whole thing in frame and you can see the "gap" between the bottom of the funnel picking up debris and the top of the funnel sucking down the clouds with the middle not quite visible yet. There are more factors that go into it the formation that determine things like wind speed, and direction, but those are the basics of it.

  • @johnniecalhoun5381
    @johnniecalhoun5381 3 місяці тому +2

    Tornadoes are the color of what they are eating !! With me living in Alabama and Georgia for the last 60 years has given me the chance to see 8 tornadoes .My home in Georgia was damaged by one . We lived on the West side of a mountain and the tornado came up the East side and sat down past our house . We ended up with half of a large Oak tree in our house . We also had a good bit of debris on our property from other homes . We had a refrigerator in our front yard from a home about 3/4 of a mile away on the East side of the mountain .The most amazing tornado I have seen was when I was around 10 years old . After school I was at my Grandmother's house at the end of the mill village I grew up in . Luckily it stayed up over the village and sat down in the ball field across the road from her house . After the ball field there were like 6 miles of heavy woods . Mostly large Oak trees and about midway through there was Interstate 85 and you couldn't even hear the automobiles traveling on it . But when the tornado had passed , you could see the automobiles traveling the interstate from my Grandmother's front yard !!!

  • @pinking5555
    @pinking5555 3 місяці тому +4

    Greenfield, IA tornado this year that happened on May 24th was recorded as the strongest tornado even. Mobile Doppler radar recorded wind speeds between 309-318mph or 497.287-511.771 kmph. Even though it was rated EF4 because of the damage caused. The EF only refers to damage done not recorded wind speed.

    • @Alex-kz4tn
      @Alex-kz4tn 3 місяці тому +1

      That tornado was insane, Reed Timmer's footage is some of the coolest tornado footage ever

  • @normanbrown8772
    @normanbrown8772 3 місяці тому +1

    A few years ago , I worked at a company that advised restaurants on improvements. We were at a family style restaurant near Topeka Kansas. Being from Maryland, I never experienced a tornado. There have been tornadoes here but nothing even close to mid west tornadoes. We were at work and suddenly there was siren. I’m thinking firehouse. A few seconds later, there was a mad dash of people moving into the basement. I was bewildered as to what was happening. Someone said “ tornado “ I became part of the crowd rushing to the basement. Nothing ever came from it. I never heard the ‘ freight train ‘ sound and there was no damage done that I could see.
    The panic and fear that thing created was immense. The locals there experienced the destruction these monsters were capable of. A tornado report nearby was enough to immediately shut down a entire town with no advance notice.
    If people who lived in fear of this would run from this so quickly then they were experienced. These tough farmers. They hesitate. There was no machismo that day but fear respect.

    • @sianne79
      @sianne79 3 місяці тому

      The fear, the respect, the trauma, the years of ptsd....
      Right so here's what one sounds like going directly over your head:
      1.) VWOOOOOOOOOOO
      2.) VWOOoooo...
      3.) ....ssk ssk sskK SSK SSK SSSSK SSSSK..SSSSSSSSK
      4. (with continuing SSKs) WUB WUB WUB WUB WHUB WHUBWHUB WHUBVWUB
      5.)ssk skss...
      6.) Vwooooooooo...
      Translation
      1. (?? - 40 feet) 75 Freight trains incoming.
      2. (40 - 20 feet) For some reason I do not understand, it gets slightly less loud
      3. (20 - 10 feet) Except now it's hissing at you...
      4. (10 - 2) ...during a rave dance party??
      5. (2 - 0) JESUS CHRIST
      6. - fadeout

  • @Cynaephyra
    @Cynaephyra 3 місяці тому +4

    If you want to react to a big one, the F5 tornado in moore oklahoma was a biggin. I was actually in oklahoma at the time. We drove out there to go to a wedding. The hail was so big we had to hide under an overpass but we didn't get to it before it damaged the car really bad and cracked the windshield in a few places. Also a side note, if you were to ever visit the US in these tornado hot spot areas and hear everyones phones simultaneously start making the siren noise be sure to take cover.

    • @aquamarinerose7639
      @aquamarinerose7639 3 місяці тому +1

      Never shelter under a overpass during a tornado it creates a wind tunnel effect if you're in your car during a tornado try to get to a sturdy building like a store if that not possible a ditch and if that not possible stay in your car keep your seatbelt on get has low has you can and cover your head

    • @Cynaephyra
      @Cynaephyra 3 місяці тому

      @@aquamarinerose7639 yeah, we were kind of stuck on the highway though and the hail was about golf ball size maybe bigger so we didn't have much choice at that moment. the whole highway stopped because of the hail and the monsoon of rain that happened. we stayed in the car we just parked under the overpass for cover. It fked the car up pretty good before we got to that thing though.

  • @laurenlasley
    @laurenlasley Місяць тому

    The thing about the Jonesboro tornado, is that it tore through the Turtle Creek mall and the busiest part of Jonesboro, right down Red Wolf boulevard. This mall was hugely popular, especially on the weekends, as it had stores like forever 21, buckle, JCPenney, Dillards, etc. and being the biggest town in Northeast Arkansas people travel to Jonesboro all the time. I live about 30 minutes away and am in Jonesboro every weekend with my family and my husband’s family being from there. This tornado claimed NO lives. This was during the pandemic when everything was closed down and hardly anyone was on the roads. Jonesboro’s population is like 80k people. To think about if this would have been a regular Saturday, the casualties would have been astounding. To this day the only part of the mall still standing is JCPenney on the left side and Dillards on the right side. They still haven’t and won’t rebuild. It was a miracle that only a handful of people were slightly injured.

  • @janedyck8852
    @janedyck8852 Місяць тому

    I remember as a pre-teen I was in the Girl Guides...maybe the Canadian version of Girl Scouts? We had gone on a camping trip (basically at the back of a farm of one of the girls families) and it suddenly started pouring. We were trying to deal with leaking tents etc when one of the leaders ran around the site screaming TORNADO! We all ran to the house a couple acres away for safety. The next morning we all went out to see the damage and there wasn't a single tent still standing. The coolers with the food etc were found in trees and clothing was no where to be found. One of the scariest experiences I have had to this day!

  • @kalebbort9246
    @kalebbort9246 3 місяці тому +14

    I love the tornado videos.

  • @CajsaLilliehook
    @CajsaLilliehook 2 місяці тому

    I was in Rosedale mall in the Twin Cities the day a tornado collapsed the roof. I went there to see the opening of the film Camelot. There were 5 or more tornadoes in a row. From the window of the mall, I could see three coming. I showed an usher who immediately told everyone to go to the front of the room where the film would be shown. We all sat on the floor. We heard it hit the mall and because theaters had to meet civil defense standards, the roof on the theater did not collapse. But the rest of the mall did collapse. Someone came in and literally said "Is there a doctor in the house?" We laughed...and there was a doctor. The National Guard came and they had to check all of us to make sure we could track visually.
    So, more tornado warnings continued on the radio so we decided to try to see Camelot at another theater. Two tornadoes hit but it only damaged cars in the parking lot.
    At work on Monday, one of my coworkers reported his family came home after a visit in Wisconsin and the welcome mat remained on their stair steps, but the entire house was gone.
    This is not my scariest tornado experience. I was racing a tornado home, trying to make it home before the road was blocked by threes. I made it home, parked in the garage, ran in the house and started to cry, a tree fell on the house. (No damage) but we had to clear 27 trees from the 3.5 miles to the main road before we could get out. I missed several days of work.

  • @johntheherbalistg8756
    @johntheherbalistg8756 Місяць тому +1

    I have never been inside a tornado, but I have been underneath a few them. Lots of hills out where I live, so they can have trouble touching down, thankfully. I live at the top of a hill with a few very large trees, so they tend to go back up a little before they get here, and move past.

  • @highro13
    @highro13 3 місяці тому +2

    I had never been in a tornado until June of 2024 when a tornado hit 15 miles north of Washington, DC

  • @thetexanladd
    @thetexanladd 2 місяці тому

    17:37 - Tornadoes DO occur in Ireland and Britain, but they are usually quite weak. It's very uncommon for strong tornadoes to strike the two islands.
    Even so, they can happen every once in a while. The most recent significant tornado to hit Britain was the London T5 (F2) tornado of December 7th, 2006 which, while not as strong as the F4 tornado that had struck the city WAY back in 1091 when London was MUCH smaller, is still noticeable. Then there was the Birmingham T5 (F2) tornado that occurred over a year earlier on July 28th, 2005. And that's just in regards to Britain.
    Then there's Ireland, where tornadoes are even MORE uncommon. Even so, they also occur there. The earliest-known tornado in Ireland having occur on April 30, 1054, in Rostella, near Kilbeggan in central Ireland. Hell, you can type in 'Tornadoes in Ireland', and there's some videos of a village in Ireland having been hit by a tornado on the 10th of December last year.
    As someone else pointed out in the comments, tornadoes occur almost everywhere on Earth EXCEPT Antarctica (for obvious reasons). North America just gets them the most due to the unique geography, as well as some other factors, such as human-induced activity (like agriculture). So while significant tornadoes may not happen as much outside of North America, it's better to be safe than sorry and take severe weather seriously, even if it doesn't result in a tornado forming.

  • @alisonmontana8895
    @alisonmontana8895 2 місяці тому

    Seen many, been in a few. The storm that made the big one that hit Moore OK, we saw it coming, went in the shelter with all the neighbors. A tornado went through my back yard, took the top out of my tree, jumped over my garage and took all of the neighbors' massive trees. My daughter was supposed to be in Moore that night on a school trip, but it got called off for another reason. I've seen many of them in the clouds, and many have hit close by. It's something that you kind of get used to.

  • @johnnygood4831
    @johnnygood4831 2 місяці тому

    The Goderich Tornado of August 2011 was the first F3 tornado to hit Ontario, Canada since April 1996. It lasted about 15 minutes, with a total track of 20 km and had peak winds between 253 and 330 km/h which cause about $100 million in damage. We don't generally get ones that powerful. That was about an hour from where I live.

  • @TLtimelord
    @TLtimelord 2 місяці тому

    The video that got Elie confirmed as an F5 is absolutely nuts. The fact a tornado that small made a damaging move that powerful is insane.

  • @kevinbadger8030
    @kevinbadger8030 3 місяці тому +1

    Watch Pecos Hank’s video on the 2013 El Reno tornado. It was the largest tornado ever recorded, being 2.6 MILES wide! It was also the second strongest tornado on record, with wind speeds around 484km/h.

  • @mamakat114
    @mamakat114 3 місяці тому

    Like I mentioned in one of your other Tornado videos, the calm before the storm & the eerie yellow hue is terrifying to me. After living through many tornadoes in Middle TN, then moving back to my hometown west of Boston, i was out for lunch with my Daddy & my Daughter who was 2. The sky turned yellow & i began to panic. My Daddy kept telling me it wasn't a tornado & we were safe. Thankfully it wasn't, though we have had a few in Massachusetts

  • @ollie_218
    @ollie_218 19 днів тому

    one time there was a tornado forming in my city, and the circulation actually passed over our house (before it touched down). We were in the back yard, and you could tell when it passed over because the pressure became so low all of a sudden it felt like your breath was getting pulled up out of your body for a second.

  • @justtere
    @justtere 2 місяці тому

    I live in Western Massachusetts. We rarely have tornadoes. One day however one started at the end of our block went down the street the other way thank goodness and killed a woman and her child who were in the bathtub. That house was totally destroyed. Then it went across that street and killed another woman. It then decided to cross the Connecticut River and took out an 18-wheeler on a bridge. It continued across Western Massachusetts and totally decimated a town not too far from here. They are still rebuilding some areas after 7 years.
    There is a lot more to this story. What are nearly as scary are called microbursts. When my family lived in Florida, a microburst destroyed my daughter's daycare. Thankfully it was on a Saturday so no children were there. A microburst went over our house, and a tree fell on our car, totalling it. No other damage was reported. Just my car. I was happy as I hated that car and got a nice new one.

  • @brandomideas
    @brandomideas 3 місяці тому

    We've had a few. Nothing substantial . Nova Scotia has nine tornado touchdowns on record. The EF1 tornado that touched down in Stewiacke on June 30, 2021, was the first confirmed tornado in the province in two decades. It was on the ground for more than 600 meters, destroying a barn. A few weeks later, another EF0 tornado was spotted in Antrim.

  • @erinzelnio8359
    @erinzelnio8359 3 місяці тому

    Every time you ask "what is that, is that the tornado?" what you're actually seeing is the debris cloud at the very base of it. Tornados are so massive you have to be far away to capture them ground to sky.

  • @chelseyrice1748
    @chelseyrice1748 3 місяці тому +1

    Check out one of the real time tornado: tornado alley documentaries (Joplin, Moore, Tuscaloosa, El reno) give you a very good look at what its like to go through a bad tornado

  • @whiskybooze
    @whiskybooze 2 місяці тому

    I was in a tornado when I renting a house with my buddies in Iowa. I had just got back from picking up a keg and we sat out on the porch watching the strom while drunk before it hit lol. It happened at night so we had to wait for lighting flashes to see where it was headed.

  • @leahmollytheblindcatnordee3586
    @leahmollytheblindcatnordee3586 3 місяці тому

    The odd thing about a tornado is that you can see it in the sky and on the ground, but until debris is kicked up the portion between the top and bottom isn't always visible. .
    I have watched a good number of tornadoes videoed by storm chasers, some of them seem to be exhilarated and yell and scream and some times act stupid. I don't l care for that type. The people I watch are the smarter, more cautious ones who respect the storm, its beauty and what it can do, but watch the storms progress and get out of the way when they get too close. I don't appreciate the ones who seem to be ignoring the fact that someone's home or life is being destroyed.

  • @timhahn7358
    @timhahn7358 2 місяці тому

    I have footage on my phone from that Madill, Oklahoma tornado. I was storm chasing that day, we were about 2 miles south of it when it went through town, my chase group were the first people to call the national weather service and confirm the tornado being on the ground

  • @YarMahNarNar
    @YarMahNarNar 3 місяці тому

    I was living on the Military Base, CFB Borden, which is literally connected to Angus, Ontario. I walked outside to have a smoke, put the cigarette in my mouth, pulled my lighter up to lite it, saw the tornado and said “Yeah, Nah, not today” About faced and went inside lol

  • @davidburney8463
    @davidburney8463 3 місяці тому +1

    Thats the one bad thing about twisters NOT being common in places, folks dont know how quickly they can ruin your day

  • @troycarlson4212
    @troycarlson4212 2 місяці тому

    You want to see a tornado, check out the December 11th 2021 tornado that hit Mayfield Kentucky. EF4 tornado that traveled 165 miles! This thing was massive and pretty much took out all of Mayfield and Dawson Springs. Worst part is there was not really any warning and was devastating

    • @gabrielaz9476
      @gabrielaz9476 Місяць тому

      I second on that or el Reno tornado. I live in Kentucky and the mayfield tornado was probably the worst we had and it was at night , the fact that Kentucky has the most nocturnal tornados . Was massive and destroyed an entire candle factory and killed a couple of people and entrapped many. then the el Reno tornado was probably one of the most biggest and violent tornado it would’ve been an ef5 if it hit towns but it didn’t it was mostly in farm land and it took a couple storm chasers..sadly

  • @ferrumaeternum7681
    @ferrumaeternum7681 2 місяці тому

    I've been in quite a few tornadoes. As a Midwesterner, we like to sit outside and watch them when they occur. :D

  • @UahUahUah
    @UahUahUah 3 місяці тому

    Tornado wind speeds are just educated estimates unless confirmed by weather instruments. To date, the highest recorded tornadic wind gust (and the highest recorded wind on Earth) occurred just a few short weeks ago, with the May 2024 Greenfield, Iowa tornado. Peak winds were measured by the University of Iowa's mobile doppler radar at 309 mph (497 km/h), with a margin of error of about 5 mph. This means they could have been as high as 313 mph (503 km/h).
    With that being said, the Elie tornado was given an F5 rating after someone recording it sent Canada's weather service their video of it lofting an entire house whole, and then disintegrating it within the vortex.

  • @jadend6978
    @jadend6978 3 місяці тому

    2:46 as an American: the tornado is moving away from the shop, which is probably why he came out near the windows. Tornados can zag or change directions, but tend to generally keep going in one main direction. However, flying debris could still be sent through the window so it’s better to wait until you’re clear of the strong winds.

  • @chitown19738762
    @chitown19738762 3 місяці тому

    I once was caught in a warehouse in Oklahoma working while a f4 came through. Couldn't see anything happening because of no windows. Which was probably a good thing. All we had was the weather radio telling in how close it passed us. Less than three miles.

  • @drakesummers886
    @drakesummers886 2 місяці тому

    As someone that’s experienced three tornadoes I live in the state of Indiana and we had one recently. It was an F3. It sounds like a freight train or jet like next to your ear

  • @Superflydanfry
    @Superflydanfry 2 місяці тому

    Oh yeah, i remember the tornado that ripped through Jonesboro. Luckily I was a few miles out of the path so my place remained undamaged for the most part but it's true, midday on a Saturday on any normal weekend that mall would have been full of people and the tornado ripped clean through a huge section. A big reason there were no fatalities at all was because of the Covid19 restrictions which believe me folks in town were not quick to adopt to

  • @benovermire3372
    @benovermire3372 2 місяці тому

    General rule of thumb for tornado safety: If it looks like it isn't moving, it's coming straight at you and you better move or get down and pray

  • @danmullins8480
    @danmullins8480 2 місяці тому

    Had a tornado travel over my house just last month. Destroyed my shade trees and my roof. Everyone was okay, but it was touch and go for a bit. I live in Oklahoma. That was the first tornado I've ever had any damage from.

  • @DMWolFGurL
    @DMWolFGurL 3 місяці тому

    Actually lying down as flat as you can on your stomach is probably the best position you can be in with your arms and hands covering your head. That's probably the safest you can be if there are no ditches, storm cellars, in ground swimming pools to jump into.

  • @denisetornga1030
    @denisetornga1030 3 місяці тому

    We that live in the area of tornado alley,carry insurance for full replacement value of our homes and property.The discovery channel had a program called storm chasers that can give you an idea of what it is like to be up close to them.These shows are available on UA-cam.

  • @victoriah.2083
    @victoriah.2083 3 місяці тому

    Yes, Adam. Think of those pieces of tornado shrapnel slicing through the air!😮

  • @R777-RLM
    @R777-RLM 3 місяці тому

    These were pretty tame tornadoes. I watch one go by my house that was as big as most of these, in Utah. Still fun to watch.

  • @IStoleYourMagoes
    @IStoleYourMagoes 3 місяці тому

    A famous tornado occurred nearby my town, it's the 2011 Joplin Missouri tornado

  • @littlerock8926
    @littlerock8926 3 місяці тому

    Yes, that is America. It is actually my homestate and about 2 & 1/2 hours north east of my home. This tornado hit on my 52nd birthday (the Jonesboro tornado).

  • @canadaknighte
    @canadaknighte 3 місяці тому

    I live in Winnipeg MB. Home of Jets. Eli is about a 40 min drive away. We all remember that storm.

  • @SaltyPug
    @SaltyPug 3 місяці тому +1

    The guy in Arkansas was praying. I recognized the ‘Bismillah’ as part of the prayer in Muslim faith.

  • @JamesWilliams-zb8ci
    @JamesWilliams-zb8ci 2 місяці тому

    The UK gets between 30-50 tornadoes each year and Ireland gets around 10 each year.

  • @johnstup4479
    @johnstup4479 3 місяці тому

    "is this line the border?" "Ohhh" "Ohhhhhh"😆 Oh Adam. Cracking me up all the time bro.

  • @johnniecalhoun5381
    @johnniecalhoun5381 3 місяці тому

    You should check out some of the videos of tornadoes with multiple vortexes and tornadoes that turn counter clock wise ! They are rare and interesting !!

  • @kristinwojtowich8902
    @kristinwojtowich8902 2 місяці тому

    Number 2 reminds me of "Its not that the wind is blowin, it's WHAT the wind is blowin." 😅😂😂

  • @theghostofu
    @theghostofu Місяць тому

    I’m from Arkansas and me and my fiancé went to pick up a car in jonesboro when that tornado hit, it was absolutely terrifying

  • @Tiix_VII
    @Tiix_VII 2 місяці тому

    That's so crazy watching number 1 because I was at a friend's house in the 8th grade when the hail hit in crosbyton 😅

  • @DannyCalderon-f7d
    @DannyCalderon-f7d 3 місяці тому

    The sequel to the "Twister" movie, "Twisters", is being released internationally on July 17th by Warner Brothers.

  • @Rwizard206
    @Rwizard206 2 місяці тому

    One went through my back yard years ago outside of Hershey pa. I was at work and saw the damage when I got home

  • @KimberMcC
    @KimberMcC 3 місяці тому +1

    If it looks like it’s not moving, it’s coming toward you.

  • @anglosaxon5874
    @anglosaxon5874 2 місяці тому

    We have around 30 tornadoes a year in the UK but much smaller than most of the American ones.
    But when you do it per sq km, we have a higher density than the USA! 2.3 per 10k sq km compared to USA's 1.3 per 10k sq km! lol

  • @weezilfreak
    @weezilfreak 3 місяці тому

    I live in Oklahoma and have got so used to the tornadoes that it’s just another day. I don’t get all worked up. If it happens it happens.

  • @ashtonthestormchaser3281
    @ashtonthestormchaser3281 3 місяці тому

    Hey Adam, my names Ashton, I’m a storm chaser from Oklahoma. I love your reactions to weather related videos. I would absolutely love to take you storm chasing when you come out to the U.S. next year. If you’d be willing that is. It’d be an incredible experience. We can get in contact further.

  • @steveeymann6374
    @steveeymann6374 2 місяці тому

    You should check out the pilger Nebraska twin f4 tornadoes. I had a friend living there at the time. Luckily they had a storm shelter or they wouldn't have made it. Their doormat was found 2 miles away on a local farmers property. They knew because they were the only Ohio state football fans in town and it was an Ohio state doormat.

  • @justinhunt8409
    @justinhunt8409 2 місяці тому +1

    Why the fuck do we all (Canadians) sound like we’re watching golf no matter what happens 😂 god damn tornado and buddy’s like “wow never seen one of these before”

  • @scrambled_eggs_music
    @scrambled_eggs_music 3 місяці тому

    Look the old TV show Storm Chasers or check Reed Timmer’s stuff… they do have videos of inside a tornado somewhere

  • @mememan6109
    @mememan6109 Місяць тому

    And the funny part is, they actually are tornadoes on those too 17:47

  • @bearhug_jaykk
    @bearhug_jaykk 3 місяці тому

    Look up Greenfield, Iowa tornado 2024. It set the new world record for most powerful tornado ever at 304-318mph. They got video of it destroying windmills and some farm buildings.

    • @bearhug_jaykk
      @bearhug_jaykk 3 місяці тому

      The video by Reed Timmer has the best view.

  • @nancystanton955
    @nancystanton955 3 місяці тому

    One fact about tornados people need to know is if the tornado doesn't look like it is moving, it is coming right at you. Pack up and go!

  • @Spankmepink
    @Spankmepink 3 місяці тому

    I'm 41 and is it weird that whenever I think of dying, how I want to die, etc, I've always came back to wanting to die by going flying in a tornado? Serious.

  • @eriksand9262
    @eriksand9262 3 місяці тому

    A haircut EVERY Friday!?!?!? I get a haircut like every 2 months 😂😂

  • @Storyideas81
    @Storyideas81 3 місяці тому

    As of 6-27-24, Oklahoma has had 100 tornadoes this year

  • @celestia486
    @celestia486 2 місяці тому

    5:01 the saying is that if the tornados moving you’re safe. When it’s not moving it’s time to hide
    Edit: 12:50 it’s not spinning because it’s coming toward them you’re right they need to move!

  • @TheKyfe
    @TheKyfe 3 місяці тому

    For the 1st one in Jonesboro, that was actually one of the weakest examples of the tornado caught on camera. Hell, the news channel got a better coverage of it. You only see the beginning of the tornado in this video, and it's like less than 10% of the size it grows to. It was HUGE.

  • @karenlobosco9646
    @karenlobosco9646 2 місяці тому

    What do you do when your home gets destroyed by a tornado? Count your blessings, try to find belongings in the rubble, and wait for your homeowners insurance agent to visit. Then you rebuild.

  • @weirdalfan1980
    @weirdalfan1980 3 місяці тому

    You should react to Skip Talbot's analysis of the El Reno tornado in 2013 and what went wrong that day.

  • @davidburney8463
    @davidburney8463 3 місяці тому

    80s music " im an old soul"😂😂😂😂😂😂 really 80s,thanks now i feel real old😂😂😂😂

  • @mfinchina__117
    @mfinchina__117 3 місяці тому

    I think the guy in the first video is speaking Arabic. Maybe he's a recent immigrant, which is why he doesn't know better than to stand by the windows. I was teaching ESL in Michigan in 2010 and there was a tornado warning. I ran into my students from UAE who told me, "Teacher, we're going to go outside to look at the tornado." I was like, "What are you talking about? You're going to get killed!"

  • @brucew7062
    @brucew7062 3 місяці тому

    At night I take shelter if the sirens start sounding and my phone starts getting the warnings. During the day I am guilty like many Texans of going outside to look for the tornado.

  • @sslerlin
    @sslerlin 3 місяці тому

    Ive lost two roofs to tornadoes , one sent my tree thru my house

  • @plutoidrepublic2765
    @plutoidrepublic2765 3 місяці тому

    the elie f5 is crazy bc the guy recording never saw one before and his first tornado is an F5

  • @BuckyBarnesATL
    @BuckyBarnesATL 3 місяці тому

    The cameraman never dies, we all know that.

  • @christopherstanley9997
    @christopherstanley9997 3 місяці тому

    you should check out the pilger nebraska twin f4 tornado, the most incredible and rare tornado ever

  • @Candycane-Foxy-YT
    @Candycane-Foxy-YT 2 місяці тому

    1:13 Yes that is real Tornados come in many different forms

  • @matthewcherry6650
    @matthewcherry6650 3 місяці тому

    I've been in three total. Two were in the same building 6 years apart.

  • @flaminggaming143
    @flaminggaming143 2 місяці тому

    12:20 nah bruhhh there was another tornado right behind them, look you can see it bending in the sky, id shit my pants😭😭

  • @mason1257
    @mason1257 Місяць тому

    The Reno is probably the scariest tornado videos and pics

  • @Redmist-se7ld
    @Redmist-se7ld 2 місяці тому

    Wish they made an open world tornado chasing games that’s gta like and have a DLC trucks from twister, Twisters, into the storm and the dominator from the hurricane heist

  • @johnthomas3505
    @johnthomas3505 3 місяці тому

    A UA-camr named Flair got hit by a tornado a couple months ago, you could do a reaction to that and see what he did after the tornado

  • @decrox13
    @decrox13 3 місяці тому

    Ugh, you NEED to watch Clem Schultz' tornado video. Please. It is so chilling.

  • @ryanbiggs8265
    @ryanbiggs8265 3 місяці тому

    ive watched a few of your videos man, and im hooked lol love the content! new subscriber here

    • @MoreAdamCouser
      @MoreAdamCouser  3 місяці тому

      @@ryanbiggs8265 love this, thanks mate!

    • @ryanbiggs8265
      @ryanbiggs8265 3 місяці тому

      @@MoreAdamCouser absolutely brotha 🤙🏻 being from Texas I’m in the heart of Tornado Alley and where Dixie Alley (crossing Georgia and that whole strip of states); it can get a bit crazy. One year we had over 300 tornadoes touch down

  • @mamakat114
    @mamakat114 3 місяці тому

    The hail balls are terrifying too

  • @colleenmonell1601
    @colleenmonell1601 3 місяці тому

    Lol, I love long walks on the beach!

  • @sassytbc7923
    @sassytbc7923 3 місяці тому

    You salvaged all you can and decide whether to move, or to rebuild.

  • @RobertRitter-l9z
    @RobertRitter-l9z 28 днів тому

    I was caught on the outlying edge of one ang almost got hit by a falling tree

  • @davidburney8463
    @davidburney8463 3 місяці тому

    1..NEVER PULL OVER for a twister,. Keep her in your rear view mirror and take a turn to get out of the path. 2.....storm chasers get paid for the footage by the news stations

  • @arrobrewer2730
    @arrobrewer2730 3 місяці тому

    Theres good footage of the Elkhorn Nebraska EF3

  • @brucejordan2200
    @brucejordan2200 3 місяці тому

    Hey this is right up my alley.......Tornado alley that is.
    Sorry, my fingertips wouldn't stop. 😂

  • @edithroberts8959
    @edithroberts8959 3 місяці тому

    Tornadoes are clear, most of the time, until debris is picked up from the ground.

  • @andrewwright8507
    @andrewwright8507 3 місяці тому

    Hell where I live in Tennessee there are no sirens

  • @tcdirtybirds79
    @tcdirtybirds79 3 місяці тому

    I would recommend you watch Reed Timmer and Pecos Hank really great videos.

  • @clarakaylamarion7982
    @clarakaylamarion7982 3 місяці тому

    You should check out the Joplin mo tornado if you haven’t seen it yet