I grew up in West Texas. I've seen every kind of tornado, devil duster and dust storm but I've never seen this before. There's barely any sound. No wind. The buildings aren't shaking and the trucks aren't moving. As a kid we would run into devil dusters to "ride" them. This is not that. This is huge. Fascinating to watch. I'm sharing this with everyone in Texas. They won't believe it either.
This is a landspout, which is a tornado not associated with a mesocyclone. They're true tornadoes, but they're typically weaker (but can still be dangerous).@@xxLivingMyWayxx
Yes Landspouts are considered non supercell Tornados by NWS/NOAA this video we will never know if this is a huge dust devil or a Landspout because of the angle it's shot at. I have noticed though NWS and Meterogolist in different regions of the USA Classifie Landspouts differently and it causes nothing but confusion I mean really this day and age it's time to get standardized definitions of cold air funnels, Waterspouts, and Landspouts across the board I run into it all the time with Waterspouts by Lake Erie I spot for Waterspouts on Lake Erie every year I'll have local Meterogolist say it's just a cold air funnel cloud that's not a waterspout then I'll send them my video showing the Waterspout Funnel Cloud with a spray ring on the water even if only a partial funnel is visible then they be actually yes that is a Waterspout great catch I'm like really I know what I'm seeing but even then I'll still have alot of people including NWS and Meterogolist still say that's just a funnel cloud I'm like what ever lol
Landspouts are tornadoes and will often form in supercell thunderstorms. What they aren't is associated with mesocyclones. But they're tornadoes as they're a violently rotating column of air that touches the ground and the base of a cloud.
@@Leafy_Captain I can't see the top of it, but from my own experience ones that look like that are usually near the ground, unconnected and as kids in rural Wewoka, Oklahoma we used jump in them and spin around. We called those dust/dirt devils. I've never seen a landspout irl but they seem to be distinguished by being taller and connected, no?
You can see the tall transparent tube on the beginning, indicating that it spins way up. Dust devils, especially that size, can not form so well in cloudy weather such as in the video.
Landspouts aren't produced by supercell thunderstorms. They are formed by rising surface convection into where clouds are forming.
Well sort of. Supercells kick up a lot of these little suckers especially in the high plains, just not under the mesocyclone.
@@bigaaronThen we call them tornadoes.
I grew up in West Texas. I've seen every kind of tornado, devil duster and dust storm but I've never seen this before. There's barely any sound. No wind. The buildings aren't shaking and the trucks aren't moving.
As a kid we would run into devil dusters to "ride" them. This is not that. This is huge.
Fascinating to watch. I'm sharing this with everyone in Texas. They won't believe it either.
Very common in Washington State. Seen 5 of them at once. One passed over the interstate and everyone started panicking.
I’m super fascinated tornadoes
Oh,no,no,no,no
Crazy
How it just turned its blinker calmly on to turn left after I was sure it was gonna crash the party of that building 😂
Incredible 😮
Must suck seeing that thing coming for your shop come America we need an anti nado weapon
Wait til the tornados have sharks in them
It’s like Pokemon evolution Dust Devil -> Landspout -> Supercell Tornado
What city was it in
Top of the video says Delphi, In. I'll have to Google if it's north or south. (I'm in south central Illinois)
@@ladydeerheart1you didnt have to tell them where you live lmao
Looks like tornadoes got a cousin
😮
Looks like a dust devil to me
Is this the same as what we called Dust Devils when I was a kid growing up in Oklahoma?
No, but I do think this is a dust devil.
This is a landspout, which is a tornado not associated with a mesocyclone. They're true tornadoes, but they're typically weaker (but can still be dangerous).@@xxLivingMyWayxx
THAT THING IS MASSIVE AS HELL
What a beautiful land spout, this one almost seems peaceful- like a gentle lovecraftian giant.
no lol, landspouts arent considered "tornadoes". Landspouts aren't supercellural unlike Tornadoes
With respect, landspouts are classified as tornadoes.
Yes Landspouts are considered non supercell Tornados by NWS/NOAA this video we will never know if this is a huge dust devil or a Landspout because of the angle it's shot at. I have noticed though NWS and Meterogolist in different regions of the USA Classifie Landspouts differently and it causes nothing but confusion I mean really this day and age it's time to get standardized definitions of cold air funnels, Waterspouts, and Landspouts across the board I run into it all the time with Waterspouts by Lake Erie I spot for Waterspouts on Lake Erie every year I'll have local Meterogolist say it's just a cold air funnel cloud that's not a waterspout then I'll send them my video showing the Waterspout Funnel Cloud with a spray ring on the water even if only a partial funnel is visible then they be actually yes that is a Waterspout great catch I'm like really I know what I'm seeing but even then I'll still have alot of people including NWS and Meterogolist still say that's just a funnel cloud I'm like what ever lol
Landspouts are tornadoes and will often form in supercell thunderstorms. What they aren't is associated with mesocyclones. But they're tornadoes as they're a violently rotating column of air that touches the ground and the base of a cloud.
Biggest Dust Devil I've ever seen!
I would run inside it because it’s just land spout
Scrraming running for auntie em
70-80mph winds? Dunno.
I would hate to have that spin by me when my mouth is wide open. 😅
Dust devils
Calling this dust devil a landspout is gonna confuse ppl.
calling this landspout a dust devil is gonna confuse ppl.
@@Leafy_Captain I can't see the top of it, but from my own experience ones that look like that are usually near the ground, unconnected and as kids in rural Wewoka, Oklahoma we used jump in them and spin around. We called those dust/dirt devils. I've never seen a landspout irl but they seem to be distinguished by being taller and connected, no?
You can see the tall transparent tube on the beginning, indicating that it spins way up. Dust devils, especially that size, can not form so well in cloudy weather such as in the video.
Pecos Bill 🤠 can get the job done 👍✅!😅
Fake
Why fake
With respect, it is very real.