A tornado is the most unpredictable thing. I mean a trailer is obliterated next to unharmed trailers ten feet away. A business is flattened twenty feet from an untouched business. They are some scary MF.
Just pray for families that lost everything and I pray that the people that lost their pets find them healthy and unhurt. Pray for Wade, who they have not found yet from Monday's storm in Oklahoma and please Lord comfort his grieving family.
At the 3:02 mark or so you will see an overturned semi. My old house we moved from in 2020 is the closest to semi. Drove by and it was sad to see our old place ruined. Be safe cleaning up everyone and take care. Hopefully insurance has your back.
Whoa. Bet you were taught in Sunday school that the wicked were punished by tornadoes/floods/earthquakes etc. That's usually the case until it happens to you or someone you care about.
@@puttentanesame6687 nah, I did however grow up catholic, did the whole nun teachers thing. No Sunday school but I did church Wednesdays & Sundays growing up. Fear wasn't taught to any of the kids, other than putting up with bullies.
I have to say, we sustained a lot of damage however I feel to say that we sustained a level of damage like they do in the south is an insult to the south. Kind of like when we get snow here in Michigan and then they get snow in Atlanta but it's only sleet and like less than an inch and they shut the whole state down. Kind of like that. Point being this, any area that receives weather that they're not used to is never good ❤
My brother's wife was in a horse barn near Ka'zoo and had no idea b/c the government tweets or whatever didn't come for anyone in Indiana or Michigan for hours. I called him and he thought it was a joke. His phone would've gone-off otherwise, he said... Nope. Don't think that there's so much tech you don't have warn family, to me it is just more ways to fail, like it did... When ppl needed it.
Look up the Flint Beecher. While most of the ones I remember were small, we get some serious ones here, too. 1976 F4 In Macomb County, 1965 Palm Sunday that hit Chesterfield, MI just to name a couple.
Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio are not technically in the tornado belt, but they get the tail end of the tornadic systems. And some of the biggest outbreaks have gone through Indiana. So some of them are bound to stray into Michigan at times.
We had a few nasty ones over the years, the last big tornado I remember was in March of 2013 hitting Chelsea area. I remember a nasty system that moved thru most all of lower Michigan in 1982 or 1983, it was called an inland hurricane, did major damage everywhere.
Here's my lil conspiracy theory, I think the Earth is warning is about draining too much oil, it sort of considering us some sort of surface disease and it increases power of the tornadoes as a attempt to scratch it's surface and purge anything that's causing problems for it. Or the Earth is trying to kill us off so it can get to our bones, the Earth needs our bones buried directly into the soil, we have been depriving the Earth of our bones for years by putting ourselves in caskets and vaults....sure maybe the Earth can get to our bones even through vaults and caskets but we should make it easier on the Earth, it provides for us.
The world and Mother Nature is definitely changing. I never really heard about tornadoes in Michigan or West Virginia. These people that live in these areas were totally unprepared for this. Because this kinda of stuff doesn't occur in these places.
I have lived in Michigan for most of my 71 years, and we not only have tornadoes every year, we are prepared for them. Most people have basements. Those that don't know what to do in case of a tornado. That's why we don't have a lot of lives lost. Property damage can be pretty extensive, though.
Many many times Michigan has tornadoes. I live in Ohio right on the Michigan border and their storms are vicious, lots of open farm land , enclosed by lakes.
Every year. My family is from MI. Tornado watches & warnings are common. Having them touch down is less common, but happens. It's just not as common as Oklahoma, Missouri, and Kansas. I've seen footage of the Frankenmuth tornados that happened in the 90's and have a close friend that lost his vacation park trailer when a small tornado came by and dumped it upside down in a lake. Tornados touch down most frequently in the lower half of the mitten.
Michigan has tornadoes every year. Most are small and don't make the news. There's less loss of life than some other areas because most people in Michigan have basements, but property damage can be pretty extensive.
I'm not sure what you think is sooooo funny? Michigan has been surviving tornadoes since recorded history and likely before. This is not something new in Michigan. So "nature" has been 'doing it' in MI for hundreds of years.
00:35 imagine being the only house in the neighborhood that gets hit by the tornado. like wtf did he do for real
A tornado is the most unpredictable thing. I mean a trailer is obliterated next to unharmed trailers ten feet away. A business is flattened twenty feet from an untouched business. They are some scary MF.
not if its geo engineered, get a clue....
@@22lilacsky, phew, mental illness is no joke; there is help for you, however.
Thank goodness it wasn't a stronger tornado!
Incredible damages , prayers to all those affected by this Catastrophe ❤🙏❤️🙏
Those Trailers were so freaking lucky!!!
My son works at Zeigler motorsports and watched it hit this park and cross I 94
Just pray for families that lost everything and I pray that the people that lost their pets find them healthy and unhurt. Pray for Wade, who they have not found yet from Monday's storm in Oklahoma and please Lord comfort his grieving family.
Prayers🙏
Talked to a lady at Circle K and she said it was bouncing or lifting up and down.
Heartbreaking for those impacted.
Looks like it was hopping around a bit.
At the 3:02 mark or so you will see an overturned semi. My old house we moved from in 2020 is the closest to semi. Drove by and it was sad to see our old place ruined. Be safe cleaning up everyone and take care. Hopefully insurance has your back.
Raised some hell for sure 😮
When I was a kid, I used to believe tornadoes were the pencil erasers of God.
Whoa. Bet you were taught in Sunday school that the wicked were punished by tornadoes/floods/earthquakes etc. That's usually the case until it happens to you or someone you care about.
@@puttentanesame6687 nah, I did however grow up catholic, did the whole nun teachers thing. No Sunday school but I did church Wednesdays & Sundays growing up. Fear wasn't taught to any of the kids, other than putting up with bullies.
@@puttentanesame6687 it was a theory I had because a devastating tornado can blast through a town but sometimes left homes or businesses untouched.
Took a drive over there Friday May 10 unbalevable.
random damage path - amazing
Could have been much worse
Those are some green lawns.😮
I have to say, we sustained a lot of damage however I feel to say that we sustained a level of damage like they do in the south is an insult to the south. Kind of like when we get snow here in Michigan and then they get snow in Atlanta but it's only sleet and like less than an inch and they shut the whole state down. Kind of like that. Point being this, any area that receives weather that they're not used to is never good ❤
Those trees around the homes, might have them from being totally destroyed
My brother's wife was in a horse barn near Ka'zoo and had no idea b/c the government tweets or whatever didn't come for anyone in Indiana or Michigan for hours. I called him and he thought it was a joke. His phone would've gone-off otherwise, he said... Nope.
Don't think that there's so much tech you don't have warn family, to me it is just more ways to fail, like it did... When ppl needed it.
Tuck and roll, Michigan...TUCK AND ROLL!
Multiple vortex “dancer”
For sure. Very evident with the sporadic nature and shifting damage path.
Michigan gets tornadoes ? I never knew that !
Look up the Flint Beecher. While most of the ones I remember were small, we get some serious ones here, too. 1976 F4 In Macomb County, 1965 Palm Sunday that hit Chesterfield, MI just to name a couple.
RIGHT??! NOWHERE NEAR THE TORNADO BELT
Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio are not technically in the tornado belt, but they get the tail end of the tornadic systems. And some of the biggest outbreaks have gone through Indiana. So some of them are bound to stray into Michigan at times.
Average is about 16 a year
We had a few nasty ones over the years, the last big tornado I remember was in March of 2013 hitting Chelsea area. I remember a nasty system that moved thru most all of lower Michigan in 1982 or 1983, it was called an inland hurricane, did major damage everywhere.
Anybody hurt at the Fed Ex facility?
35💭
🙏🙏🛐🙏🌎🙏🇺🇲🙏🛐🙏🙏
geo engineering, nothing less, nothing more....
H.A.A.R.P
That has nothing to do with it. Michigan has had tornadoes every year, well before HAARP existed. Stop being ridiculous.
Solar flares have increased
Here's my lil conspiracy theory, I think the Earth is warning is about draining too much oil, it sort of considering us some sort of surface disease and it increases power of the tornadoes as a attempt to scratch it's surface and purge anything that's causing problems for it. Or the Earth is trying to kill us off so it can get to our bones, the Earth needs our bones buried directly into the soil, we have been depriving the Earth of our bones for years by putting ourselves in caskets and vaults....sure maybe the Earth can get to our bones even through vaults and caskets but we should make it easier on the Earth, it provides for us.
The world and Mother Nature is definitely changing. I never really heard about tornadoes in Michigan or West Virginia. These people that live in these areas were totally unprepared for this. Because this kinda of stuff doesn't occur in these places.
I have lived in Michigan for most of my 71 years, and we not only have tornadoes every year, we are prepared for them. Most people have basements. Those that don't know what to do in case of a tornado. That's why we don't have a lot of lives lost. Property damage can be pretty extensive, though.
How did you ever reach adulthood while remaining so ignorant???
Tornado in MI? Exactly when has that happened before
Edit : Sorry we asked, good to know it's just more of the same here
Many many times Michigan has tornadoes. I live in Ohio right on the Michigan border and their storms are vicious, lots of open farm land , enclosed by lakes.
Every year. My family is from MI. Tornado watches & warnings are common. Having them touch down is less common, but happens. It's just not as common as Oklahoma, Missouri, and Kansas. I've seen footage of the Frankenmuth tornados that happened in the 90's and have a close friend that lost his vacation park trailer when a small tornado came by and dumped it upside down in a lake. Tornados touch down most frequently in the lower half of the mitten.
May 13, 1980, in Kalamazoo.
Michigan has tornadoes every year. Most are small and don't make the news. There's less loss of life than some other areas because most people in Michigan have basements, but property damage can be pretty extensive.
1980 was the big one in Kalamazoo and there have been a couple of others. Tornadoes can happen anywhere
Anybody been manipulating the weather by way of cloud seeding,check it out if you are alive ! 🦆
Tonado in Michigan!!!! hahahahahahahahaha😮Nature can't do, but I know who can!!!😂😂😂😂😂
It's no laughing matter for those that have lost everything.
I'm not sure what you think is sooooo funny? Michigan has been surviving tornadoes since recorded history and likely before. This is not something new in Michigan. So "nature" has been 'doing it' in MI for hundreds of years.
@@bobdeyoung7261 It's being done on purpose! 😬
Nothing new to having tornadoes in Michigan.
@@chrisparker2118 60 years is what the news said! Very rare! Look it up!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣