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I don’t know a good video to recommend, but I would really like to see you react to it We lived about 200 miles away from Mount Saint Helens and the sonic boom from the eruption shook our house and rattled the windows. Luckily, we were not in the path of the ash. My ex-husband said it grew dark as midnight when it was only noon because of all the ash in the air. People had to shovel it off the roof because the weight of the ash could make your roof collapse.
Hey Habibi brothers....Mount St Helen's volcano is in Washington State, not Hawaii! We have active volcanos in Washington State, Oregon and here in California. In fact there is one only 30 miles north of me here in Chico in Northern California. Mount Lassen last erupted in 1918 and there are active sulfur pots and bubbling hot mud pits. It is VERY much active.
I live all the way in Nebraska, and last year our skies were brown from the smoke from Canada for months. It was awful even all these thousands of miles away, like a nightmare...
What you’re trying to describe in the Sahara sounds like what we call dust devils in America; they look like small tornadoes or whirlwinds of dust and sand. You see them sometimes in the southwest. But they’re not caused by the same thing as tornadoes.
I've seen summer days where they would dance around the valley where my mom lives. lots of them, at once, towering over a mile high though the worst ones tend to be just below tornado levels
The deadliest known hurricane was the "Bhola cyclone" that struck East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) in 1970. An astonishing 300,000-500,000 people lost their lives. Even more died from natural disasters in China: 242,000-655,000 in the Tangshan earthquake of 1976, from 930,000 to 2 million in the flooding of the Yellow River in 1887, and from 422,000 to 4 million in the flooding of the Yangtze and Huai Rivers in 1931.
I was born and live in the San Francisco Bay Area. Wouldn’t change for any other state. We have people from all countries in the world. Come over someday, I know you would like here. ✌🏼🌷
I would love to know more about your country. Please do a vlog of where you live, react to it, and tell us some things about your country! 😃 I enjoy y’all’s reactions so very much. You are very kind people.
Howdy from Texas. We just got through hurricane Beryl so this video is very fitting. Luckily it wasn't too bad where I am but others got it much worse.
Howdy, I live in South Texas and luckily we didn't get any kind of damage or anything. And I didn't hear of any damage in any places in the San Antonio metro area in general. Edit- here in San Antonio, we had crazy rain in crazy winds the same day I made this comment just later and the day. No damage though, the fried chicken place that I worked at was actually one of the few places that accepted cash cuz a lot of restaurants computers were down. There are also people coming in from Houston to San Antonio I'm assuming to stay with relatives because many of them in Houston lost power
I'm in northeast Texas & we're having tornadoes all over! Fortunately I'm just in the edge of the storm & just getting rain, but we still have a tornado watch right now at 5 pm.
Tornado is an air twister from the movies, traveling and rotating usually faster than a hurricane. Hurricane (cyclone or typhoon) is much much bigger giant storm, it is also circular but massive (200-300 miles), also bringing the difference in air pressure, heavy rains etc.
The worst thing about volcanoes is the ash that goes into the atmosphere. It can block all plants and crops from getting sunlight, and it falls down and chokes your lungs which can be deadly. And also the ash landing on crops
@@andyv2209True. It destroys several crops that season however. Just like fire; it clears and feeds the soil. I don't think I'd live that close to a volcano. I can deal with our hurricanes and the occasional tornado in Virginia.
Dear Habibi brothers, you should react to a video about the story of Dave Crockett the KOMO news photographer who was trapped by the eruption of Mount Saint Helens and filmed his ordeal as the day turned to night all around him and hot ash began to fall and made breathing extremely difficult. He thought he was going to die. It is one of the most compelling videos you'll ever see.
The 1906 San Franscisco earthquake resulted in a massive fire - which was what killed most people. That single earthquake resulted in more deaths than all the other earthquakes in recorded US history combined.
@@jabreck1934 Yes indeed, that is precisely what I tell folks from hurricane country when they start to talk about being afraid of earthquakes. Though, to be fair - in parts of the world where construction standards are lower, earthquakes kill more people. I shudder to think what a repeat of the "New Madrid" quake would do to cities like Saint Louis - built on alluvial soils with many unreinforced masonry buildings.
I've lived in Wisconsin, Minnesota, South Dakota & California. I've been through tornados, blizzards, floods, wildfires, earthquakes & a hurricane. The scariest for me was the wildfires in California.
I'm never going to forget the ones in 2007, mainly because my then girlfriend decided it would be a good idea to put on the emergency scanner to listen to radio transmissions. It was nothing short of scary when multiple firefighting units were reporting that they were out of water and had to retreat. It's the closest to war I've ever been.
How was SD realistically to live, like in Rapid City or Souix Falls? Decent ppl? You don't have to reply some crazy answer, or at all, just curious about that state. :P
@@sanic1085 I was in Brookings - about an hour north of Sioux Falls but went there many times. Overall the people were very nice although fairly conservative back then but that was 20 years ago and a LOT has changed. My good friends still live out there & just moved out to Rapid City last year hoping for an improvement but are planning on moving to another state because it didn't get any better. Sioux Falls is probably your best bet for the best mix of people & activities. Visiting the sites for vacation in SD is always a good time but I definitely wouldn't move back there to live. Weather wise, aside from the odd tornados, spring floods & blizzards it was great! Because it is so flat with such wide open spaces wind & blowing snow could be a problem if you're not used to it. Not gonna lie the wages were the lowest among the states I lived in but the cost of living was also lower so it balanced itself out. Hope that helps!
@jacd751 damn thanks for great answer. Eh, I'm kinda conservative, but SD always felt like a dream that should prollay stay a dream. You kinda confirmed it with that answer. I'll prollay visit, though. 😀 As a Chi burb guy my whole life, I gotta be realistic with my first move. 😜 Anyways take care! ✌️
Actually had a tornado hit a couple miles away from where I live a week or two ago. I live in a very hilly area, so it’s very uncommon, but not unheard of.
I still have a vial on volcanic ash from Mount St Helen’s! And I gathered it from my car roof in Calgary Alberta Canada - 100’s and 100’s of miles away! I also survived the wildfires in British Columbia last year! I was one street away from the mandatory evacuation zone, and stood on the roof of my house with a garden hose for 15 hours! Peace
I lived in Alaska over 20 years and there are lots of small earthquakes (and big ones) regularly. You get to a point where you don’t even react unless it’s a BIG one. Now I live in Monsoon, Haboob, flood area of the Sonoran Desert and also lived in the mid-west with tornados.
Hey guys There is a time-lapse video of the eruption of Mount St. Helen on May 18, 1980. Slow motion video shows the power of a volcano. I believe that video (slow motion) is on here, YT.
7:19 That one in the Pacific Ocean is known to geologist and those who have interest in geology as "The Ring of Fire" due to volcanoes and earthquakes that happen so frequently. Frequently enough that those who are used to it shrug it off like it's no big deal.
Today in Sluthern Indiana I was chasing storms, tornado warned. It tried so hard, didn't put one down but was wicked! Didputdown a confirmed tornado North of the White River.
I can see mount jefferson from my kitchen window it has a low probability of erupting it hasn’t in the last 10,000 years but if it does i would be in the evacuation zone. It’s such a beautiful place to hike
The Mount Saint Helens eruption was bigger than a nuclear explosion. It was our pompeii. It wasn't so much an eruption as an explosion of the mountain containing it. And it didn't explode up, it exploded out to one side. There are videos about the Mount Saint Helens eruption that you guys would probably be enjoy reacting to.
There’s around 1,200 tornados, 16 earthquakes, 2 or 3 hurricanes make landfall, and we are #1 for the most wildfires per year. That doesn’t sound rare to me!
I lived 250 miles away when Mt St Helens erupted. I was just a little girl but I remember ash falling that far away and being stuck in the house for a day or two to keep from breathing the ash. As a kid it was just something they happened. But as an adult I can see what a unique experience it was
In June of this year, in the Oklahoma Panhandle, where we are lucky to get 6-8 inches of rain a year, we got 11 inches in a night and had flash floods. This is high desert country. This was a once in a thousand year flood.
I live in tornado alley, in my state we have the most tornadoes. I’ve been in a few, tornadoes are not rare here, we get a lot during tornado season. We get earthquakes too sometimes. Once we had flooding, thunderstorms, tornadoes and earthquakes all in the same day. We have really good weather men, they are scientists and they let us know when a tornado is coming and which street it on. My family in southern Texas just experienced a hurricane because it’s hurricane season.
Total number of volcanoes just in the state of OREGON USA = 61 (Portland Oregon received some of the ash cloud from the Mnt ST Helens, Washington State eruption in 1980. Portland's closest active volcano is MT Hood which is 63 miles from Portland, OR and which vents steam continuously.)
Many people do not talk about this but California has volcano Fields they say they are extinct but they're not every now and then they kick out some smoke
Yep.... Utah is home to wildfires and right now it is time for wildfire chances to go up. If I ever walk out of a building and smell smoke: most likely it's from either central Utah or somewhere in California. I rarely smell any smoke from Idaho.
The Arabian Plate consists mostly of the Arabian Peninsula, it extends westward to the Sinai Peninsula and the Red Sea and northward to the Levant. The plate borders are East, with the Indo-Australian plate, at the Owen Fracture Zone. If it were not for this plate, there would be no oil in the middle east, most of the oil was formed from organic materials from the oceans, aqueducts brought in rich sea life nutrients, while the techtonic plate aided in helping to create plenty of heat for the organic material to brew into the stew. It is also believed that the oil in Texas is a result from the same type of process, feed by the Permian Basin, as well as the Ford shale in south Texas. As Texas itself borders with the North American tectonic plate, again the perfect heat generator for organic materials to brew and stew.
I love your videos guys! I hope you don't mind me asking, but I was always kind of curious if there is a significance or reason for one of you wearing blue and the other wearing red. Loving your content from Ohio!
I knew about the Letters Lost in the Pond guy before I found your channel. He's hilarious. Have you seen his video on Fireflies? They came out where I live about a week ago. I LOVE FIREFLIES!!! Do you have any in Algeria?
The reason the United States has such powerful storms is actually because of not only it's large land mass, but the jet stream. This is because storms tend to follow the jet stream, so when it dips further south the colder air is mixed with the warmer air in the south causing the air to expand, and increasing moisture, and yes unstability in winds. Keep in mind all tornados actually form parallel (latitude) and when dropping turn meridian (longtitude).
The yarnell fires were pretty bad in AZ, not only the firefighters that died, which good thing to look up maybe, but we had to stay indoors for a few days because the sky was just yellow and nasty, it looked like early dawn all day because most of the sunlight was blocked out
God doesn't give you more than you can handle, that's why America's weather is the most extreme in the world. This video didn't even touch on the crazy hailstorms, flash floods or sandstorms or blizzards. 🙏💪😎
Hello, I would like to see your reactions to navy seals rescued jessica buchanan. a very beautiful story, tragic but beautiful story. I have watched several of your videos. ( from Montreal )
If you two have not watched actual,footage of the the Mt St Helen’s eruption, then you should. It’s pretty dramatic. Ditto for footage of some F5 tornado,s Scary stuff. The US has so many tornadoes because when conditions are right, we have cold air coming down from the Arctic with meets warm, moist air . Coming up from the Gulf of Mexico. When they meet….atmospheric conditions become unstable .
If it's above the North Atlantic, central North Pacific or eastern North Pacific oceans (Florida, Caribbean Islands, Texas, Hawaii, etc.), we call it a hurricane. If it hovers over the Northwest Pacific Ocean (usually East Asia), we call it a typhoon.
I just kno that the natives back then, left an offering to the wind. Mainly do to them losing their land and being almost completely wiped out by the soldiers back then and it was left that way for the future. So anything built will be destroyed. Anyway, that's the story for why tornadoes happen
Hurricanes begin as storms off the east coast of Africa, which gather size & strength as it travels west through warm waters. Residents in the regions it seems to be targeting have a week or more of advance warning in which to board the windows & head inland awayr from the danger. Tornados begin overland as masses of warm & cold air collide, and start to spin. When meteorologists see a hook on radar, that's when then advise people to take shelter, meaning in a room in the center of the house away from windows, in a basement; or in a purpose built storm shelter. But they don't know for certain a funnel has formed: this is where spotters & storm chasers come in: brave police, reporters & people devoted to studying tornadoes who often are the first to see a funnel on the ground & contact 911 to start the siren! Advance warning time can be as long as a few hours to literally being woken in the middle of the night by the sirens!
I’m sorry…Did you guys even hear what they said about Mt St Helen’s? You’ve been talking through the entire video, so not sure what you did or did not hear. I lived in Seattle when that eruption occurred…..about 60 miles to the north of it. It was a pretty big deal. And I have no idea what you were talking about about volcanos in Yellowstone? The west coast of the US is part of the so-called Ring of Fire, which you saw on the map…from The west coast of South America, to Alaska, to Japan etc. caused by plate tectonics, earthquakes and volcanoes are active throughout the Pacific.
As I said in another comment, the sonic boom from the eruption shook our house and we lived north of Seattle, about 200 miles away (as the crow flies). The brothers were referring to the Yellowstone Caldera, which is a supervolcano which sits under the geothermal features in Yellowstone. Apparently there are four prior calderas from previous eruptions, which overlap, and the field of volcanic calderas are now called supervolcanoes. There are 1000-2000 low-medium level earthquakes in the region annually, some of which have formed “swarms“. I am reminded of the swarms of earthquakes that happened in 1980 before Mount Saint Helens erupted. Scientists have warned that there will be devastating consequences if this supervolcano erupts.
Wildfires aren't unique to California. I live in Washington state, in the Pacific northwest, (where Mount Saint Helens is located) and we choke on hazardous air from wildfire smoke every summer
It looks like you missed what he said about Mount Saint Helens. It is in the mainland US and erupted in 1980. There is an old documentary about it and some footage too! It would be great for you to check out. It would be cool for y’all to check out tornado videos and there is at least one really great video of a hurricane that someone captured the eye of the storm on video and it was amazing to see. You do need to be careful about reacting to storm videos as I think storm chasers will copyright you. But there are plenty you can look at that other reactors haven’t had problems with.
Don't Forget to Drop a Like, it Will Help us a lot to Reach More Viewers Thank you for all the Support ♥
Movie Reaction Channel www.youtube.com/@HABIBIBROTHERS717
As an American I’m glad y’all are learning more about our country I’d like to know more about yours.
Definitely I love your honest reactions and would love to see your home from your perspective
I saw some pictures of historical Algerian women's attire. Images & outfits were stunning. Unique
The entire coast of countries along the Pacific Ocean is known as "The Ring of Fire."
I just said that....
You guys should react to the Mount Saint Helens volcano eruption that occurred in the 1980's 🌋
I don’t know a good video to recommend, but I would really like to see you react to it We lived about 200 miles away from Mount Saint Helens and the sonic boom from the eruption shook our house and rattled the windows. Luckily, we were not in the path of the ash. My ex-husband said it grew dark as midnight when it was only noon because of all the ash in the air. People had to shovel it off the roof because the weight of the ash could make your roof collapse.
Hey Habibi brothers....Mount St Helen's volcano is in Washington State, not Hawaii! We have active volcanos in Washington State, Oregon and here in California. In fact there is one only 30 miles north of me here in Chico in Northern California. Mount Lassen last erupted in 1918 and there are active sulfur pots and bubbling hot mud pits. It is VERY much active.
Mt Konocti in clear lake is still active.
@@garycamara9955 I did not know that! I will have to look it up!
Thanks for mentioning the Canadian wildfires. I live in the province of Alberta and last year was our worst wildfire season ever.
I live all the way in Nebraska, and last year our skies were brown from the smoke from Canada for months. It was awful even all these thousands of miles away, like a nightmare...
@@gl15col Yeah, here in Edmonton sometimes the smoke was so bad it would give you a sore throat. At least my home was safe though.
...... until this year.
@@RellHaiser1we were getting sore throats and asthma attacks in Upstate New York from it.
It's not just Hawaii that has volcanoes. Hawaii just has the most active. Washington and the states around it have volcanoes too.
What you’re trying to describe in the Sahara sounds like what we call dust devils in America; they look like small tornadoes or whirlwinds of dust and sand. You see them sometimes in the southwest. But they’re not caused by the same thing as tornadoes.
Then there is the Arabic word "haboob" which has recently entered the English language to refer to desert dust storms.
Yeah my mind immediately went to dust devil.
I've seen summer days where they would dance around the valley where my mom lives. lots of them, at once, towering over a mile high
though the worst ones tend to be just below tornado levels
The Mount Saint Helens eruption was 500 times as powerful as the nuclear bomb at Hiroshima!
The deadliest known hurricane was the "Bhola cyclone" that struck East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) in 1970. An astonishing 300,000-500,000 people lost their lives. Even more died from natural disasters in China: 242,000-655,000 in the Tangshan earthquake of 1976, from 930,000 to 2 million in the flooding of the Yellow River in 1887, and from 422,000 to 4 million in the flooding of the Yangtze and Huai Rivers in 1931.
I was born and live in the San Francisco Bay Area. Wouldn’t change for any other state. We have people from all countries in the world.
Come over someday, I know you would like here. ✌🏼🌷
AND tornadoes and hurricanes bring havoc year after year after year
I would love to know more about your country. Please do a vlog of where you live, react to it, and tell us some things about your country! 😃 I enjoy y’all’s reactions so very much. You are very kind people.
Howdy from Texas. We just got through hurricane Beryl so this video is very fitting. Luckily it wasn't too bad where I am but others got it much worse.
Howdy, I live in South Texas and luckily we didn't get any kind of damage or anything. And I didn't hear of any damage in any places in the San Antonio metro area in general.
Edit- here in San Antonio, we had crazy rain in crazy winds the same day I made this comment just later and the day. No damage though, the fried chicken place that I worked at was actually one of the few places that accepted cash cuz a lot of restaurants computers were down. There are also people coming in from Houston to San Antonio I'm assuming to stay with relatives because many of them in Houston lost power
I'm in northeast Texas & we're having tornadoes all over! Fortunately I'm just in the edge of the storm & just getting rain, but we still have a tornado watch right now at 5 pm.
Be safe glad you’re ok. Hope everything gets put right soon.
Are you through it completely though?
@@gimpyrules6714 It's all over in Texas, it has moved on north.
Tornado is an air twister from the movies, traveling and rotating usually faster than a hurricane. Hurricane (cyclone or typhoon) is much much bigger giant storm, it is also circular but massive (200-300 miles), also bringing the difference in air pressure, heavy rains etc.
also hurricanes usualy last few days when tornados are more impredictable, can form randomly in a storm and only last few minutes, sometimes more 👍
The worst thing about volcanoes is the ash that goes into the atmosphere. It can block all plants and crops from getting sunlight, and it falls down and chokes your lungs which can be deadly. And also the ash landing on crops
volcano ash in soil is really good for it it makes the soil there really rich
@@andyv2209True. It destroys several crops that season however. Just like fire; it clears and feeds the soil. I don't think I'd live that close to a volcano.
I can deal with our hurricanes and the occasional tornado in Virginia.
Dear Habibi brothers, you should react to a video about the story of Dave Crockett the KOMO news photographer who was trapped by the eruption of Mount Saint Helens and filmed his ordeal as the day turned to night all around him and hot ash began to fall and made breathing extremely difficult. He thought he was going to die. It is one of the most compelling videos you'll ever see.
The 1906 San Franscisco earthquake resulted in a massive fire - which was what killed most people.
That single earthquake resulted in more deaths than all the other earthquakes in recorded US history combined.
Including the Civil War?
Galveston Texas hurricane …
Almost 3 times as many fatalities.
More deaths than all earthquakes combined in recorded history.
@@jabreck1934 Yes indeed, that is precisely what I tell folks from hurricane country when they start to talk about being afraid of earthquakes.
Though, to be fair - in parts of the world where construction standards are lower, earthquakes kill more people.
I shudder to think what a repeat of the "New Madrid" quake would do to cities like Saint Louis - built on alluvial soils with many unreinforced masonry buildings.
@@AC-ni4gtkey word, earthquake buddy
@jabreck1934 the op was about earthquakes but ok, weird flex bro XD
In my part of canada the wildfires were largely caused by drunk folks being careless; although a lot of fires were just natural wildfires.
The term "Lost in the pond", has to do with the United States and Britain being separated by the Atlantic ocean (which is the pond).
Well duh!
I've lived in Wisconsin, Minnesota, South Dakota & California. I've been through tornados, blizzards, floods, wildfires, earthquakes & a hurricane. The scariest for me was the wildfires in California.
I'm never going to forget the ones in 2007, mainly because my then girlfriend decided it would be a good idea to put on the emergency scanner to listen to radio transmissions.
It was nothing short of scary when multiple firefighting units were reporting that they were out of water and had to retreat. It's the closest to war I've ever been.
The fire in Texas this year was larger than any in CA history.
1 million acres burned including 500 homes/ranches and livestock.
How was SD realistically to live, like in Rapid City or Souix Falls? Decent ppl? You don't have to reply some crazy answer, or at all, just curious about that state. :P
@@sanic1085 I was in Brookings - about an hour north of Sioux Falls but went there many times. Overall the people were very nice although fairly conservative back then but that was 20 years ago and a LOT has changed. My good friends still live out there & just moved out to Rapid City last year hoping for an improvement but are planning on moving to another state because it didn't get any better. Sioux Falls is probably your best bet for the best mix of people & activities. Visiting the sites for vacation in SD is always a good time but I definitely wouldn't move back there to live. Weather wise, aside from the odd tornados, spring floods & blizzards it was great! Because it is so flat with such wide open spaces wind & blowing snow could be a problem if you're not used to it. Not gonna lie the wages were the lowest among the states I lived in but the cost of living was also lower so it balanced itself out. Hope that helps!
@jacd751 damn thanks for great answer. Eh, I'm kinda conservative, but SD always felt like a dream that should prollay stay a dream. You kinda confirmed it with that answer. I'll prollay visit, though. 😀 As a Chi burb guy my whole life, I gotta be realistic with my first move. 😜 Anyways take care! ✌️
Hello from Louisville Kentucky. Please watch the interview y'all will love it!
Thanks guys, your brotherly banter is nice, 😊 It is is such a refreshing break from politics & women's basketball. LOL
Our pleasure! ♥
Actually had a tornado hit a couple miles away from where I live a week or two ago. I live in a very hilly area, so it’s very uncommon, but not unheard of.
I still have a vial on volcanic ash from Mount St Helen’s! And I gathered it from my car roof in Calgary Alberta Canada - 100’s and 100’s of miles away! I also survived the wildfires in British Columbia last year! I was one street away from the mandatory evacuation zone, and stood on the roof of my house with a garden hose for 15 hours!
Peace
I lived in Alaska over 20 years and there are lots of small earthquakes (and big ones) regularly. You get to a point where you don’t even react unless it’s a BIG one. Now I live in Monsoon, Haboob, flood area of the Sonoran Desert and also lived in the mid-west with tornados.
Hey guys
There is a time-lapse video of the eruption of Mount St. Helen on May 18, 1980. Slow motion video shows the power of a volcano.
I believe that video (slow motion) is on here, YT.
7:19 That one in the Pacific Ocean is known to geologist and those who have interest in geology as "The Ring of Fire" due to volcanoes and earthquakes that happen so frequently. Frequently enough that those who are used to it shrug it off like it's no big deal.
Today in Sluthern Indiana I was chasing storms, tornado warned.
It tried so hard, didn't put one down but was wicked!
Didputdown a confirmed tornado North of the White River.
I can see mount jefferson from my kitchen window it has a low probability of erupting it hasn’t in the last 10,000 years but if it does i would be in the evacuation zone. It’s such a beautiful place to hike
The Mount Saint Helens eruption was bigger than a nuclear explosion. It was our pompeii. It wasn't so much an eruption as an explosion of the mountain containing it. And it didn't explode up, it exploded out to one side. There are videos about the Mount Saint Helens eruption that you guys would probably be enjoy reacting to.
First View First comment!
Yes you are!
There’s around 1,200 tornados, 16 earthquakes, 2 or 3 hurricanes make landfall, and we are #1 for the most wildfires per year. That doesn’t sound rare to me!
Typhoons happen on the west coast. On the east coast they are hurricanes. In Florida we call tornadoes in the ocean water spouts.
I lived 250 miles away when Mt St Helens erupted. I was just a little girl but I remember ash falling that far away and being stuck in the house for a day or two to keep from breathing the ash. As a kid it was just something they happened. But as an adult I can see what a unique experience it was
Living in Eastern North Carolina Hurricanes are pretty common. We are in the start of hurricane season now. Texas was just recently hit
In June of this year, in the Oklahoma Panhandle, where we are lucky to get 6-8 inches of rain a year, we got 11 inches in a night and had flash floods. This is high desert country. This was a once in a thousand year flood.
I live in tornado alley, in my state we have the most tornadoes. I’ve been in a few, tornadoes are not rare here, we get a lot during tornado season. We get earthquakes too sometimes. Once we had flooding, thunderstorms, tornadoes and earthquakes all in the same day. We have really good weather men, they are scientists and they let us know when a tornado is coming and which street it on. My family in southern Texas just experienced a hurricane because it’s hurricane season.
That west coast chain of volcanos that move across the Atlantic/Bering sea, into Asia, is known as the "Ring of fire".
Not Atlantic, Pacific.
Total number of volcanoes just in the state of OREGON USA = 61
(Portland Oregon received some of the ash cloud from the Mnt ST Helens, Washington State eruption in 1980. Portland's closest active volcano is MT Hood which is 63 miles from Portland, OR and which vents steam continuously.)
Many people do not talk about this but California has volcano Fields they say they are extinct but they're not every now and then they kick out some smoke
Our quakes are relatively occasional … hurricanes & tornadoes cause havoc year after year after year !
I’d still love to see you react to the paradise fires In California. I grew up in California and wildfire’s devastated our area regularly
Hurricane Katrina was only a category 3 when it made landfall, in the state of Mississippi… a whole state over from New Orleans, Louisiana.
Yep.... Utah is home to wildfires and right now it is time for wildfire chances to go up. If I ever walk out of a building and smell smoke: most likely it's from either central Utah or somewhere in California. I rarely smell any smoke from Idaho.
Comets are ice balls, not fireballs.
The Arabian Plate consists mostly of the Arabian Peninsula, it extends westward to the Sinai Peninsula and the Red Sea and northward to the Levant.
The plate borders are East, with the Indo-Australian plate, at the Owen Fracture Zone.
If it were not for this plate, there would be no oil in the middle east, most of the oil was formed from organic materials from the oceans, aqueducts brought in
rich sea life nutrients, while the techtonic plate aided in helping to create plenty of heat for the organic material to brew into the stew.
It is also believed that the oil in Texas is a result from the same type of process, feed by the Permian Basin, as well as the Ford shale in south Texas.
As Texas itself borders with the North American tectonic plate, again the perfect heat generator for organic materials to brew and stew.
I love your videos guys! I hope you don't mind me asking, but I was always kind of curious if there is a significance or reason for one of you wearing blue and the other wearing red. Loving your content from Ohio!
no reason we just like the color.
I knew about the Letters Lost in the Pond guy before I found your channel. He's hilarious. Have you seen his video on Fireflies? They came out where I live about a week ago. I LOVE FIREFLIES!!! Do you have any in Algeria?
The reason the United States has such powerful storms is actually because of not only it's large land mass, but the jet stream.
This is because storms tend to follow the jet stream, so when it dips further south the colder air is mixed with the warmer air in the south
causing the air to expand, and increasing moisture, and yes unstability in winds.
Keep in mind all tornados actually form parallel (latitude) and when dropping turn meridian (longtitude).
The yarnell fires were pretty bad in AZ, not only the firefighters that died, which good thing to look up maybe, but we had to stay indoors for a few days because the sky was just yellow and nasty, it looked like early dawn all day because most of the sunlight was blocked out
Just to clarify, it's never aliens (extraterrestrial beings). That was tongue-in-cheek. 😉
God doesn't give you more than you can handle, that's why America's weather is the most extreme in the world. This video didn't even touch on the crazy hailstorms, flash floods or sandstorms or blizzards. 🙏💪😎
Wildfires can happen in just about any state.
Some states more likely than others. Which I'm not fond of.... Smoke is so annoying to deal with.
Hello, I would like to see your reactions to navy seals rescued jessica buchanan. a very beautiful story, tragic but beautiful story. I have watched several of your videos. ( from Montreal )
After Mt St Helen's went up there are mountains of ash.
If you two have not watched actual,footage of the the Mt St Helen’s eruption, then you should. It’s pretty dramatic. Ditto for footage of some F5 tornado,s Scary stuff. The US has so many tornadoes because when conditions are right, we have cold air coming down from the Arctic with meets warm, moist air . Coming up from the Gulf of Mexico. When they meet….atmospheric conditions become unstable .
Hurricane and typhoon are the same thing. Just called something different in Asia.
If it's above the North Atlantic, central North Pacific or eastern North Pacific oceans (Florida, Caribbean Islands, Texas, Hawaii, etc.), we call it a hurricane. If it hovers over the Northwest Pacific Ocean (usually East Asia), we call it a typhoon.
Hurricane, typhoon, and cyclones are essentially the same thing.
Comets are made up of frozen gas, dust and rocks and such. If any of one hit the earth it would be ice.
I just kno that the natives back then, left an offering to the wind. Mainly do to them losing their land and being almost completely wiped out by the soldiers back then and it was left that way for the future. So anything built will be destroyed. Anyway, that's the story for why tornadoes happen
Hurricanes begin as storms off the east coast of Africa, which gather size & strength as it travels west through warm waters. Residents in the regions it seems to be targeting have a week or more of advance warning in which to board the windows & head inland awayr from the danger.
Tornados begin overland as masses of warm & cold air collide, and start to spin. When meteorologists see a hook on radar, that's when then advise people to take shelter, meaning in a room in the center of the house away from windows, in a basement; or in a purpose built storm shelter. But they don't know for certain a funnel has formed: this is where spotters & storm chasers come in: brave police, reporters & people devoted to studying tornadoes who often are the first to see a funnel on the ground & contact 911 to start the siren! Advance warning time can be as long as a few hours to literally being woken in the middle of the night by the sirens!
If you didn't stop the video so often it might actually be watchable
I’m sorry…Did you guys even hear what they said about Mt St Helen’s? You’ve been talking through the entire video, so not sure what you did or did not hear. I lived in Seattle when that eruption occurred…..about 60 miles to the north of it. It was a pretty big deal. And I have no idea what you were talking about about volcanos in Yellowstone? The west coast of the US is part of the so-called Ring of Fire, which you saw on the map…from The west coast of South America, to Alaska, to Japan etc. caused by plate tectonics, earthquakes and volcanoes are active throughout the Pacific.
As I said in another comment, the sonic boom from the eruption shook our house and we lived north of Seattle, about 200 miles away (as the crow flies). The brothers were referring to the Yellowstone Caldera, which is a supervolcano which sits under the geothermal features in Yellowstone. Apparently there are four prior calderas from previous eruptions, which overlap, and the field of volcanic calderas are now called supervolcanoes. There are 1000-2000 low-medium level earthquakes in the region annually, some of which have formed “swarms“. I am reminded of the swarms of earthquakes that happened in 1980 before Mount Saint Helens erupted. Scientists have warned that there will be devastating consequences if this supervolcano erupts.
Tell us about your country
Wildfires aren't unique to California.
I live in Washington state, in the Pacific northwest, (where Mount Saint Helens is located) and we choke on hazardous air from wildfire smoke every summer
The fire in Texas this year was larger than any fire in CA history.
1 million acres, including 500 homes/ranches and livestock
I dont think you guys can get hurricanes, youre off a sea more, if you get a hurrican its probably end of the world type shit lol
It looks like you missed what he said about Mount Saint Helens. It is in the mainland US and erupted in 1980. There is an old documentary about it and some footage too! It would be great for you to check out. It would be cool for y’all to check out tornado videos and there is at least one really great video of a hurricane that someone captured the eye of the storm on video and it was amazing to see. You do need to be careful about reacting to storm videos as I think storm chasers will copyright you. But there are plenty you can look at that other reactors haven’t had problems with.