@@barrybarry5803 guess Bureau of Meteorology must be hiring 2 year olds then, since they reviewed radar, completed a damage survey and confirmed it as a tornado.
@@RobEmburyThe Bureau of Mythology doesn’t no shit…claiming a stage 3 cyclone hit Melbourne weeks back…wind wasn’t strong enough to be classed as a stage 1… pushing the climate change cult lies …thank George Soros,Gore and the UN for that crap….
Incredible footage. The way that wind just ripped that tree apart like it was matchwood. I do hope all the roos escaped unscathed. Thanks for the share.
Who ever put the roof on that garage deserves a beer down the pub . Amazing footage , seeing trees disintegrate in seconds , frightening, and ours are pretty wimpy compared to the ones in the US . Very gutsy people living in tornado alley.
There are people in T Alley who have still never encountered one, huge area, let’s be honest, gutsy? Don’t downplay our weather just because of what you’ve seen on sensationalism of MM..
Had a similar storm out Boweya/ Thoona way a few years back it twisted the tops clean out of the most of Little Forest. Hay sheds twisted piles of metal. The noise was something else. Amazing how quick they pass like they're going at a blistering pace but leave a hell of a mess behind. Hope there was no one hurt other than property damage.
Yes, the noise of a tornado is horrendous. The one that went through where we live was a few suburbs away but the noise woke me out of a dead sleep. It louder than a military C17 aircraft coming in low over our house prior to landing.
@@josephj6521 There wouldn't have been any footage. It occurred in the early hours of the morning prior to sunrise. There was no warning. A part from the section of Townsville Queensland that got hit, I am not sure how many people were woken by the sound of the Tornado. Except I did my father had just died day or two before and I swear I only woke up because he was warning me to wakeup, something was about to happy. The only footage was on local TV News that night. Being a regional centre, I doubt it got picked up by the major city news stations. I honestly had never seen or heard of a tornado in Australia until that morning and I was inky 60s when it hit. Since then there have been reports of other tornadoes in Australia and we have lived and worked in four States and the NT.
This happened out Near Mansfield vic where I’m from, it destroyed a small house no one was in it, stripped an entire hill of trees before passing through this property dissipating a few hundred metres away
You're having it all in Mansfield. Thanks for that earthquake a few years back that nearly knocked me off my feet! That was surely the worst I've experienced so far in the Northeast. There was another tornado that same night that travelled between Gapstead and Whorouly. This one knocked out my power for 12hrs. We get it all in this neck of the woods. Stay safe.💖
Oh wow I definitely felt that storm. I'm in the Strzelecki ranges in Victoria, and our house shook like never before, and we get some pretty awesome storms! This day was crazy!
To signify an anomaly as it is happening during non cyclone season a new phenomenon for the Southern Hemisphere Continental landmasses so this be what an all year round phenomenon right lovely hopefully we don't get it in the Oceanic landmasses to be an all year round as well Maybe because we have the moisture more now as volcanoes active from both directions within the Jetstreams 10 degrees South latitudes like Tonga 🇹🇴 just surfaced its submarine volcano 2022 and yep we did have a tornado Ba side from the sea and even within main island Viti Levu during the decades 2010 to 2019 when Rabaul PNG erupted as well as Solomon Islands and Vanuatu so it is understandable then more indictive moistures sucks evapotranspiration faster to condensation more cumulonimbus clouds formations Yep naturally that is normal so not cloud seeding then cool get it informatively no worries we shall be spinning round and round throughout the year THANK YOU GOD
My family and I experienced the tornado that went through Tolmie in 2018. We were staying in a camper trailer on my father-in-law's property for a visit at the time. It sounded like an aeroplane coming down, I looked out the window and saw it coming. we had just enough time to grab the kids and run for the house! It flipped the camper and almost tore the top off it. Sent our stuff (table, chairs, etc.) across the paddocks, and just missed the house, thank goodness. It was terrifying. I still have trouble sleeping when it's really windy. Great footage. I didn't even know that that area got tornados until we experienced it. Apparently, there are quite a few, but they mostly happen where no body lives, or they just go through a paddock without causing much damage. Teh sad part was, not long before it happened, my 8-year-old son had asked if we got tornados after watching something on TV about the US, and I had said no, just willy-willys - I had no idea!
@@zx6angel978 I never had heard much about tornados when in Melbourne. It wasn't until I moved to the Northeast that I then knew that the area experienced quite the number. I even saw one form over Mt. Porepunkah but it fizzled out. Lost power for about 12hrs after the night this happened. You just don't know where they are going to form and then it's really too late. Glad you all were safe.💖
Had a similar microburst hit Benalla mid January 2023.. i hadn't see so many gum trees uprooted, snapped, and such an extensive debre field.. It never even got any media attention. Blew the roof clean off the church across from Coles. And the lighting from that storm was stroabing. Just not fkn normal!!
I was chasing that storm. Then it chased me up the Hume Hwy. Can confirm it was an absolute monster, and the debris I had to make my way through to get back to Melbourne afterwards was crazy.
You are just up the road from me then as I am in Wangaratta. I remember a Tornado that went through Mulwala and wrecked the caravan part and this was around 12 years ago from memory. I did see a tornado here in Wang in the early 80's never forgot it to this day.
@steviebboy69 went all the way from Mulwala to Swanpool, I remember driving up the midland highway thinking it looks like a bulldozer has just gone through.
I had no idea Australia had tornados until I attended the aftermath of one outside of Canberra a few years back with the emergency services. Very clear damage path - long and narrow and completely smashed a few houses.
Kangaroo's are smart. There's a lady along the western hwy in Vic heading towards Sth Aust, she takes in injured roo's, nurses them back to health & releases them back out when they are better. When there's bushfires & other natural disasters, the kangaroo's trust her enough to go there for refuge until its safe to go back out. The kangaroo's also take their baby Joey's to show her. I don't know if she is still there now. They are mammals, mammals have emotion, love, empathy & loyalty just like us because we are mammals too. Not like reptiles & snakes, they would kill the person that feeds them with no guilt at all.
Far out, I did Cyclone Yasi among others in my years up north., ten minutes out of Cardwell. At a Cyclone party, at least they are built for it up north.
Have a still from BOM radar from this day after this tornado had gone through Mansfield. The supercell still had a sizable hook echo and very surprised it didn't intensify again and touch down in suburban Melbourne.
At about 2:05 I'm like ' Meh , this isn't too windy '. A bit later ' well. That escalated quickly'🙂 That straggling kangaroo looked like it had a bad day.
Man that's some scary shit. Almost like a horror movie without the pause button. I do hope everyone survived this. This is jaw-dropping. I'm from Newcastle NSW.
Our son got trapped in a row of cars just outside Mulwala a few years back with one of these. Trees down in front and behind them. Fortunately the centre of the tornado was just up the road. They could see it as it raced across the paddock and over Lake Mulwala. You can still see the damaged trees.
from 4:53 onwards (I'm watching at 0.25 speed). . How on earth are those kangaroos still jumping on the ground in all that wind. I'm sure I woudn't still upright in winds strong enough to be ripping big trees apart.
Is this the tornado that hit Mansfield or the one that occurred the same night at 1900hrs around Gapstead through to Whorouly? Naturally, the scenery is pretty much alike in the North East, so it's hard to tell.🇦🇺
@@Jumbo-k4tCyclone in Australian English and Hurricane in US English are different words for the same thing - massive tropical storms hundreds of km across. Tornado is a different weather phenomenon (just a few tens of metres across) and is the same word in both “languages”. The OP is correct.
Wow I hope any farm animals, sheep etc were ok. We had a tornado last Christmas night through the Gold Coast. My first Christmas after moving here. It was scary AF. Luckily it was around 8.30 - 9.00pm and we saw it approaching on the weather radar and I had time to get home from our Christmas day family get together. Magnificent lightning show (no thunder) for a good half hour before the tornado hit. Then BOOM. The devastation of the aftermath was huge. Mt Tambourine without power for two weeks. Other local suburbs for a week and this is in the middle of Australian tropical summer. So many trees down, massive flooding, houses damaged or destroyed. I had never experienced anything like that. 😢 Can't wait to see what happens this summer 😮
It dropped right over our townhouse complex. My husband saw it out of his study window and the trees on the were bent over horizontal. Fortunately we sustained no damage, just tree losses, but it intensified as it moved down Discovery Drive and got much worse over Oxenford and up to Tambourine. The trees round us are a major roosting site for rainbow parrakeets. The loss of bird life must have been shocking. I have not heard how the local koala colony fared. A tradie who came to fix an awning 3 weeks go has been living in caravan in Tambourine since and was due to get his house finally fixed to move into - more than 6 months after the event. First responders who live in the area where coming down to help people in our area. I met two who had no home to go back to. Let us hope we never get another night like that one.
Yeah I live in the Gold Coast hinterland. Those storms last Christmas were something else entirely. Just escaped the damage here but sure as hell lost power for 8 days. I'm glad you bought this up however. Just my opinion of course but I actually don't see any reason to believe a single tornado dropped from those Gold Coast storms. Or if one did drop it did the minority of damage at best. The radar images certainly did not show a supercell, what tornadoes typically generate from, and any hook echoes were vague at best. Literally all the damage was consistent with straight line winds, not twisters like the monster in this video. Also of note this tornado for example was over in a few seconds, the winds from the Gold Coast storms went on for 5-15 minutes. And then there was the damage path widths, several times wider than the largest tornado ever recorded. Yet everyone is saying tornado tornado, including the dysfunctional BOM. Although rare there are such a thing as storms that cause that much damage without generating tornadoes. Regardless of the facts its the way the public just went and created their own facts. Believing the first thing that triggered the most attention and not giving anything else a second thought. For whatever reason I actually find it quite devastating on this occasion that the public in general just has no interest in the actual science or in debate and critical thinking. I literally have not commented on anything on the internet in years but heck I'm just gonna leave this here if nowhere else and maybe if but one person reads this I will feel a tad better to get this off my chest, lol.
@@huioliver you are 100% correct. I’m local and drove every road and street from Tamborine to the coast , all tree’s and damage was from straight line winds. Classic DRECHO storm event. The damage was 5 kms wide ingredients where not supported for a 5 km wide tornado in australia. There is a new study article on the event and it has came to the same conclusion. Media is a big problem. Tornado , mini tornado. Facts don’t matter.
I beg to differ you couldn't get the media to say tornado up until they were actually caught on camera, now they don't have a choice but to admit the existence of a tornado when it happens, straight line winds can be present with tornadoes as well and it most definitely would have been a supercell to produce that much damage!!
@@shaqbarclark4277You are right. Someone in Oxenford filmed the touchdown and followed the track up the hinterland. From our windows we could see we were in a vortex with the debris circling around. Definitely not horizontal wind shear.
Amazing footage. That tree was obliterated. Mother nature. Never think you can beat her. Show respect. Sorry for your damage. Hope your recovery is swift
Happens all the time in Far East Gippsland Victoria ,especially when a cold front moves up from Antartica ,Houses built in the Area have a high wind rating ,there have been many storms in the last 20 years with wind speeds over 160kph ,my self and my Daughter were lucky to survive one storm that blocked off roads for more than 10 days ,this happened around 15 years ago .
Interesting that they got such severe winds on 25/8. The more widespread damage didn't come until 2/9. Power went out for me (West Gippsland) that evening and wasn't restored for about 5 days. Much damage, even consistent with small tornadoes, like trees with ~3ft thick trunks twisted off a few meters from the ground. I had on tree (1ft thick branch) twisted off about 10m from the ground, spun around and the twisted off branch wedged in the V of the same tree that it came from. Luckily, the trees seem to have taken the brunt of the winds, which peaked at ~125km/h, and I didn't suffer any significant building damage. Others weren't so lucky and lost the roofs of their houses.
That hit like a ton of bricks. Looks like a cool shed too, all tricked out with cameras, so luckily just the roller doors blown in and a bit of corner flashing blowing off. At least you won't have to trim the trees now. Something hit my caravan like that, lifted it up and dumped it on it's roof about 8 m from where it was, totally destroyed. The shed just had a roof to wall corner overlap piece come off, looked like the same manufacturer. Getting crazy hard wind blasting like that down south, in Vic and the Riverina and slopes now, just blows for 5 minutes and stops.
Saw patch where a small tornado went through just outside of Wangaratta on the same day. For a 100m wide strip, every tree was snapped off 1/3 of the way up
any info on the wind speeds and cat of the tornado ? it seemed to move so fast and be quite wide, hard to see as i think it was rain wrapped slightly would of been hard to know which direction to run for the kangas in the video one of them seemed to run into the storm towards the end lol.
Wind speed vs cat are two different things. Category (fujita scale ) is determined by damage. You can have a tornado with powerful wind speeds that can be categorized only as an EF1 is it's in thr middle of nowhere and causes no damage to property.
I remember a tornado going through Bendigo in mid 90's a trail of damage along the railway line, and flattened houses, it was an f1 and sounded like a freight train
@@candymixon7011 Okay I may have been stretching it a bit . Every time I drive on the Country roads I see dead ones but there's so many more that don't get hit and hop away . Very dangerous if you hit one and they can wreak an entire car because they're so Muscley
I was storm chasing near Benalla that day and also went down the Hume to Seymour. The storms I saw had a soft, wintery look to them - not very impressive at all. I also struggled to find views around Euroa and Seymour….
@@QueenOfScorpions thanks, as a Pom my only reference was herds of Red Deer on Exmoor. Now you have reminded me, I do recall being told it was a mob, but it was 30 years ago,
@@PeterLGଈ 1982 must have been a good year, I recall the farmer who owned the land saying he believed there was between 700 and 1200 Roos in the ‘mob’.
❤❤Excellent video coverage👍 Australia certainly has Tornadoes I have seen the devastation they can cause as in the late 80's central Nsw. One tore a path through our farm destroying sheds. One very well built woolshed leveled with a brand new truck suffering badly tractors losing every window next to it. Also completely rolling a Class harvestor over for least 100 meters tearing its wheels off depositing them further away leaving it totally destroyed. Living through a Tornado is scary it sounded like a massive jet coming in at full throttle seeing it approaching like a huge funnel eating everything in it path it was pure luck the house was on the edge loosing all its windows. For weeks we were finding lost items.❤❤❤❤
@@MissModify123 nah, we have always had a lot of tornados in Australia. Generally not as big as in the US though we have had an f5. We just have smart phones and social media now. Australia is a big area that is mostly unpopulated so alot just go unnoticed.
I've seen first hand the destruction these Australian twisters have done out in the bush but have never seen any footage of it actually happening. Amazing.
I drove through Martins Gap on the weekend - the damage is just amazing. If it was in the city, I have no doubt many would have lost their lives. Interested in finding out what rating the tornado would be. It looks a LOT weaker here than the damage shown in Martins Gap!
Amazing footage, when my house got hit by a Tornado I rung the BOM and asked if they why didnt they have Tornado warnings in Australia, the Woman I got put through to said "Thats because Australia doesn't have Tornados" I said thats funny my house just got hit by one and she hung up on me 🤷🏼♂
Because tornados here are very uncommon. You can get a spin up occur in seconds. Even the US doesn't always get warnings out in time for a quick spin up funnel.
It is though 😂 the big difference between here in the US is we are mostly empty so they rarely impact us directly, I used to live on a property in western NSW and used to see them all the time but they were usually in fields and paddocks except for that one night when the town got smashed 😮
If you Google the site "Tornado archive" and play around with the settings to show all tornadoes over Australia. You will be amazed at how many we have had! Seems Bendigo / Ballarat area is a hot spot for them with some EF2-EF3 long tracking ones having occurred in the area over time. Wikipedia also have a great database of Australian tornadoes as well.
We had one go through our district about 10 years ago, it came off the coast just north of Kiama and travelled west just missing Jamberoo and continued west where it faded out as it hit the escarpment near minnamurra falls. Friends of the family's historic house took a direct hit in Jamberoo. You could clearly see the path for years. It was well documented in the local paper "The Illawarra Mercury"
This is why I built my home mid slope, instead of on top. The winds go over me. We still catch the updraft, but nothing like the neighbours on top of the hill, whose houses get hammered by the winds. When I saw debris flying past in the footage, I really hoped it wasn't a kangaroo. 😢 I love my roos and Joey season every year.
Amazing footage - probably some of the best Australian tornado footage ever captured!
A two year old might have thought it was a tornado!!!
@@barrybarry5803 guess Bureau of Meteorology must be hiring 2 year olds then, since they reviewed radar, completed a damage survey and confirmed it as a tornado.
I was impressed the steel shed stayed intact even with the roof flexing. The only failure was the doors if they fix that issue thats a damn good shed.
Happy birthday for when you reach being a 2yo
@@barrybarry5803
*Edit..sorry, I forgot the exclamation points, like you included. My bad.
❗❗❗🤣
@@RobEmburyThe Bureau of Mythology doesn’t no shit…claiming a stage 3 cyclone hit Melbourne weeks back…wind wasn’t strong enough to be classed as a stage 1… pushing the climate change cult lies …thank George Soros,Gore and the UN for that crap….
Incredible footage.
The way that wind just ripped that tree apart like it was matchwood.
I do hope all the roos escaped unscathed.
Thanks for the share.
I hope so too but I’m not so sure
I’m not confident many of the kangaroos survived in that.
Who ever put the roof on that garage deserves a beer down the pub .
Amazing footage , seeing trees disintegrate in seconds , frightening, and ours are pretty wimpy compared to the ones in the US .
Very gutsy people living in tornado alley.
There are people in T Alley who have still never encountered one, huge area, let’s be honest, gutsy? Don’t downplay our weather just because of what you’ve seen on sensationalism of MM..
@@thrusta100he talks about people who have been hit before and rebuild there again and again
Skippy, I have a feeling we are not in Kansas anymore.
Ohaww right-o skip. XD
Clever…😂😂🦘🦘🦘
click your hard yakkas three times and say
"there's no place like the pub"
🤣
Had a similar storm out Boweya/ Thoona way a few years back it twisted the tops clean out of the most of Little Forest. Hay sheds twisted piles of metal. The noise was something else. Amazing how quick they pass like they're going at a blistering pace but leave a hell of a mess behind. Hope there was no one hurt other than property damage.
Yes, the noise of a tornado is horrendous. The one that went through where we live was a few suburbs away but the noise woke me out of a dead sleep. It louder than a military C17 aircraft coming in low over our house prior to landing.
@@Lyn4817which area? I’m used to seeing tornadoes on video from the USA/Europe/China, but rarely I’ve seen Australian footage.
@@josephj6521 There wouldn't have been any footage. It occurred in the early hours of the morning prior to sunrise. There was no warning. A part from the section of Townsville Queensland that got hit, I am not sure how many people were woken by the sound of the Tornado. Except I did my father had just died day or two before and I swear I only woke up because he was warning me to wakeup, something was about to happy.
The only footage was on local TV News that night. Being a regional centre, I doubt it got picked up by the major city news stations. I honestly had never seen or heard of a tornado in Australia until that morning and I was inky 60s when it hit. Since then there have been reports of other tornadoes in Australia and we have lived and worked in four States and the NT.
Amazing video. I love how we get to see the different angles of impact!
This happened out
Near Mansfield vic where I’m from, it destroyed a small house no one was in it, stripped an entire hill of trees before passing through this property dissipating a few hundred metres away
Went to Jamieson a few weeks ago It looked like a hill had its tree's ripped out
You're having it all in Mansfield. Thanks for that earthquake a few years back that nearly knocked me off my feet! That was surely the worst I've experienced so far in the Northeast. There was another tornado that same night that travelled between Gapstead and Whorouly. This one knocked out my power for 12hrs. We get it all in this neck of the woods. Stay safe.💖
Oh wow I definitely felt that storm. I'm in the Strzelecki ranges in Victoria, and our house shook like never before, and we get some pretty awesome storms!
This day was crazy!
Even something as fearless as a 'roo ain't screwing around with a twister.
Why that music though? I had to mute it to watch the video through.
To signify an anomaly as it is happening during non cyclone season
a new phenomenon for the Southern Hemisphere Continental landmasses
so this be what an all year round phenomenon right
lovely hopefully we don't get it in the Oceanic landmasses to be an all year round as well
Maybe because we have the moisture more now as volcanoes active from both directions within the Jetstreams 10 degrees South latitudes like Tonga 🇹🇴 just surfaced its submarine volcano 2022 and yep we did have a tornado Ba side from the sea and even within main island Viti Levu during the decades 2010 to 2019 when Rabaul PNG erupted as well as Solomon Islands and Vanuatu
so it is understandable then more indictive moistures sucks evapotranspiration faster to condensation more cumulonimbus clouds formations
Yep naturally that is normal so not cloud seeding then cool get it informatively
no worries we shall be spinning round and round throughout the year THANK YOU GOD
@@DimereseiniNRobbyRavouvou cyclones and tornados are way different, tornados dont have a designated season in australia.
Ambiance I’m watching this while a storm is coming
Had a similar storm nearly a month ago. We're still cleaning up. It's amazing to see it captured on video like that!
My family and I experienced the tornado that went through Tolmie in 2018. We were staying in a camper trailer on my father-in-law's property for a visit at the time. It sounded like an aeroplane coming down, I looked out the window and saw it coming. we had just enough time to grab the kids and run for the house! It flipped the camper and almost tore the top off it. Sent our stuff (table, chairs, etc.) across the paddocks, and just missed the house, thank goodness. It was terrifying. I still have trouble sleeping when it's really windy. Great footage. I didn't even know that that area got tornados until we experienced it. Apparently, there are quite a few, but they mostly happen where no body lives, or they just go through a paddock without causing much damage. Teh sad part was, not long before it happened, my 8-year-old son had asked if we got tornados after watching something on TV about the US, and I had said no, just willy-willys - I had no idea!
@@zx6angel978 I never had heard much about tornados when in Melbourne. It wasn't until I moved to the Northeast that I then knew that the area experienced quite the number. I even saw one form over Mt. Porepunkah but it fizzled out. Lost power for about 12hrs after the night this happened. You just don't know where they are going to form and then it's really too late. Glad you all were safe.💖
Get them here in West Australia also
Lived in aust all my life , never seen footage like this, absolutely amazing, and terrifying at the same time.😮
I lived in Australia all my life and seen worse.
Had a similar microburst hit Benalla mid January 2023.. i hadn't see so many gum trees uprooted, snapped, and such an extensive debre field.. It never even got any media attention. Blew the roof clean off the church across from Coles. And the lighting from that storm was stroabing. Just not fkn normal!!
I was chasing that storm. Then it chased me up the Hume Hwy. Can confirm it was an absolute monster, and the debris I had to make my way through to get back to Melbourne afterwards was crazy.
Was the church one of the disgusting organised 501c3 religions by chance??
You are just up the road from me then as I am in Wangaratta. I remember a Tornado that went through Mulwala and wrecked the caravan part and this was around 12 years ago from memory. I did see a tornado here in Wang in the early 80's never forgot it to this day.
@steviebboy69 went all the way from Mulwala to Swanpool, I remember driving up the midland highway thinking it looks like a bulldozer has just gone through.
@@lesnish226 Yes that is pretty much what it looked like for sure.
I had no idea Australia had tornados until I attended the aftermath of one outside of Canberra a few years back with the emergency services. Very clear damage path - long and narrow and completely smashed a few houses.
idk i think the music alone gives me a lot of anxiety wow impressive shots
WoW, incredible footage, thanks for sharing.
wow poor Kangas - hope none of them got injured. That shed looked solid built and it caved right in.
The shed was OK, but the doors were weak spots, especially roller doors. Bloody impressive footage.
It's quite likely that kangaroo was dead within two hours because it ran out on the road
I think you meant to say "Poor Roo's..." 🙃
Anyone know what type of shed that was?
I keep coming back to this video! Shared numerous times...music is amazing
Some inappropriate
Those kangaroos are smarter than a lot of people.
Especially than in China going by the videos out there.
Kangaroo's are smart. There's a lady along the western hwy in Vic heading towards Sth Aust, she takes in injured roo's, nurses them back to health & releases them back out when they are better.
When there's bushfires & other natural disasters, the kangaroo's trust her enough to go there for refuge until its safe to go back out. The kangaroo's also take their baby Joey's to show her.
I don't know if she is still there now.
They are mammals, mammals have emotion, love, empathy & loyalty just like us because we are mammals too.
Not like reptiles & snakes, they would kill the person that feeds them with no guilt at all.
The ones that get hit by cars are smarter than most people.
@@WanderingRoe you never met roo.
@@JoeyBlogs007
WHAT
Hats off to the shed builder
Crazy music
Sounds like something slowed down
Far out, I did Cyclone Yasi among others in my years up north., ten minutes out of Cardwell. At a Cyclone party, at least they are built for it up north.
Your neighbours say thank you for the outdoor dining table and chairs that landed in their garden.
Didn’t even know we got tornadoes that bad in Vic.
I'm not actually sure all those kangaroos got out alive in time. A couple at the end there might have copped it.
Cant be worse than getting hit by a car, they were probably back to eating 30 seconds later.
The one time a kangaroo doesn't care about preserving energy. Just go fast.
and don't look behind!!!
Have a still from BOM radar from this day after this tornado had gone through Mansfield. The supercell still had a sizable hook echo and very surprised it didn't intensify again and touch down in suburban Melbourne.
This was posted into our Severe Weather Victoria Group facebook.com/groups/SevereWeatherVictoria/
Storms were moving SE, so this is a completely different storm - but there were a few that day that looked a bit hookey
@@SevereWeatherAustralia Just added the still from BOM radar to your Facebook post.
It's called a hurricane in Australia stop being a bloody American
@@SevereWeatherAustralia This is Australia we called them hurricanes here not Tornadoes
03:09 That's why they say if you can't see it moving left or right it's usually coming straight for you, run Skippy run
what is this camera setup? i needs it
Wow, the way that picnic table flew away at the end
I don't think they're finding that any time soon....
At about 2:05 I'm like ' Meh , this isn't too windy '. A bit later ' well. That escalated quickly'🙂
That straggling kangaroo looked like it had a bad day.
Man that's some scary shit. Almost like a horror movie without the pause button. I do hope everyone survived this. This is jaw-dropping. I'm from Newcastle NSW.
Our son got trapped in a row of cars just outside Mulwala a few years back with one of these. Trees down in front and behind them. Fortunately the centre of the tornado was just up the road. They could see it as it raced across the paddock and over Lake Mulwala. You can still see the damaged trees.
from 4:53 onwards (I'm watching at 0.25 speed). . How on earth are those kangaroos still jumping on the ground in all that wind. I'm sure I woudn't still upright in winds strong enough to be ripping big trees apart.
They have low centre mass and are very dense.
Is this the tornado that hit Mansfield or the one that occurred the same night at 1900hrs around Gapstead through to Whorouly? Naturally, the scenery is pretty much alike in the North East, so it's hard to tell.🇦🇺
The timestamp says 17:45.
You put up an Australian flag but you don't know what they are called here ,does everything have to use American terminology
@@Jumbo-k4tCyclone in Australian English and Hurricane in US English are different words for the same thing - massive tropical storms hundreds of km across. Tornado is a different weather phenomenon (just a few tens of metres across) and is the same word in both “languages”. The OP is correct.
@Jumbo-k4t "Tornado" is what they're called here 🙄 Of course, since you know better than the Bureau of Meteorology ...
@@Jumbo-k4t read this explanation from the BoM > www.bom.gov.au/weather-services/severe-weather-knowledge-centre/tornadoes.shtml
Wow I hope any farm animals, sheep etc were ok. We had a tornado last Christmas night through the Gold Coast. My first Christmas after moving here. It was scary AF. Luckily it was around 8.30 - 9.00pm and we saw it approaching on the weather radar and I had time to get home from our Christmas day family get together. Magnificent lightning show (no thunder) for a good half hour before the tornado hit. Then BOOM. The devastation of the aftermath was huge. Mt Tambourine without power for two weeks. Other local suburbs for a week and this is in the middle of Australian tropical summer. So many trees down, massive flooding, houses damaged or destroyed. I had never experienced anything like that. 😢 Can't wait to see what happens this summer 😮
It dropped right over our townhouse complex. My husband saw it out of his study window and the trees on the were bent over horizontal. Fortunately we sustained no damage, just tree losses, but it intensified as it moved down Discovery Drive and got much worse over Oxenford and up to Tambourine.
The trees round us are a major roosting site for rainbow parrakeets. The loss of bird life must have been shocking. I have not heard how the local koala colony fared.
A tradie who came to fix an awning 3 weeks go has been living in caravan in Tambourine since and was due to get his house finally fixed to move into - more than 6 months after the event. First responders who live in the area where coming down to help people in our area. I met two who had no home to go back to.
Let us hope we never get another night like that one.
Yeah I live in the Gold Coast hinterland. Those storms last Christmas were something else entirely. Just escaped the damage here but sure as hell lost power for 8 days.
I'm glad you bought this up however.
Just my opinion of course but I actually don't see any reason to believe a single tornado dropped from those Gold Coast storms. Or if one did drop it did the minority of damage at best. The radar images certainly did not show a supercell, what tornadoes typically generate from, and any hook echoes were vague at best. Literally all the damage was consistent with straight line winds, not twisters like the monster in this video. Also of note this tornado for example was over in a few seconds, the winds from the Gold Coast storms went on for 5-15 minutes. And then there was the damage path widths, several times wider than the largest tornado ever recorded. Yet everyone is saying tornado tornado, including the dysfunctional BOM. Although rare there are such a thing as storms that cause that much damage without generating tornadoes. Regardless of the facts its the way the public just went and created their own facts. Believing the first thing that triggered the most attention and not giving anything else a second thought. For whatever reason I actually find it quite devastating on this occasion that the public in general just has no interest in the actual science or in debate and critical thinking.
I literally have not commented on anything on the internet in years but heck I'm just gonna leave this here if nowhere else and maybe if but one person reads this I will feel a tad better to get this off my chest, lol.
@@huioliver you are 100% correct. I’m local and drove every road and street from Tamborine to the coast , all tree’s and damage was from straight line winds. Classic DRECHO storm event. The damage was 5 kms wide ingredients where not supported for a 5 km wide tornado in australia.
There is a new study article on the event and it has came to the same conclusion. Media is a big problem. Tornado , mini tornado. Facts don’t matter.
I beg to differ you couldn't get the media to say tornado up until they were actually caught on camera, now they don't have a choice but to admit the existence of a tornado when it happens, straight line winds can be present with tornadoes as well and it most definitely would have been a supercell to produce that much damage!!
@@shaqbarclark4277You are right. Someone in Oxenford filmed the touchdown and followed the track up the hinterland.
From our windows we could see we were in a vortex with the debris circling around. Definitely not horizontal wind shear.
Wow. Awesome footage mate. My part of Vic had the rain but the wind was tame compared that. Thanks for putting the vid up.
Incredible footage. Scary stuff.
Run to the Hills!
Gday
Hey PecosHank! Good to see you! I'm a big fan from Adelaide, Australia! 👍🇦🇺
Didn't expect to see you here, surprised your comment has so few likes.
Pretty amazing footage and I liked the music too
Amazing footage. That tree was obliterated. Mother nature. Never think you can beat her. Show respect. Sorry for your damage. Hope your recovery is swift
And here in the UK we are fretting over a bit of rain . Australia I salute you 👌👌👌
Happens all the time in Far East Gippsland Victoria ,especially when a cold front moves up from Antartica ,Houses built in the Area have a high wind rating ,there have been many storms in the last 20 years with wind speeds over 160kph ,my self and my Daughter were lucky to survive one storm that blocked off roads for more than 10 days ,this happened around 15 years ago .
Interesting that they got such severe winds on 25/8. The more widespread damage didn't come until 2/9. Power went out for me (West Gippsland) that evening and wasn't restored for about 5 days. Much damage, even consistent with small tornadoes, like trees with ~3ft thick trunks twisted off a few meters from the ground. I had on tree (1ft thick branch) twisted off about 10m from the ground, spun around and the twisted off branch wedged in the V of the same tree that it came from. Luckily, the trees seem to have taken the brunt of the winds, which peaked at ~125km/h, and I didn't suffer any significant building damage. Others weren't so lucky and lost the roofs of their houses.
That hit like a ton of bricks. Looks like a cool shed too, all tricked out with cameras, so luckily just the roller doors blown in and a bit of corner flashing blowing off. At least you won't have to trim the trees now.
Something hit my caravan like that, lifted it up and dumped it on it's roof about 8 m from where it was, totally destroyed. The shed just had a roof to wall corner overlap piece come off, looked like the same manufacturer. Getting crazy hard wind blasting like that down south, in Vic and the Riverina and slopes now, just blows for 5 minutes and stops.
Saw patch where a small tornado went through just outside of Wangaratta on the same day. For a 100m wide strip, every tree was snapped off 1/3 of the way up
Wow thats a great Video ! Poor Skippys must be scared to death.
Wow that looked scary.
Alot like the ex-wife...
Howls and screams when coming ,
Takes the house as it leaves.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂☠️
Lol 🤣
Could be the comment of the year, just saying. Lol
any info on the wind speeds and cat of the tornado ? it seemed to move so fast and be quite wide, hard to see as i think it was rain wrapped slightly would of been hard to know which direction to run for the kangas in the video one of them seemed to run into the storm towards the end lol.
Wind speed vs cat are two different things. Category (fujita scale ) is determined by damage. You can have a tornado with powerful wind speeds that can be categorized only as an EF1 is it's in thr middle of nowhere and causes no damage to property.
I remember a tornado going through Bendigo in mid 90's a trail of damage along the railway line, and flattened houses, it was an f1 and sounded like a freight train
Great video....shame about the choice in background music
Wow…that is amazing footage. OMG….I’m from New Zealand and never knew Australia got tornadoes. I hope and pray everyone is safe. Thank you for sharing
Hope the Roos got to somewhere safe.
It's quite likely an hour after this was filmed it ran out on the road and got squashed by a truck
@@Jumbo-k4t hopefully not…
@@Crissy3p I do a lot of travelling in country South Australia and a dead roo is one that's not going to destroy my car lol
@@Jumbo-k4twell not *all* of them, I will say it is quite common for Kangaroos to get ran over, but that many? Okay maybe one got ran over.
@@candymixon7011 Okay I may have been stretching it a bit . Every time I drive on the Country roads I see dead ones but there's so many more that don't get hit and hop away . Very dangerous if you hit one and they can wreak an entire car because they're so Muscley
Love the soundtrack ❤
I was storm chasing near Benalla that day and also went down the Hume to Seymour. The storms I saw had a soft, wintery look to them - not very impressive at all. I also struggled to find views around Euroa and Seymour….
Wow this is the first time I've seen my town mentioned in the wild on the internet haha.
why the background music?
I always assumed kangaroos where solitary animals, until I saw the size of their herds in Queensland. Some of them are bloody big too.
It's a 'mob' of kangaroos not a herd 😊
Yeah, roos run in mobs, and some of the mobs get to very high numbers in good seasons.
@@QueenOfScorpions thanks, as a Pom my only reference was herds of Red Deer on Exmoor. Now you have reminded me, I do recall being told it was a mob, but it was 30 years ago,
@@PeterLGଈ 1982 must have been a good year, I recall the farmer who owned the land saying he believed there was between 700 and 1200 Roos in the ‘mob’.
Not " herds! " ; MOBS !
that sound is gonna make me have nightmares this night bro
So, where in Victoria was this?
On ashwin road in Boorolite near Mount Buller and Mansfield
I live in Victoria, where was this?
Ashwin road in Boorolite near Mansfield and Mount buller
Where is Boorolite?
I could only find Boorolite Park pty ltd, in Pakenham Victoria
Looked like a Kangaroo flying in the background. Hope all souls are ok.
❤❤Excellent video coverage👍 Australia certainly has Tornadoes I have seen the devastation they can cause as in the late 80's central Nsw. One tore a path through our farm destroying sheds. One very well built woolshed leveled with a brand new truck suffering badly tractors losing every window next to it. Also completely rolling a Class harvestor over for least 100 meters tearing its wheels off depositing them further away leaving it totally destroyed. Living through a Tornado is scary it sounded like a massive jet coming in at full throttle seeing it approaching like a huge funnel eating everything in it path it was pure luck the house was on the edge loosing all its windows. For weeks we were finding lost items.❤❤❤❤
Gives the term "Flying Kangaroo" a whole new meaning, doesn't it?
Rain wrapped. Most dangerous kind of twister next to a nocturnal one. Can't see it until it hits
By then, it's too late
My only concern is were the f**k is sunny 😮??? 5:19
Hes stuck in the dam , Skippy has gone for help
awwww skiip!
If it wasn't for the kangas, I would say that was in the US 😮
Quite the anomaly for Victoria. The kangaroos would have been a bit shell-shocked. I hope they're all safe.
Amazing footage 😮 hope the roos are OK 😬 and those poor people took a bit of damage there and such a nice property too
The world is changing. I hope any animals exposed to these extreme elements were okay and not injured. 😢
@@MissModify123 nah, we have always had a lot of tornados in Australia. Generally not as big as in the US though we have had an f5. We just have smart phones and social media now. Australia is a big area that is mostly unpopulated so alot just go unnoticed.
Whats with the Halloween music?
I've seen first hand the destruction these Australian twisters have done out in the bush but have never seen any footage of it actually happening. Amazing.
Needs a UPS for their camera system.
Moral of the story get a Fairdinkum shed 😂😂😂
Where and when please? Looks like vic?
Boorolite near Mansfield and Mount buller on august 25
@@soldati2004_gun beautiful, cold and I miss as it out there! 😁 seems to be a bit of odd weather about these days.
@@Freedomau24 rare for tornado to happen in winter warm air mustve come from somewhere to mix with the cold air to form the twister
That was amazing footage👍
I drove through Martins Gap on the weekend - the damage is just amazing. If it was in the city, I have no doubt many would have lost their lives. Interested in finding out what rating the tornado would be. It looks a LOT weaker here than the damage shown in Martins Gap!
Thats a nasty Willy Willy.
Wow great footage, sorry about the damage though.
Remarkable footage!
First ever tornado in vic, I’m from southern vic and these winds were wild
Not the first and won't be the last
Amazing footage, when my house got hit by a Tornado I rung the BOM and asked if they why didnt they have Tornado warnings in Australia, the Woman I got put through to said "Thats because Australia doesn't have Tornados" I said thats funny my house just got hit by one and she hung up on me 🤷🏼♂
BOM are just idiots anyhow.
Because tornados here are very uncommon. You can get a spin up occur in seconds. Even the US doesn't always get warnings out in time for a quick spin up funnel.
Because her pride was more important
That’s baffling. I’m interested - if you don’t mind me asking, which state do you live in? When did this happen?
We call it cyclones, but she knows it's the same thing. Pretty dumb otherwise.
Up until recent History the idea that Australia doesn't get tornadoes seems to be very common. This doesnt seem normal for Australia.
There are maps detailing a long history of tornadoes in Australia.
Australia is ranked 6th in the world for Tornadoes.
Oh we get them , there was a big one in Port Stephens in NSW a few years ago
It is though 😂 the big difference between here in the US is we are mostly empty so they rarely impact us directly, I used to live on a property in western NSW and used to see them all the time but they were usually in fields and paddocks except for that one night when the town got smashed 😮
If you Google the site "Tornado archive" and play around with the settings to show all tornadoes over Australia. You will be amazed at how many we have had! Seems Bendigo / Ballarat area is a hot spot for them with some EF2-EF3 long tracking ones having occurred in the area over time. Wikipedia also have a great database of Australian tornadoes as well.
O hope everyone was ok and they didnt suffer too much damage expense
We had one go through our district about 10 years ago, it came off the coast just north of Kiama and travelled west just missing Jamberoo and continued west where it faded out as it hit the escarpment near minnamurra falls. Friends of the family's historic house took a direct hit in Jamberoo. You could clearly see the path for years. It was well documented in the local paper "The Illawarra Mercury"
Some of them were Qantas kangaroos for sure..
What is its rating?
If it damaged only one shed in the middle of knowhere it wouldn't have a category. EF (fujita scale) is rated by damage.
Where abouts was this tornado in Victoria? Pretty viscous damge. Poor kangaroo s also.
People need to realise that tornadoes are more common in Australia then they think and they will only get more common with the way weather goes
Table and chairs .. What table and chairs.
This is why I built my home mid slope, instead of on top. The winds go over me. We still catch the updraft, but nothing like the neighbours on top of the hill, whose houses get hammered by the winds. When I saw debris flying past in the footage, I really hoped it wasn't a kangaroo. 😢 I love my roos and Joey season every year.
Great edit.. amazing wether
Phuck that’s a powerful twister!
Oh, the poor little kangaroo at the back (I'm not sure he made it). Also, I wonder how the slow koalas cope.
Great video! With fingernails scraping a chalkboard music in the background.
lol
When this happened?
The time and date is displayed on the video.
Omg scary tornado,
poor kangaroos