Deadliest "Weak" Tornadoes

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  • Опубліковано 15 гру 2024

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  • @davidfoster7173
    @davidfoster7173 Рік тому +1311

    I found information on the May 1974 Murrell's Inlet, SC F1 tornado in Grazulis' book "Significant Tornadoes: A chronology of events (1880-1991)". Looks like a boat off of Murrell's Inlet was struck and all 6 fatalities came from that. Also, the book says the tornado took place on May 19 rather than May 26/27.

    • @someaveragemaxrubyfan8716
      @someaveragemaxrubyfan8716 Рік тому +17

      Yeah

    • @SwegleStudios
      @SwegleStudios  Рік тому +281

      Wow! Thanks so much for finding this out David. Unfortunately, Im not surprised that it was boat related.

    • @someaveragemaxrubyfan8716
      @someaveragemaxrubyfan8716 Рік тому +30

      @@SwegleStudios there is also a deadly EF2 tornado on May 24 (if i remember correctly), 2017 and the tornado killed 3 in a capsized boat

    • @OfftheWallTales
      @OfftheWallTales Рік тому

      ​@@SwegleStudios I was going to post about the tornado before noticing the comment. I found it listed on the government's weather website. (I'd post the page but UA-cam already ate one of my comments for doing so. The page is literally weather gov, input the dot where you need to.) They have a page titled "Today in Weather History." I believe the book got the day wrong by exactly a week, as I found it mentioned on several pages as May 26th. And if you click on May 26th on that US government site, it states: An F1 tornado killed 6 people and injured one person when it struck a boat on the Waccamaw river near Murrells Inlet, SC. It also damaged trees over a 3 mile path, as well as a cabin and mobile home.

    • @weathermanofthenorth1547
      @weathermanofthenorth1547 Рік тому +6

      @David Foster, is your profile pic the Edmonton Tornado?

  • @evanmurray901
    @evanmurray901 Рік тому +2333

    No matter what anyone says, all tornadoes are dangerous

    • @goombagoomba5009
      @goombagoomba5009 Рік тому +42

      What about water sprouts oh yeah I’m dum

    • @asdf9890
      @asdf9890 Рік тому +35

      It might only be one property or structure but something is going to get messed up.

    • @kakumee
      @kakumee Рік тому +6

      @NFL productions Yes true!! Can confirm from personal experience!!

    • @MAGNITUDE16
      @MAGNITUDE16 Рік тому +74

      I know tornadoes have been known to puncture trees with plastic straws. Imagine getting hit with a plastic straw and dying.

    • @sir_dragonfly7287
      @sir_dragonfly7287 Рік тому +2

      What about the fun ones?

  • @DC_Lahjay
    @DC_Lahjay Рік тому +1117

    The fact that people underestimate tornados is insane I mean it’s a tornado

    • @kimm6589
      @kimm6589 Рік тому +94

      same goes for floodwater. Wind and water are far more powerful than our little bodies.

    • @deft_spex_jr9628
      @deft_spex_jr9628 Рік тому +40

      @@kimm6589 I almost got hit by a chair from a windstorm.

    • @catsinwonderland7473
      @catsinwonderland7473 Рік тому +23

      Exactly. It’s a tornado. What else is there to say?

    • @jonathansefcik473
      @jonathansefcik473 Рік тому +30

      There's a video on YT of someone driving their boat through a waterspout. Not smart, but people still do it.

    • @DC_Lahjay
      @DC_Lahjay Рік тому +14

      @@jonathansefcik473 that’s madlad

  • @John_The_Eeveechu
    @John_The_Eeveechu Рік тому +665

    Remember: Size doesn't show what the Tornadoes Scale is. There could be a Wedge that is an EF0 or a Rope that's an EF5

    • @Firemarioflower
      @Firemarioflower Рік тому +8

      *F0 *F5

    • @Whatisthis438
      @Whatisthis438 Рік тому +138

      @@Firemarioflowerthe scale was changed to EF in 2007

    • @westernsavage2313
      @westernsavage2313 Рік тому +17

      have you seen a rope EF5 because i sure as hell haven’t

    • @John_The_Eeveechu
      @John_The_Eeveechu Рік тому +59

      @@westernsavage2313 well there hasn't been a (Recorded) EF5 for 10 years now. What's scary about thinking of this is the fact that a EF5 is possibly going to happen again today, tomorrow, near, or far. Tornadoes can be no joke

    • @frostcate2546
      @frostcate2546 Рік тому +9

      ​@@John_The_EeveechuThe world got close with Mayfield, but not quite

  • @SoCal780
    @SoCal780 Рік тому +696

    Just goes to show, respect ALL tornadoes, including the F-0’s. Driving an 18 wheeler primarily in the Midwest, I’m always especially hyper vigilant for tornadoes during the springtime months. I have an app on my phone called “My Radar” which warns me about any kind of inclement weather in my area. My worst fear is to come upon a tornado in the dark, when you can’t see them. This app helps to prevent that and allows me to form a “ Plan B” should this ever happen. Great video as always! 👍

    • @TheLycanStrain
      @TheLycanStrain Рік тому +41

      Yep, I did trucking in the Southeast/East and was always very very wary of really any storm.
      If I saw a severe thunderstorm warning, I'd pull over to a truck stop and wait it out. Sure I wasn't technically making money during that rest but I also wasn't being injured or killed.
      Also the amount of people that want to park right next to the trailer in a thunderstorm is bewildering. As a normal driver now, I pass trucks as quickly as I can to not be near them for long. I live in Tehachapi CA and it's super windy sometimes and I don't want to be crushed haha

    • @SoCal780
      @SoCal780 Рік тому +22

      @@TheLycanStrain oh yes, been to Tehachapi many times. I even delivered to the prison there one time, that was fun! 😂 Yes, I too am astounded at people who hang out ( in the NO ZONE!) right next to me during high winds when it’s all that I can do to keep my rig “between the lines.” If they only knew the danger that they are putting themselves in by doing that, yet they are oblivious. Worse than that, I often see people tailgating flatbed trucks at 70+ mph with their noses buried in their phones instead of looking up ahead and keeping a safe distance from a potential rolling guillotine!

    • @dcrggreensheep
      @dcrggreensheep Рік тому +2

      Don't go to the twin cities at spring if you can decide not to

    • @intraterrestrial5035
      @intraterrestrial5035 Рік тому +2

      any phone radar that includes velocity scans ... that'll help you target the tornado couplet location and direction

    • @sameeknowsitall
      @sameeknowsitall Рік тому +1

      Why should we respect a tornado?

  • @Fusion2307
    @Fusion2307 Рік тому +457

    I guess it never occurred to me that tornadoes don't have to be higher on the EF scale to kill...

    • @lordnatey8503
      @lordnatey8503 Рік тому +4

      Oh, hey fusion!

    • @girlbuu9403
      @girlbuu9403 Рік тому +86

      Reminder that the deadliest thing about a tornado is debris. Seventy mile per hour winds doesn't sound that scary until it picks up a bunch of sheet metal and starts throwing it at you.

    • @millhousemillard2140
      @millhousemillard2140 Рік тому +7

      If you die by one of these nowadays you messed up. I live in kansas btw

    • @deft_spex_jr9628
      @deft_spex_jr9628 Рік тому +18

      I remember being curious if there was any F0 tornadoes that have killed any people looking it up it shocked me there was a few that have.

    • @CFRF13
      @CFRF13 Рік тому +17

      Ratings are based on damage. You could have an EF5 obliterate a trailer park per say and kill a lot of people but it would receive probably an EF2 rating at max due the low quality of construction standards.

  • @PendragonNC
    @PendragonNC Рік тому +125

    So sad to hear about those kids. I've seen firsthand the damage a comparatively "weak" tornado can do. A strong EF1 (wind speeds were approximately 105mph) knocked over a brick wall in a manufacturing facility in my hometown and there were many people inside, luckily they were unharmed. I almost drove into that storm but had decided to stay past the end of my shift to help out at work in another town and that saved me from harm.

    • @rodmunch69
      @rodmunch69 8 місяців тому +2

      Oh man, that's like 9/11 all over again. Thank the Lord you're safe and made it through OK.

    • @joshplayzgamingpetsandcode2052
      @joshplayzgamingpetsandcode2052 Місяць тому +1

      Yeah 105 is quite bad good thing you stayed back

  • @zacharykaufman9433
    @zacharykaufman9433 Рік тому +191

    Love the video format every time! I was in the 2012 Dexter, MI tornado that was an EF3 and it's an absolute miracle nobody was hurt. Homes completely destroyed. I was teaching a martial arts class downtown and had my little ninjas in the basement of the school as I watched it peel through. Only a few spots were rated EF3, but even the EF0 and EF1 damage was significant. It uprooted the back 9 of our local golf course almost entirely. Interesting stuff man - thanks for the great content.

    • @sorenshaffer1040
      @sorenshaffer1040 Рік тому +3

      yo i was really close to that when it happened i was like 5 but I still remember hiding in my grandmas basement

    • @sophiak1354
      @sophiak1354 Рік тому +1

      I live in Michigan kind of far away from Dexter but I was born in 2012

    • @wolfo1931
      @wolfo1931 Рік тому +1

      I was living in an apartment with my family at the time of that Tornado and was cleaning an office suite in Saline to the south that day and returned as the storm began. The conditions really played into the power of that storm. I remember the white out of rain as the Tornado came through and I bunkered down in my bathroom with the dog.

    • @AstroTheNeonAstronaut
      @AstroTheNeonAstronaut Рік тому +3

      Bro you saved people’s lives + you teach martial arts and call your students “little ninjas” you need a cool nickname

    • @zacharykaufman9433
      @zacharykaufman9433 Рік тому +2

      @@AstroTheNeonAstronaut Much appreciated! Still teaching martial arts. Little Ninjas are our 3-5 year old kids. They were pretty freaked out when the tornado came through... glad everyone was safe!

  • @someaveragemaxrubyfan8716
    @someaveragemaxrubyfan8716 Рік тому +95

    There is also a deadly weak tornado that occured in Moerdijk, Netherlands on October 6, 1981. The tornado struck NLM Cityhopper Flight 431 at its dissipation stage where it sent the plane crashes to the ground and killed all of its 17 (or 16 according to ESWD) occupants

    • @RagingMoon1987
      @RagingMoon1987 Рік тому +8

      There was one near Sterling City, Texas that was kinda like that. That particular tornado never really WAS a tornado (never touched down), but a B-36 flew into it and crashed, killing all fifteen men. This occurred on the same day as the Blackwell, Oklahoma and Udall, Kansas tornadoes.

  • @pmzephyr22
    @pmzephyr22 Рік тому +22

    A long-time family friend was among the dead in the Whippoorwill incident. He, his wife and another couple, family friends, were members of the same Topeka, KS church and attended the outing together. Our friend's body was found entanglement in an awning. He never had a chance. His wife and our other friends survived, thankfully. I do not know for certain that I may have know other attendees but it's very possible since the members of that church were all well-known to me. It always struck me that the chances of experiencing a tornado in the middle of a very small lake in a paddle-wheel boat have to be quite low. These are the very first picture and video that I have ever seen of this. I was almost holding my breath at the possibility of actually seeing any of them in the footage.

  • @Dovietail
    @Dovietail Рік тому +37

    We had an F0 come down right on top of our house in New River, AZ in 2019. Though our home suffered only minor damage, it was DEEPLY MEMORABLE.

    • @awrsish
      @awrsish 8 місяців тому +2

      kind of thing that will absolutely only ever happen once, haha

    • @DaAlvaro
      @DaAlvaro 5 місяців тому

      same lol

    • @Billybobjoeihavebigtoes
      @Billybobjoeihavebigtoes 4 місяці тому

      I mean at least ur house isn’t made of cardboard

  • @antiquatedideas1107
    @antiquatedideas1107 Рік тому +23

    As someone who was in their home while it was destroyed during the recent hurricane Ian, weather awareness is such a crucial thing. Thanks for always including solutions and helpful tips in your videos. I can safely say that if I didn't prepare my home beforehand, the damage from winds could have been so much worse and I'm lucky to have escaped with what I did compared to a lot of other people in the area. Nature is scary stuff

  • @ShannonLH1108
    @ShannonLH1108 Рік тому +157

    I'd love to see a story on the 1990 Plainfield IL tornado. I lived at Gaylord and Ardaugh Aves in Crest Hill, and we had no sirens or warning of the mile wide EF5 just blocks away. My mom said she saw it out the back window, looking towards Theodore Rd, as it was hitting the apt complex where the most deaths occurred. It was so close and so wide, she had no idea what she was looking at. And since there were no sirens, we didn't know to go to the basement. It missed up by literally two blocks. Our house and neighborhood sustained damage, and my dad helped recover bodies from the cornfield across the street. It is shocking that more people didn't die. But there were 29 deaths and it will never leave the locals memories.

    • @KermitTheGamer21
      @KermitTheGamer21 Рік тому +30

      The Plainfield tornado wasn't a mile wide, it was actually only about a third of a mile wide at its largest point. The problem was the storm produced so much rain that the tornado was completely invisible. I've read one account from a survivor that said they had no idea there was a tornado until their neighbor's house exploded. It passed a few hundred feet from the Joliet Mall and nobody there ever saw the tornado. I read another account from those apartments that a kid from a family of 4 was only able to exclaim that it was getting dark and in a flash he was thrown into the corn field and the rest of his family was killed.
      I live in the area as well (though I was not born until 8 years after the tornado) and made a video on it a few years ago if you want to take a look.

    • @matthewd1918
      @matthewd1918 Рік тому +4

      Yeah!! I actually go to the high school that was directly hit and currently live a mile from the path so I’d like to see a video about it!

    • @sammylacks4937
      @sammylacks4937 Рік тому +5

      You can find videos of the Plainfield tornado on You Tube.
      Plainfield Tornado Disaster of 1990 Carly Anna WX
      ( She has posted videos of many tornadoes and does a great job covering them.)
      Eight mins in August The F5 Plainfield tornado.
      Joliet Area Historic Museum

    • @matthewd1918
      @matthewd1918 Рік тому +4

      @@sammylacks4937 I actually just watched Carly Anna’s video earlier today (I love her videos) and I watched the documentary in elementary school (our district’s curriculum)

    • @ShannonLH1108
      @ShannonLH1108 Рік тому

      @@sammylacks4937 thank you for the recommendations, I'll check them out!

  • @WanderingRoe
    @WanderingRoe 11 місяців тому +21

    When you look up a tornado wind chart, it’s disturbing how strong even the “weak” ones are. Which is why I truly cannot fathom going through an EF5…

    • @09enderman
      @09enderman Місяць тому

      They can strip THE BARK OFF TREES, DRIVE STRAW INTO SOLID WOOD, AND CAN REDUCE HOUSES TO UNRECOGNIZABLE PILES OF GRAVEL AND SPLINTERS. It's scary.

  • @joshuayates4952
    @joshuayates4952 Рік тому +82

    My mom’s first husband died in the 1989 tornado in Huntsville. She’s been terrified of tornados ever since

    • @junkiexl86
      @junkiexl86 Рік тому +16

      I know the feeling. We lost everything in the Moore tornado in '99. After that we moved to another part of the city on 12th St. behind Plaza Towers Elem and then lost it all again 14 years later after another direct hit. We finally took the hint and moved well away from tornado alley, but still, hearing a tornado siren or tornado warning EAS message gives me a panic attack.

    • @Micfri300
      @Micfri300 Рік тому

      First husband..

    • @ohno7153
      @ohno7153 10 місяців тому +11

      @@Micfri300 yeah, first husband... she remarried, duh.

    • @Micfri300
      @Micfri300 10 місяців тому

      @@ohno7153 and that's respectful and normal?

    • @ohno7153
      @ohno7153 10 місяців тому +14

      @@Micfri300 ..yes? tf? shes just supposed to stay single after he died? lmao what r u trying to say

  • @RomeGunnLeaf_36710
    @RomeGunnLeaf_36710 10 місяців тому +191

    Tornadoes are made out of air, breathe it in

  • @Baldevi
    @Baldevi Рік тому +25

    Great video, and a great PSA aboutbeing weather aware, especially about tornadoes of any possible rating. Thanks for your dedication to the topic of Torandoes!

  • @AUlgen
    @AUlgen Рік тому +36

    I freaking loved the Google Earth tornado remnant hunting video you did some time back, could we see more videos where you try to find some old and forgotten tornadoes? Amazing content as always.

  • @Teverell
    @Teverell Рік тому +86

    You mentioned the Stretch Duck 7 disaster and I thought you might be interested in the recent video on the channel Brick Immortar that covered it in some detail - it's a really interesting channel for all sorts of (non-weather related) accidents and disasters, some of them not very well-known at all.
    Great video as always!!

    • @heavymetalfishingla
      @heavymetalfishingla Рік тому +8

      Love his content. Unbiased, unopinionated, and just straight facts

    • @jennteal5265
      @jennteal5265 Рік тому

      That's an excellent channel! I also quite like Building Integrity

    • @Ty91681
      @Ty91681 Рік тому

      Absolutely great video. Watched it recently.

  • @MegaBiker199
    @MegaBiker199 Рік тому +8

    Im 25 and lived in Huntsville my entire life and so glad to see this on here. My father has home recordings of the tornado and rescues on old VHS tapes.

    • @lightingthelatenight9942
      @lightingthelatenight9942 Рік тому

      Damn nice lol I'm 22 and been chillin here whole time too, shit be Huntsville af round here

  • @-IMAGINE_
    @-IMAGINE_ Рік тому +10

    Tornadoes take "size doesn't matter" to a whole new level.

  • @Isaactheweathernerd
    @Isaactheweathernerd Рік тому +15

    Dude, your content is amazing!

  • @pinkprideparade
    @pinkprideparade Рік тому +3

    your content is extremely entertaining, im completely focused on the video even when youre bringing up a tornado that has 0 story information on it! i have never been interested in tornados until i randomly found your content yesterday, great work

  • @cooperludwig3842
    @cooperludwig3842 Рік тому +6

    the video quality just keeps getting better! good work man!

  • @davidzactecaz
    @davidzactecaz Рік тому +32

    I used to live in a trailer park, back in Dixmoor Illinois 2008 I saw the beginning of a swirling cloud taking form. It eventually formed into a funnel cloud in Lansing Illinois. It was an f-0 .

    • @CortexNewsService
      @CortexNewsService Рік тому +6

      It's freaky when you can see the rotation even if it doesn't touch down where you are. You instinctually know "oh this is bad."

    • @Volundur9567
      @Volundur9567 Рік тому +1

      When I lived in one, I went to work when one was spotted. They got mad that I came in early (didn't clock in, just needed a safe place and the factory was literally a minute walk. I could see and hear it from inside the trailer). I told them I had no safe place to go. They were still mad.
      There wasn't houses nearby and it was in a not-so-good area of town, so nobody would have never let me in anyways, thinking I was trying to do something.

    • @heroinboblivesagain5478
      @heroinboblivesagain5478 3 місяці тому

      Lansing Illinois mentioned lets gooo!!

  • @willsessions2474
    @willsessions2474 Рік тому +8

    Another great video, bro. This is kind of what I was mentioning earlier. I'm looking forward to seeing what you find on back-to-back impacts.

  • @hblackburn5580
    @hblackburn5580 Рік тому +9

    I live in Mobile Ala, where we've more than had our fair share of tornados, and the strange thing is, most homes haven't got basements because of hurricanes! Thankfully though, I am fortunate enough to live in a very solid house, but I never would have guessed AL was a hotspot for tornados when I moved here.

  • @austincoffman2276
    @austincoffman2276 Рік тому +10

    It’s so crazy how it lead up to the whippoorwill disaster. I live just south of Pomona! Many people still remember this event

  • @imquokkacola
    @imquokkacola Рік тому +30

    It'd be interesting to see a video on the largest "weak" tornadoes as well. A lot of people assume that the bigger the tornadoes, the more damaging and deadly they are. I'm curious what mile-wide-plus tornadoes didn't actually do all that much damage.

    • @dysonansgd
      @dysonansgd Рік тому +7

      I think there was a tornado in Denton,Texas that was nearly a kilometer wide,however not only did it not do that much damage,it has ef1 windspeeds.

    • @ViceKnIghtTA
      @ViceKnIghtTA Рік тому +3

      Mile wide is more like a hurricane lol

    • @randomlyentertaining8287
      @randomlyentertaining8287 7 місяців тому +2

      @@ViceKnIghtTA And yet multiple tornadoes have been measured to be more than a mile wide lol

    • @_v0rtx.beatz_
      @_v0rtx.beatz_ 4 місяці тому

      Hurricanes are multiple miles wide most of the time

    • @thisgameisezbroshorts
      @thisgameisezbroshorts 2 місяці тому +1

      For example El reno in 2013 that was over 2.6 miles wide but didn't kill that many people

  • @tsherwood2112
    @tsherwood2112 Рік тому +4

    It's crazy how random tornadoes can be. One of my rugby teammates grew up 1/2 a mile from me, and his house was direct hit by an EF0 in 2018. However, that tornado then swung southwest, increased in strength to an EF2, and destroyed a mobile home park. It's crazy to think I was fine, his family sustained minor roof damage, and some people lost their homes all within the 3 miles

  • @tozz_elvenesian831
    @tozz_elvenesian831 10 місяців тому +3

    in 1970 an EF4 tornado hit the Venice lagoon (North-East Italy), lifting and overturning a 22-ton vaporetto, causing 21 deaths (out of a total of 36 caused by the entire 70 km path of the tornado) similar to the Duck Boat Disaster

  • @bobgaming80
    @bobgaming80 17 днів тому +2

    In 1971, Australia had an F0 with 3 fatalities

  • @stacyrussell460
    @stacyrussell460 Рік тому +13

    Although I live in NJ & am out of the tornado alley loop, we have still experienced some tornadoes over the years. My home is a raised rancher style & half of the basement is underground. I have prepared our pantry closet down there just in case (water, flashlights, extra batteries, blankets, pet food, basic toiletries & some pet food, portable phone chargers, etc). Even if you're in an area not prone to major tornadoes, it's always better to be prepared.

    • @Zylaku
      @Zylaku Рік тому +1

      That Mullica Hill tornado was crazy..

    • @stacyrussell460
      @stacyrussell460 Рік тому

      @@Zylaku yes it was. A cousin of mine lives just outside Mullica Hill. Right before the tornado hit, she felt all the hairs on her arms stand up out of nowhere. Before she could wonder why, her ears popped & large trees outside started snapping in half. Thankfully she & her family are alright & only minimal property damage.

    • @Zylaku
      @Zylaku Рік тому +1

      @Stacy Russell wow that's very interesting.. very happy your cousin is safe!!!
      I'm from a neighboring area of Mullica Hill and I was watching the storm that spawned the tornado with a friend on my back porch.
      The atmosphere of that day was unlike anything I've ever experienced

  • @sammylacks4937
    @sammylacks4937 Рік тому +11

    In NC , most tornadoes are produced from QLCS events and tend to spawn quickly touching down with no warning . Although they tend to be EF 0 - 1- 2 and short lived because they spin up quickly and these systems often pass in the night if one or several drop over a populated area they can be deadly and cause much damage. Years ago NC lead the nation in nighttime tornado deaths because of these weak tornadoes and an outbreak in the Red Springs area.

  • @fallenangel4052
    @fallenangel4052 Рік тому +5

    For that statement at 8:43, also keep in mind that tornadoes have updrafts which allow them to do significant damage quickly. If a tornado crosses over a ditch directly above you, the suction could rip you out of the ditch. This almost happened with two survivors of the 2.5 mile wide Hallam F-4. In their account, they said they almost were sucked out of the ditch. This tornado didn't directly hit them, either.

    • @TheAutisticCowboy
      @TheAutisticCowboy Рік тому +2

      A lot of tornadoes "jump" or bob. This is why they seem to leave one house untouched, and destroy another. When a tornado lifts, there is no suction(unless a vortis reaches down. Happens with larger tornados. Think Smaller suction arms/tentacles reach out from the side) Now, besides lifting, tornados can dig. There is no rule saying that a tornado can only go as low as the top of the ground. Tornados can trench into the ground.

    • @TheAutisticCowboy
      @TheAutisticCowboy Рік тому +1

      A deep ditch can be the difference between life and death. If the tornado completes suction with ground, then it's going to create a vacuum, which can lift you out of the ditch. However, the biggest threat is debris. Multiple reports of people sadly being killed by electric poles, & cars being slammed into them. A good place to get to, if possible, would be a man hole. Smelly, but alive.

    • @fallenangel4052
      @fallenangel4052 Рік тому +2

      Yeah, I know that. Debris is the biggest threat, sure, but I was saying that it's not ideal nevertheless. It's just as he said in the video there, too. One, you are openly vulnerable to debris falling from above. If it strikes you directly, the updraft will, like you said, create suction much like a vacuum. And yes, I know that sub-vortices can be present with tornadoes, rendering them as multi-vortexes no matter the shape. I also do know some tornadoes can lift and descend again multiple times, creating strips of damage which can be very sporadic and imperfect.

  • @RagingMoon1987
    @RagingMoon1987 Рік тому +1

    In 2012 there was a tornado at Diehlstadt, a small community in the Missouri Bootheel about fifty miles from where I live. It was rated EF-2 and thus would not have qualified for this video, but it still managed to kill three people in one mobile home. It was after dark, and I don't remember bad weather even being in the forecast, and thus I presume that the deceased were caught by surprise. It was sad, and for us it drove home the point that mobile homes are NOT the place to be in bad weather! I love your videos!

  • @jimjohanson8152
    @jimjohanson8152 Рік тому +3

    Little story about the F4 the hit Huntsville. My aunt was driving home from school and decided she was too tired to drive so she pulled into a parking lot just to the right of the picture to nap. When she woke up the whole block was leveled, but her car was fine.
    My grandfather (her dad) was a general at Redstone Arsenal and was called in to protect the contents of a jewelry store (the pile of rubble closest to the intersection on the left). He loaded it into the trunk of his Volvo and stood there with a rifle until a truck could come to get it.

  • @theresemalmberg955
    @theresemalmberg955 Рік тому +1

    I live in a mobile home park that has a lot of very large old oak trees. No tornado shelter, but we "are" supposed to be getting an outdoor swimming pool in the next year or so. No low-lying ground that is free of trees. No sturdy buildings nearby that are open 24/7. The Van Buren County Michigan Emergency Preparedness Office told me that there are no tornado or severe weather shelters anywhere in my county but they will open shelters after the fact. The police chief in my town says he does not want people out driving around during a tornado event. The last F5 in the entire state of Michigan was between 65-70 years ago, the last really bad F3 in my part of the state was the 1980 Kalamazoo tornado. I think it is because EF3's and above are so infrequent in Michigan that people are not as tornado conscious as they should be. When the northern Michigan town of Gaylord was struck by an EF3 last year, they didn't even have warning sirens in place! Well, those are the ones which get all the headlines, but what a lot of people don't realize is that Michigan is far more likely to experience quick spin-up EF0's and EF1's which may not even register on radar before they are over (that happened near Grand Rapids a few years back) and which may be rain-wrapped making them hard to see. Yes, there is definitely a "it can't happen here" mentality in this state.

    • @bowtiejess80
      @bowtiejess80 9 місяців тому

      When I was standing in the parking lot of my place of employment in Gaylord, looking at the tornado, my thought process was exactly that- we don't have tornadoes here.

  • @stancedstyfon1234
    @stancedstyfon1234 Рік тому +4

    Gosh today's a good day...I got a job offer, weather was nice and cool when I went to exercise..and Swegle studios uploads

    • @SwegleStudios
      @SwegleStudios  Рік тому +2

      Glad you had a great day! Weather in my area was terrible (frigid temps)

    • @stancedstyfon1234
      @stancedstyfon1234 Рік тому

      @@SwegleStudios Oh goodness...I hope it passes by quickly for you man

  • @julioatrejo7687
    @julioatrejo7687 Рік тому +2

    I've really been enjoying the content you've been putting out! I'll be looking forward to new uploads.

  • @sabrinaleedance
    @sabrinaleedance Рік тому +3

    The fact that I grew up in a trailer home is very haunting bc f1 tornadoes are actually fairly common in Pennsylvania where I live. Heck we've had a few f2 tornadoes , one that went right past me when I was at work. My parents however said that our was rated for hurricane winds, not sure how high like category wise. But when hurricane Sandy hit in 2012 we had some fairly strong winds and everything was fine, though it was a little bit nerving

    • @sabrinaleedance
      @sabrinaleedance Рік тому

      Yup, I remember it wasn't till I was a little older did my parents find out the best bet is actually leaving the trailer and finding the lowest lieing place, so my mom designated a nice ditch where we were to go 😅 before that tho, ofc the advice was to go into a bathroom like a small room centered in the house w no windows, the bathroom bc you can get down in the tub. Once there was a strong derecho type storm that my mom thought was a tornado, and she put me in the bathtub with her and took my crib mattress on top of us lol

  • @ellisjackson3355
    @ellisjackson3355 Рік тому +2

    Interesting topic and I love the smooth jazz outro

  • @clutchthecinnamonsergal8493
    @clutchthecinnamonsergal8493 Рік тому +5

    The recent old Kingston Alabama tormado killed 7 people all of them in single wide or double wide mobile homes…however that was a mid range EF3 rating with potential EF4 level contextual damage…

  • @edmcg6257
    @edmcg6257 7 місяців тому +1

    I drove through an F-0 tornado in Michigan on the turnpike about 3 years ago. Absolutely terrifying!! I never saw it until it started coming onto the road. All the trees were whipping around. I don’t know if any fell. But I can say that as I went through the beginning of it. It was just brutal. All the debris swirling above me as I just hoped it didn’t fall on me. As I got about halfway through I felt the SUV start to twist on the road. Honestly. I just gunned it to try to make it through. As I got through the other side I heard a loud BOOM! I thought something hit me. Afterwards. I discovered the loud boom I heard was it actually ripping my weatherstripping off of the vehicle. I saw the clouds. Just wish I would’ve pulled off a bit earlier.

  • @corenko
    @corenko Рік тому +4

    Wake up babe, Swegle Studios uploaded again

  • @shankbone100
    @shankbone100 Рік тому +1

    It’s fuckn wild to hear someone talk about your hometowns natural disasters

  • @GingerRACING21
    @GingerRACING21 Рік тому +5

    Love your content man 🌪️ keep going bro ❤❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @Somelunatic
    @Somelunatic Рік тому +1

    I used to be so obsessed tornadoes! I used to spend all of my free time when i was like in the single digits of age, i was obsessed

  • @tasticfan4286
    @tasticfan4286 Рік тому +8

    This is pedantic as all hell, but I feel like "motorhome" refers to those specifically with an engine. Mobile home/trailer are those that require a truck for transportation.

    • @dennisc6716
      @dennisc6716 5 місяців тому

      I've always understood the difference as being exactly that. Still wouldn't want to be in either during a tornado.

  • @konerfrandsen9751
    @konerfrandsen9751 Рік тому +2

    Very solid vid bro. I’m liking this recent content! The transitions are beautiful too 😍

  • @thebandit979
    @thebandit979 Рік тому +4

    I’m loving the tornado content

  • @cynthiasimpson931
    @cynthiasimpson931 Рік тому +1

    I lived in mobile homes for most of my life, including three years in Topeka, Kansas. We lived across the street from the local tornado shelter in Topeka, and my mother always had a bag packed with essentials since my sister was a toddler at the time. When we heard the sirens we'd move fast, especially since we'd moved to Topeka in 1967, the year after the June 8, 1966 tornado that caused over $100 million in damage, and when we moved there many of the traces of the tornado were still there. After that I lived in a mobile home in northern California; my experiences in Topeka had taught me to keep a close eye on the weather. I remember one time looking out the front window at a stormy sky that was practically green, and things were too quiet. So, I kept a close eye on things, and if I'd seen a wall cloud I would have headed for the downtown area of the small town where I lived, since there was nothing in the way of shelter in the trailer park. Nothing happened, but at least I knew enough to keep an eye on the sky.

  • @SockyNoob
    @SockyNoob Рік тому +3

    As I always say, there's no such thing as a harmless tornado. If it's strong enough to touch down, it's strong enough to take shelter and prepare for.

  • @tinahirst3841
    @tinahirst3841 11 місяців тому

    For some reason i thought ur videos would be boring but u ended up being my fav youtuber account

  • @worsel555
    @worsel555 Рік тому +5

    Spent the first few years of my life growing up in a mobile home before my dad went back into the Air Force and we have a saying in our family: God hates mobile homes. We always had a plan to get out if a bad storm was coming and head down the road to my then grandmothers house and her basement, so many of our neighbors would just stay and gawk at the storm and never realized what danger they were in.

  • @ThesmartestTem
    @ThesmartestTem Рік тому +1

    My family has a permanent RV (a park model) in a private membership campground in MI. In 2021, a powerful EF 2 hit less than a quarter mile away. I was supposed to be there with my kids that day. But the non-stop rain and an upgrade to the severe outlook including a tornado risk had me pack up and head home that morning. Not long after we got home, my mom called me up and told me that the south side of the town took a direct hit. And because that area is a radar hole, it was unwarned until it was pretty much on top of town. It chills me to think how many unsuspecting people could have died that day if that tornado took a slightly different path. And if not for my intuition and weather awarness, my kids and I might not be here today.

  • @bartokbrown6424
    @bartokbrown6424 Рік тому +6

    It would be interesting to discuss the weak tornadoes that caused the greatest amount of damage. I thought of this because of the EF1 tornado that struck north Minneapolis and nearby suburbs on May 22, 2011 (the same day as the infamous Joplin tornado). It also killed one person who was in a car when a tree fell on him.

  • @Cereal421
    @Cereal421 Рік тому +1

    New Swegle, Alferia, Weatherbox, and Carly Anna videos all in one week. Nice.

  • @snuffedtorch3683
    @snuffedtorch3683 Рік тому +6

    Will you be doing severe weather predictions and your thoughts on the outlook for the 2023 season?

    • @SwegleStudios
      @SwegleStudios  Рік тому +1

      Unfortunately Im not super qualified for weather forecasting :/ (more of a history guy) However Im sure Ryan Hall Y'all will have some videos on that topic!

    • @snuffedtorch3683
      @snuffedtorch3683 Рік тому

      @@SwegleStudios it’s okay! I was just curious what your thoughts were. I love yours and Ryan’s videos too!

  • @Wiseguy_53
    @Wiseguy_53 Рік тому +1

    The picture at 4:15 of Rye Cove School (not Roy Cove) is actually my old highschool's rival. I remember hearing about this storm a few years ago. This area is mostly thought of being safe from Tornados due to our location in the Appalachian Mountains. It's crazy to see pictures from my area online and come to find out this Tornado was the deadliest in Virginia history.

  • @tornadostories
    @tornadostories Рік тому +3

    Great work. Instant like.

  • @funfunisland1
    @funfunisland1 Рік тому +2

    Near my town, an F1 bordering on an F2 hit a small town and swept through the middle of it. High school completely destroyed, one of my friend’s friends’ house’s ground floor became their basement. It was brutal, but to my knowledge, no one died.

  • @jaimej40
    @jaimej40 Рік тому +5

    You didn’t speak about it, but showed photos from the Rye Cove tornado. I did some work in the area in the 90s when I was in college. Had no idea there had been a deadly tornado there. The things you learn on UA-cam…

  • @j-mikedecker7279
    @j-mikedecker7279 Рік тому +1

    So interesting archive website. I noticed that my town got hit by an EF-1 tornado back in 2002, when I was 2 years old. What's crazy about that, is that it looks like my home was only about half of a mile away from the path of the tornado. Did not know that. Crazy!

  • @slipknottin
    @slipknottin Рік тому +3

    So can category 2 or 3 hurricanes toss cars around as well? They have roughly the same wind speeds as a F1 tornado. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a video of a Hurricane tossing a car around like that clip you showed of a tornado. Most videos or hurricanes just show vehicles pushed around. Maybe the wind profile makes a significant difference rather than just the speed?

    • @ginaminasaurus
      @ginaminasaurus 2 місяці тому

      sorry for being late, but tornadoes push air under the vehicle and suck it up into the sky, thats why tornado interceptors have skirts

  • @P_RO_
    @P_RO_ Рік тому +1

    VERY very good advice about leaving mobile homes in tornadoes. The last local tornado fatality here occurred when a mobile home overturned and crushed the man who was in it. It was barely an EF-2 at that point. Trees falling on mobile homes are just as dangerous; there isn't any structural strength in mobile homes, campers, or RV's but there is a lot of surface area for wind to act against. A lot of the 'weak' tornado deaths and injuries come from falling trees even in well-built homes' so keep that in consideration when you're choosing a safe spot to ride out a storm in your home. Even EF-0 winds are enough to launch deadly debris so take every tornado seriously.

  • @alfatejpblind6498
    @alfatejpblind6498 Рік тому +4

    I have so many nightmares about tornadoes, and I’m an adult… I think my brain is telling me I should stop watching these videos…

    • @Jeff-sl7xp
      @Jeff-sl7xp Рік тому +2

      I used to have them as a child, I believe it's what attracted me to storm observing.

    • @SwegleStudios
      @SwegleStudios  Рік тому +3

      I literally had one like 2 weeks ago, I was in my basement watching a tornado slowly approach me through one of those small upper basement windows... I woke up right before it hit.

    • @alfatejpblind6498
      @alfatejpblind6498 Рік тому

      @@SwegleStudios Good to know I’m not alone then, haha! I guess the fear, however small and subconscious, is part of what makes tornadoes so fascinating. For me personally, I usually see pitch-black clouds and many tornadoes on the horizon approaching my house. Ever since I saw that super up-close video by BasehuntersChasing of the Dalton MN EF4 where it just sits in a field and has that unbelievably fast-moving vortex of maybe 50cm in diameter, I’ve had a few absurd nightmares where a tornado will just rip me apart. Wild stuff, but funnily enough those dreams are never very scary to me unlike the ones with the dark clouds approaching. Looking at that (Dalton EF4) video, there is no doubt in my mind that such power could destroy almost anything… Scary, but absolutely fascinating!

  • @RagebaitRating
    @RagebaitRating 7 місяців тому

    3:04 holy shit, that sort of emotional rollercoaster is insane. Could you imagine your child narrowly surviving a devastating tornado, feeling the relief yet sorrow that your child is okay but others passed, then your child is taken from you anyway only two days later? Sickeningly sad.

  • @amberhawksong
    @amberhawksong Рік тому +6

    I'd love to see you talk more about tornados outside the Midwest sometime.

  • @stevensharpe3182
    @stevensharpe3182 Рік тому +1

    Cleaned out my subscriptions I kept this one for the great content loved the Video!!!

  • @Cheese12358
    @Cheese12358 8 місяців тому +3

    While I was watching this, they tested the tornado sirens

  • @Project_Prescott
    @Project_Prescott Рік тому +1

    1:09 that tornado was so small I had to rewind like 5 times before I finally saw it before it threw the car

  • @cragre28
    @cragre28 Рік тому +5

    I live in Murray County, Ga, and in 2020, not long after the Covee started, an F2 tornado that was briefly an F3 hit during the night. It missed my house by 1/2 a mile. Most of Murray County is either farmland or sparsely populated woodlands. Unfortunately, this tornado hit a mobile home park head on and killed 8 people. We live in a house with a basement, and our neighbors are family that lives in mobile home. We leave our basement unlocked during bad storms, and I will text my neighbors if possible tornadoes are close by.

  • @MRuth-es5kf
    @MRuth-es5kf Рік тому +1

    New subscriber! All your videos are amazing! Great work! I live in MS, tornado alley, and in my 30 years I’ve yet to see a tornado in person! We get tornado warnings constantly though! I’m about 20 minutes from hazelhurst, so I was so intrigued when I watched your video about the bottle top kid! I never knew hazelhurst had a large tornado like that.

  • @patmo131
    @patmo131 Рік тому +4

    Be careful when taking shelter in outdoor ditches and low spots. Most tornadoes take place during severe thunderstorms which are typically high precipitation events. Low areas can flood nearly instantly. It’s better, if at all possible, to find a nearby permanent structure and get to the lowest interior room (no windows). Cover your head with something thick and soft, such as a pillow or mattress. Even a football, hockey or bike helmet might help you survive.

    • @cs77smith67
      @cs77smith67 Рік тому +1

      U right but for some reason I'll take my chances in low land area because I never heard of a flood occurring doing a tornado

  • @ChromeAndChaos
    @ChromeAndChaos Рік тому +3

    This is probably really stupid but it never dawned on me an EF1 could be deadlier than an EF2. I just assumed the bigger the deadlier. Sheesh lol 🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @SwegleStudios
      @SwegleStudios  Рік тому

      That's usually the case. Just depends on the situation!

  • @icyd1amond
    @icyd1amond Рік тому

    Another amazing video! Keep it up man. Also, saw on your IG that you and your wife are expecting twins! Congratulations and hopefully everything goes well.

  • @VelosterFur
    @VelosterFur Рік тому +3

    9 children is crazy, the engineers that made that wall didn’t account for strong winds apparently

    • @dieterdelange9488
      @dieterdelange9488 Рік тому +1

      Also the fact that it occurred in NY State; tornadoes are, in general, very rare in the North-Eastern part of the USA. Still very sad (all of the deaths in these stories).

    • @dieterdelange9488
      @dieterdelange9488 Рік тому +1

      @ns 3421 Really? I don't live in America, but I've always been interested in tornadoes. I was aware that the traditional Tornado Alley was in the central part of the US. The sources I read that stated that the North-Eastern US don't get a lot of tornadoes could be a bit outdated. In the end I guess each state/country is at risk.

    • @SwegleStudios
      @SwegleStudios  Рік тому +1

      Its very tragic.. What's crazy is that it seems everyone (except for the surrounding communities) have seem to have forgotten about it

  • @Rattyfanboy
    @Rattyfanboy 3 місяці тому +1

    There was an ef0 here not too long ago, and they refused to acknowledge the deaths.

  • @lavbunxx
    @lavbunxx 7 місяців тому +1

    I had an EF0 tornado that ran through my neighborhood and went on for around 2-3 miles. The weather refuse to confirm it as a tornado and we had 0 warning. One house had a car canopy from the neighboring apartments on it, causing major damage. There was also many things fkying and hitting houses, damaging siding and roofs. And they just wanna call that a flat line wind…

  • @DEVOGENESIS
    @DEVOGENESIS Рік тому

    love the weatherscan music as a outro it works so well

  • @xobrynn90
    @xobrynn90 11 місяців тому +1

    Any tornado can hurt you; it's just a matters where you are

  • @slimbroco572
    @slimbroco572 8 місяців тому

    Love your tornado content. Could you do a video of tornadoes just in the state of Wisconsin. I'd find it really interesting as I live there. Keep up the great work 👍

  • @blair56561
    @blair56561 Рік тому +2

    Great stuff! Thank you and good work 👍

  • @lukasrentz3238
    @lukasrentz3238 Рік тому +1

    A lot of weak deadly Tornadoes occured in Germany in the past too.
    The Outbreak of 15th June 1980 was featuring 8 Tornadoes. One F1 moved through a Camping site killing 6 People. Possibly a second F1 killed 2. In 1901 a Tornado of unknown strength (possibly >F1 though) spun around a boat killing 7 near Berlin. In 1913 an Airship crashed in a waterspout near Heligoland killing 13.

  • @danadoozer9990
    @danadoozer9990 Рік тому +1

    This is a super cool video, because you never hear about how damaging these so called weak tornadoes are!

  • @Legos-u1v
    @Legos-u1v 7 місяців тому

    I'm from Utah and even the wild tornado of 1999 still killed someone even with a tiny scale compared to other tornados of the Midwest so I say all tornados are dangerous. Thank you for making this video it really does show us that no matter the size or scale, all tornados are dangerous

  • @morganbryce7877
    @morganbryce7877 Рік тому

    Very interesting video. Keep it up Swegle

  • @stacyrussell460
    @stacyrussell460 Рік тому

    Finally able to watch this!! Thank goodness for a quick dinner & kids had easy homework tonight.

  • @jessicagriffin2019
    @jessicagriffin2019 3 місяці тому +1

    I had like an F1 or Two tornado and. It was on February 27th this year. Uhh I still remember what it looks like. It was a surprising wider than a F1 but I was at jazz and this alert came on on a Tuesday !
    Plano, Illinois 🎉

  • @CamandoGaming
    @CamandoGaming Рік тому +1

    8:40 - Why go to the center of the building? So the tornado does not get/hit you?

  • @sabrinaleedance
    @sabrinaleedance Рік тому

    Wow so cool finding a video on this. I had this same thought like wondering what the worst weakest tornado was and good was confused and I couldn't find much info on it.

  • @Drew-do9wx
    @Drew-do9wx Рік тому

    Great job. Keep doing what you're doing.

  • @adinamcgriff5152
    @adinamcgriff5152 Рік тому +1

    Fun fact i actually live in Fort Wayne Indiana august 2020 was insane the derecho was crazy I can’t believe it actually killed someone me and my mom went outside and we saw tree damage and everything else

  • @shinoasmelody
    @shinoasmelody Рік тому

    you make some of the BEST content on youtube i can't believe you only have 40k subs

  • @justinniemeier3581
    @justinniemeier3581 Рік тому +2

    I am dying for an in-depth video on microbursts, and also what causes and the significance of monsoon rain around the world. Please, pick me! Pick me!

  • @CortexNewsService
    @CortexNewsService Рік тому +2

    When I was living in Chicago a couple of years ago, an F1 went through the Chicago northside. No deaths. However, even though I was a mile away from the track of it, it STILL knocked down trees all around my building. I actually grabbed my cat and ran for shelter when it hit (there were no sirens) because, even that far away, it looked like it was going to knock the tree out front into the building. In the path itself, large 100 year old trees blocked streets with power lines down everywhere. It was "weak," but it's luck there were no injuries.

    • @harryparsons2750
      @harryparsons2750 Рік тому

      I wouldn’t be worried about tornadoes in Chicago you would have a infinitely more likely to be murdered. That place is the worst hell hole I’ve ever seen and I got robbed at gun point at 9 in the morning in the middle of the street

    • @CortexNewsService
      @CortexNewsService Рік тому

      @@harryparsons2750 hmmm. I lived there 23 years and never got robbed at gun point. And I lived in a couple of tough neighborhoods

  • @Paseoman
    @Paseoman Рік тому +1

    Oh my god you cut your hair and it went from 90s stoner to 90s nsync style 🤯😲

  • @lolTravis
    @lolTravis Рік тому

    I appreciate you videos. I'm keeping an eye on the weather tonight (Near Birmingham AL 2/16//23)

  • @tonyb33
    @tonyb33 3 місяці тому

    Any chance you get to put James Spann in your videos you do it.
    Hats off to you sir for showing the GOAT as often as you can 💯