I remember this day. I remember I was watching tv with my parents because I was over their house. And then as I was watching a show we all liked, I hear Thunder. But not just any thunder. This was louder than I had ever heard it before. Then as soon as I knew it, the wind started howling, trees near my parents backyard forest *crashing.* We had gotten no warning, and they don’t have sirens near their house, so we all had to go into the place with no glass, the kitchen. I remember it took months for the recovery, and I’ve been traumatized ever since. I’m so thankful no one died. God bless the people and humans affected by tornadoes and things that are harmful to them.
So crazy to see a video called "New Jersey Tornado Outbreak" but this is why I have a tornado plan for every building I walk into because you never know. Lived in NJ my whole life and I have a plan in place should anything happen.
This region has to look out for tornadoes. I’ve watched storm systems on their way out become tornadic. A lot of people all over assume tornadoes don’t happen because of the mountains and whatnot. I’m not an expert but you should never assume something won’t happen.
I have some pics of the Mullica Hill EF3 from 2021. That was the biggest tornado I have ever seen in person. Unfortunately due to climate change these severe weather events are going to be more common.
@meghanhause9435 That's almost entirely in the West of the state. Not the Delaware River Valley. You can't use stats from the Western or even central part of PA to apply towards the Eastern part. That's just using stats in bad faith.
Never thought I'd see the day that someone would be doing this here in New Jersey. Whenever you see the sky turn really dark and you see people like you it's not a good sign.
I remember this day very well. I just came back from my brothers footy game after the heavy rain in the morning. It was clear out with some intermittent cumulus. It was very humid. I knew something big was going to happen. At around 5:30 I remember going to this wide open field with a shed overhang to watch the storms. It went from almost perfectly clear, to me being swallowed whole by the storm. I was genuinely scared of the lightening because it was just constant flickering. I took some good photos but then I had to sprint home. I remember it being one of the craziest storms I have ever experienced.
In the past five years, the Delaware Valley (East PA, NY and NJ) has seen a dramatic increase in tornado instances and while I think a healthy amount of that is increased reporting, particularly as it pertains to South Jersey - especially in response to Mullica Hills EF3 - I think there is a genuine uptick in the tornados being generated here. I think it's only a matter of time before something stronger than your seasonal waterspouts touches down in South Jersey and when it does the local geography is going to make life difficult for anyone in its path. I think tornados have always been underreported here due to a lack of long sightlines. Other than the coastal estuaries, barrier islands, and highway corridors, there isn't the sightlines needed to confirm the presence of something until you're sifting through the damage, and unless something other than pine trees gets hit there's little reason for people to report something has occured. Inland past the GSP, it's a blind spot and I think this is reflected pretty starkly in resources like the NOAA damage map or other interactive mapping resources. It's like a black hole over the pine barrens until you start hitting open farm country or Philly exurbs. While this area is less populated for sure, it's more "isolated" by foliage density than it is unpopulated. This presents unique difficulties that I hope technology can account for should the worst come to pass. Mullica Falls EF3 happening where I lived would have been a mass casualty event.
I was coming back from baseball and I started shouting,” tornado! Tornado! Tornado!!! My dad got the warning and he said we will be okay and he hugged us and kissed us so we wouldn’t be frightened.
I remember this day. I remember I was watching tv with my parents because I was over their house. And then as I was watching a show we all liked, I hear Thunder. But not just any thunder. This was louder than I had ever heard it before. Then as soon as I knew it, the wind started howling, trees near my parents backyard forest *crashing.* We had gotten no warning, and they don’t have sirens near their house, so we all had to go into the place with no glass, the kitchen. I remember it took months for the recovery, and I’ve been traumatized ever since. I’m so thankful no one died. God bless the people and humans affected by tornadoes and things that are harmful to them.
Great video! I like the way you point to where the actual storm is, with the radar, warning polygon, and your location next to it.
Awesome video! The northeast doesn't get a lot of storms, but when it does I'm sure its a blast!
Kinda crazy crazy to see that kind ofstorm in New Jersey
We had an EF3 in Mullica hill in September 2021.
So crazy to see a video called "New Jersey Tornado Outbreak" but this is why I have a tornado plan for every building I walk into because you never know. Lived in NJ my whole life and I have a plan in place should anything happen.
This region has to look out for tornadoes. I’ve watched storm systems on their way out become tornadic. A lot of people all over assume tornadoes don’t happen because of the mountains and whatnot. I’m not an expert but you should never assume something won’t happen.
Anywhere a thunderstorm can happen, a tornado can also happen (under certain situations)
I have some pics of the Mullica Hill EF3 from 2021. That was the biggest tornado I have ever seen in person. Unfortunately due to climate change these severe weather events are going to be more common.
Great to see a storm chaser in New Jersey. I'm from mullica hill, NJ. New Jersey seems to be the northeast's tornado alley/hot spot.
No I think that would belong to Penn., as it has more tornadoes in its recorded history than NJ dose, PA had several F4 and even one F5.
@meghanhause9435 That's almost entirely in the West of the state. Not the Delaware River Valley. You can't use stats from the Western or even central part of PA to apply towards the Eastern part. That's just using stats in bad faith.
Nice! Cant wait to see what 2023 tornado season has in store for us
Never thought I'd see the day that someone would be doing this here in New Jersey. Whenever you see the sky turn really dark and you see people like you it's not a good sign.
I remember this day very well. I just came back from my brothers footy game after the heavy rain in the morning. It was clear out with some intermittent cumulus. It was very humid. I knew something big was going to happen. At around 5:30 I remember going to this wide open field with a shed overhang to watch the storms. It went from almost perfectly clear, to me being swallowed whole by the storm. I was genuinely scared of the lightening because it was just constant flickering. I took some good photos but then I had to sprint home. I remember it being one of the craziest storms I have ever experienced.
So frekin cool! Wish we got that here in upstate, but not rly.
Hey! I just subbed based on another channel and we live at the beach in DE. It was creepy. We got pics even though it was west of us
My stepdaughter lives in Hamilton NJ
Thank god I survived. My brother took an image of the nado. I lived very close to the tornado. Respect to all who might very died or got injured.
In the past five years, the Delaware Valley (East PA, NY and NJ) has seen a dramatic increase in tornado instances and while I think a healthy amount of that is increased reporting, particularly as it pertains to South Jersey - especially in response to Mullica Hills EF3 - I think there is a genuine uptick in the tornados being generated here. I think it's only a matter of time before something stronger than your seasonal waterspouts touches down in South Jersey and when it does the local geography is going to make life difficult for anyone in its path.
I think tornados have always been underreported here due to a lack of long sightlines. Other than the coastal estuaries, barrier islands, and highway corridors, there isn't the sightlines needed to confirm the presence of something until you're sifting through the damage, and unless something other than pine trees gets hit there's little reason for people to report something has occured.
Inland past the GSP, it's a blind spot and I think this is reflected pretty starkly in resources like the NOAA damage map or other interactive mapping resources. It's like a black hole over the pine barrens until you start hitting open farm country or Philly exurbs. While this area is less populated for sure, it's more "isolated" by foliage density than it is unpopulated. This presents unique difficulties that I hope technology can account for should the worst come to pass.
Mullica Falls EF3 happening where I lived would have been a mass casualty event.
Tbh
I never expected there to be tornadoes in New Jersey of all places, but I guess I shouldn't be so surprised 😯
Fantastic job!
I was coming back from baseball and I started shouting,” tornado! Tornado! Tornado!!! My dad got the warning
and he said we will be okay and he hugged us and kissed us so we wouldn’t be frightened.
Bro I heard there was A EF3 tornado in Mercer county
That was fun in Jackson.
Great chase, Ethan!
Thanks Andrew! Felt good to be back 😎
You're 2 months early
Tell that to Mother Nature 😉
I love you
I swear if this was supposed to be for April fools day the storm did not the correct thing for April fools day
Mamia🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏻🙏🏻
5:55
Did you get that bad wheel bearing replaced yet? Lol
Lol, I did! I was procrastinating. Did so before we left for our Great Plains chase trip.