I really appreciate that you just play these clips and don't talk incessantly over them, but still explain them before and after. Every YT channel I watch people are talking so fast and never even breathe and it is way overkill. It gets exhausting and I just shut it all off. Thanks for not doing that.
RIP The animal Shelter owners who died in Tonga while trying to save their dogs... 😢 They died as Heroes and I Hope they're in heaven with their puppies...💔
That landslide in Norway is terrifying! Wildfires in Southern California are freaky, to me. Back in September 1979, I drove from Virginia to Ventura, Cali, to help my sister-in-law move, after she was divorced. We drove down to San Diego, so I could see an old friend, where I would catch a red-eye, back to DC. As the plane took off, I looked down, out of my window, and it seemed like I was flying out of Hell. It was pitch black, above, and fire was down, under the plane. It looked surreal.
You might want to research your explanation for the Louisiana 'sinkhole'. It was caused by Shell Oil not knowing where they were drilling when in the lake on their oil platform. They made a miscalculation, they drilled right into the top of the salt mines below in their quest for more oil. Salt is very unstable when wet.
This one wasn't caused by oil drilling. You're thinking about the Lake Peigneur incident in 1980. This one is the Bayou Corn sinkhole, caused by a collapsing salt mine.
😮yep, that an earthquakes; can't imagine the feeling of having the forever( sturdy) ground beneath u suddenly splitting open like eggs as u disintegrate into the earths core
There is this little area that was across the lake from me. It was woods with an old cemetery in it. My parents would take us over to explore and look at the graves. I can still hear my mother, becareful there are sink holes.
If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. 1 John 1:9 ☦ Afterward Jesus findeth him in the temple, and said unto him, Behold, thou art made whole: sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto thee. John 5:14☦ Truly, these times of ignorance God overlooked, but now commands all men everywhere to repent. Acts 17:30☦
great video! really loved how you showcased these incredible moments. but honestly, i can't help but feel that some of these clips almost glamorize the devastation. shouldn't we be more focused on the human impact and recovery rather than just the spectacle of the disasters?
Thank you for showing the location of each disaster on a map. Most people these days are sadly lacking when it comes to geography. Maybe your maps will help remedy that in some small way.
Definitely a terrible and deverstating situation for the people of Turkey 🇹🇷 and Syria 🇸🇾 poor people. But also amazing when someone is pulled out alive especially when the death toll is over 22000
The filming of those disasters are very good ty to the people who put this together. I am sorry for the loss of lives and property. This is as close to these disasters I ever want to be. Again ty for sharing. 🙏🙏🙏
My husbands uncle lost his home in that Fire tornado in Redding, not even several months later, we lost our town of Paradise Ca, our home, everything we knew. It is crazy what nature can throw at you.
great video, really well put together! it's fascinating to see these moments captured, but i can’t help but wonder if recording these disasters for entertainment is crossing a line. i mean, aren’t we kind of desensitizing ourselves to real tragedies just for views?
@@justaskin8523 I dunno, they seem pretty confident in knowing that if there's a rather steep, wooded valley between them and the avalanche that they wouldn't bear the brunt of it. They look like this isn't their first rodeo 😅
I guess if they were pros and read the avalanche report beforehand- what you should do before starting a Tour - they knew it was safe enough. But you can always be mistaken.
These natural disasters serve as powerful reminders of the awesome power of nature and the importance of preparedness, resilience, and community support in the face of adversity.
I live in the Redding area where the Carr Fire took place. We are prone to wildfires every year, but this one was the scariest of them all. It approached Redding more than any other fires weve had. I'll never forget that year.
My parents home survived the Caldor fire, it's one of the few homes left, the whole town is gone, sadly wildfires don't get the kind of attention and financial support that hurricanes and tornadoes get
Years ago in my rural tiny town we had BASKETBALL SIZE HAIL! Damage was unbelievable. No one reported it though. The sky glowed red. It seemed to be the apocalypse.
There was an even larger mudslide caused by quick clay in Gjerdrum, Norway on 30.12.2020. It covered an area of 210 000 m². 10 people lost their lives, and 14 houses with 31 apartments were claimed by the mud.
great job on the video! it’s fascinating to see these natural disasters up close. however, i can’t help but feel that sometimes, the way these events are presented can overshadow the real human impact they have. shouldn’t we focus more on the communities affected rather than just the spectacle of the disasters?
We got some mudslides last year in austria too. They are often laden with stones, on one occasion half of the mountain came tumbling down. Stones as big as a small house just lying around. Bridges and streets torn away. Try cleaning THAT up..that one here was peanuts.
The collapsing ancient clay, was formed in a salty sea. With many thousands of years of rain the salt has leached out. Similar slides are well known in Scandinavia.
I thought the same thing! I was ready to start filling some landscape pots and wheelbarrow full of that rich topsoil. The soil was so dark and rich and would be great for growing plants!!
In 1980, my cousin was buried by an avalanche for 10 hours in Durango, Colorado on Christmas day. He survived, but he got a little frostbite. Almost lost his toes, tho.
I really enjoy your videos. You are one of the best online doing this work. Always an eye for detail. You demonstrate a great level of pride in your work. Keep it up! also, thanks for helping others in need.
5:08 Ok seriously?? Those were some IMPRESSIVELY BUILT homes. The stick built crap around here would fall apart and those things are floating like they're boats... This slide is absolutely the most insane footage I've seen...
@@email6743 Absolutely false. Bravery isn't reserved specifically for people who save others, and while it is commonly an aspect of a person or persons saving one another, bravery isn't always required to save a person. Are you implying that someone who was abused, but finds the courage to stand up to their abusers aren't brave? Do you really think that when one person speaks out against corruption at great risk to themselves and typically with no other reward than to know that they, in spite of the potential risk involved in such an act, chose to do what was right, aren't brave? Bravery at it's core isn't hinged upon the morality or reasoning behind it, it is simply choosing to do something with little or no regards to one's own well being. A philosophical person might say that bravery is when that for whatever reason, a person or people caring more about something in those moments than they care of themselves.
In Johanesburg South Africa, they frequently get hail storms that kill people particularly in cars. The cricket ball sized ice balls smash through windows and will crush a car roof down! It is quite common and happens every year.
If the storms happen every year, and they are a known risk, then cars should be designed accordingly. People should stop whinging and adapt to the conditions they already know will occur.
It's hard to believe that these disasters are bigger than the Indonesia or Japan tsunamis, which were each captured on video from many different angles.
It’s hard to believe you think a channel that wants viewers would post the same two disasters, when it does “filmed natural disaster” videos every few months.
Most people don't know that Denver has regularly occurring hail storms as well! The automobile body shops and roofers do a booming business in May and June.
I have to watch this stuff rn to remind me that things could've been a lot worse. The storm we had last week here in Ohio flooded our entire basement with 3 feet of water. And of course our homeowners insurance isn't paying for any of it. Took our 15k dollar car and wedged it in our garage, ruined our brand new washer and dryer, we have no heat or hot water. We just bought this house 4 months ago. I lost pictures and letters from my deceased father and birthday toys for my children and so much more. Over half of our clothes and strollers and beds and I could go on. However, as of now, nobody was hurt and the only damage to the actual house is the door from the basement to the garage that ripped off it's hinges. Other than that, the walls and floors are just fine (thank God they're solid concrete) and I was able to save some of my pictures, they look like they were wet but as long as I have the ones of my dad I don't care, I can take pictures of everyone here alive but I can never replace a picture of my father. Anyhow, seeing this makes me feel like that's just stupid. Like my house didn't get swept into the ocean and my other daily car still runs. We can buy new clothes and toys. And the main thing, we are alive!
There was a landslide in Gjerdrum on the 30 of December in 2020 just before the new year, and became a big case for everyone involved in it. That was also a quick clay slide just like the Alta Slide, and 14 houses was taken by the slide. Also 31 units got involved in it. It was marked with less fireworks on new years eve to salute to the 10 people who died in the landslide.
I'm from iowa, lived 30 miles northwest from Marshalltown. I watched this tornado form 2 miles east of Zearing, Iowa, population 535. Watched 7 small tornadoes merge together. 3 came from the north(spread 2 to 5 miles apart), 3 came from the west about 4 miles spread out(1 of these took out part of a friend's farm), 1 was coming from the south west(another friend had this one kiss their property). Once these 7 tornados hooked up it was massive. There were storm chasers all over northeast story county. Law enforcement was behind the storm, totally aware of it. Needless to say the noise in town and the sky to the east as each tornado was sucked into the growing EF3 was like a sci-fi movie. Once they all got sucked up with iowa dirt, trees, and buildings it took off like a switch was flipped. At that point I was outside watching standing next to a truck w a storm chasing team inside. The 3 guys looked at each other w a wild look and one guy said this is huge and it going to leave a big path of destruction. He looked at me and asked how to get to Marshalltown fast, i told him and they went from 0 to 70 out of town towards the destruction. Went inside to flip on tv to watch it unfold. This part of iowa has many wind events that continue to increase every couple of years, in size and frequency. Many times in the last 50 years I have stood outside and feel and watch the clouds form and atmosphere churn.
Another drastic incident happened in one of the small coal mining towns in northeastern Pennsylvania. An underground fire started in 1962 in Centralia, PA, when someone burning trash (no formal trash pick up at that time) in a small hole set a coal vein on fire. It’s been burning since. Residents have long gone. My home with my parents was about 11-15 miles from that area. Mother Nature is difficult sometimes, but beautiful other times.
I have experienced a baseball-sized hail storm here in Queensland Australia. Within a min of running in the door after seeing the blackest cloud in my life. Hearing roof tiles shatter,sounded like boulders hitting my garage door was frightening. No foliage on plants & trees anywhere for a full year.
Wow, this video is super well put together! The footage is just incredible. but honestly, I can't help but wonder if capturing these disasters on camera is more about sensationalism than raising awareness. I mean, shouldn't we focus more on prevention and helping victims rather than showcasing their suffering for views?
I'm surprised the hail one made this list. We've had many many worse than that. One of my siblings survived being battered while camping by hail the size of baseballs. There were holes where it went through the roof of their camper. Luckily they had a wood shelter near by to take cover in. That was one of the worst. A lot of people don't make it in some of the hailstorms here.
The biggest natural disaster in Australian history (based only on insurance claims) was a hailstorm that hit metropolitan Sydney in 1999. People recorded it on video cameras. It completely destroyed all the rooves in two suburbs. Over $2B in damages.
Seeing a lot of disaster videos where debris falls into the ocean makes me wonder how much stuff is at the bottom of the ocean? Supposedly only 5 percent of the ocean floor has been "discovered"/explored...
agree! About 20 years ago, I heard a weather expert talking about how we were going to be getting more and stronger weather events like hurricanes because of the global warning. He stated that at that time, 50% of the U.S. population lived within approximately 50+ miles of a coast line. His point was actually about how “in the near future” FEMA was not going to be able to provide the necessary help to victims of catastrophic weather events, particularly floods from hurricanes, because there would be too much damage. I’m guessing he knew what he was talking about!
@@cydkriletich6538 Well, when you can see your life just “float away” as it were, then the realisation hits. I live in Australia and we have been experiencing catastrophic floods not long after catastrophic bushfires and it’s hard to take in! Nature is the apex predator!! We can’t control it, tame it but we have to live with it.
It’s not an obsession Rod. It’s who we are. The Earth is 80% water man so naturally we’re going to be close to it somewhere. Besides we’re water based animals. But yes it will always be costly. But somehow I bet you’ve never felt the affects to your wallet.
There are natural reasons why we live near water, number one, we need it to live. Most of the cities close to water are there because it was used for ships to carry goods and people in and out of the harbors. Many logging companies, for example, used rivers to carry their logs back in the day before we had cars or trucks, those villages where the companies were located still exist today and it's not like we'll move the whole village, only Kiruna does that as far as I know but not because of water. My mothers hometown moved a year after it was founded closer to the water, that was 400 years ago, (not in an area where disasters happen.)
HRISTOS să indure spre omenirea acestei planetă și căință oameni buni și rugăciune multă vreme vremurile așa cum sunt DOAMNE AJUTA la toți căință și BUNUL DUMNZEU să indure de păcate grele și căință oameni buni
The landslide was so enormous it was honestly difficult to discern what my eyes were looking at until you panned the camera back further. At that time I was able to detect a gigantic piece of Earth slowly being washed into the sea. I was hoping to myself no people or animals were drowning in that footage
great video! it's really impressive how you showcased these natural disasters. that being said, I sometimes wonder if there's an ethical line when it comes to filming such tragic events. shouldn't we be focusing more on the people affected rather than just the spectacle of the disasters?
I was born in California in 65 and lived there several years.I remember seeing houses with dried out cedar shingles on the roof and sometimes for siding.Also too houses built right on top of dirt cliffs,some held up by long poles.These 2 things alone have caused so many disasters out there.Dont know if they still do.
Are you talking about the fire in Shasta County? It was started by a trailer wheel making sparks when one of it's tires went flat........what wasn't mentioned was that the guy who was towing the trailer knew the tire was flat and still continued to drive along side the road. Also, the three other tires on the trailer were dated December of 1992, so basically the guy was using 25+ year old tires. I live in Paradise, California. Paradise is the mountain town where everything burned to the ground. The only houses built on the sides of cliffs are the old ones built decades ago.......no new construction on cliffs is allowed anymore. Another thing, here's how dumb California is: If you own residential property, above 1,500 feet elevation (hills & mountains) you can't remove any dead trees/branches from the ground because it "disrupts wildlife habitat".
@@megatonesilva6546 No.Just in general.Those house that were made of dried out cedar or other dried wood literally only took a small spark to set them off.They looked nice,but....
@@katedaphne4495 Because you have seen new houses do this, but old houses do not? Video evidence, not your opinion, please. You are aware that older houses typically had heavier studs (true 2" X 4") on 12" centers instead of 16"? In addition, Joists and trusses were the actual dimensions instead of "class" to save money and materials and were installed, again at 12" instead of 16" Corners, headers, sills, everything was more robust in older houses. It's fine if you don't actually know anything about house construction but have been led to believe that new=better.
@@contumelious-8440 I'm not sure why he said that ( My roommate uses my tablet sometimes ) Maybe because he is a builder He was trying to be funny I don't know
great video, really enjoyed the footage and the way you presented the information! but i can't help but think that maybe showing these disasters can desensitize people to the real-life devastation they cause. it’s a fine line between education and entertainment, ya know? what do u all think?
There was a hailstorm that hit in the 70’s where I was living in nrthn NSW. It was so heavy that 6-7 cows that took shelter in a gully were covered in hail there and died, from cold and asphyxiation. My siblings and I had never seen snow and didn’t realise how cold it was when we walked up there in thongs. The dump of hail was very narrow, less that 300 yards but quite long. It was unbelievable to see feet of hail.
I’m curious as to how this narrator would describe the hailstorm (May 9, 2017) in Lakewood. Not Denver. Denver got just pea-sized! Lakewood got… wrecked. Definitely not the best time to be trying to help a stranger through a panic attack and be high on lidocaine. I’d gotten dental work done just before the hail hit. It was pretty intense
We had a devastating hailstorm this summer in France, one of the most terrifying experiences of my life. Some hailstones were the size of a baseball. ua-cam.com/video/8jSWaZKnQ7Q/v-deo.html
@@icarusbinns3156 But I mean honestly lidocaine is one of the weakest pain killers, it’s usually only used for topical issues like shingles. Novocaine is the much stronger of the two which is why it’s used for dental work usually like extractions. But neither of them are narcotic or even controlled substances 🤷🏼♀️
The Tonga volcanic eruption has affected all of the weather in the southern hemisphere. It sent a massive amount of water into the atmosphere changing the normal weather dynamics. The weather we have had since the eruption it vastly different from the norm. Our weather in Australia has been very uncharacteristically wet, very unstable, hot cold hot cold..
great video! i really appreciate the effort put into showcasing these natural disasters. however, i can't help but feel that some clips are a bit sensationalized. i mean, while it's fascinating to see how nature can be so powerful, do we really need to focus so much on the destruction? it's kind of a double-edged sword, right?
I was raised in tornado alley and we’ve had close calls with twisters. It’s a shame that we never had video footage of it like seen here. But, we were able to jump in the car and see the damage done.
I grew up in a state that had a lot of tornadoes. When I tell people that I refuse to live in a house that doesn’t have a basement/storm shelter they say that I am overreacting. I’ll tell you though, go through it once and you’ll never want to do it again!
@@ryzzie9610 yeah I understand my friend has gone through it and she told me all that happened that alone has made me to go to any countries that has alot of tornados. Greetings from Miami how are you doing hope the weather condition over there is favourable
I really appreciate that you just play these clips and don't talk incessantly over them, but still explain them before and after. Every YT channel I watch people are talking so fast and never even breathe and it is way overkill. It gets exhausting and I just shut it all off. Thanks for not doing that.
This channel is shit.
Full of lies and deception.
AGREED
a year later, still in agreement 👍
"Can you believe how powerful nature is? If you've survived a massive storm, what was going through your mind as it happened?"
That white house in the fjord mud slide was well built. It slid out to sea and came back to where it started still intact!
Amazing things can happen in the worst of times.
hey/."With the rivers overflowing their banks so often now, have floods affected your life or home? How did you manage during those critical times?"
RIP The animal Shelter owners who died in Tonga while trying to save their dogs... 😢 They died as Heroes and I Hope they're in heaven with their puppies...💔
That landslide in Norway is terrifying!
Wildfires in Southern California are freaky, to me. Back in September 1979, I drove from Virginia to Ventura, Cali, to help my sister-in-law move, after she was divorced. We drove down to San Diego, so I could see an old friend, where I would catch a red-eye, back to DC. As the plane took off, I looked down, out of my window, and it seemed like I was flying out of Hell. It was pitch black, above, and fire was down, under the plane. It looked surreal.
You might want to research your explanation for the Louisiana 'sinkhole'. It was caused by Shell Oil not knowing where they were drilling when in the lake on their oil platform. They made a miscalculation, they drilled right into the top of the salt mines below in their quest for more oil. Salt is very unstable when wet.
Think you will find that the sinkhole your talking about is on the video
This one wasn't caused by oil drilling. You're thinking about the Lake Peigneur incident in 1980. This one is the Bayou Corn sinkhole, caused by a collapsing salt mine.
Hhgg to u hi du
Energy denier!
😅00ppl
Sinkholes have to be one of the scariest things on earth. I can't imagine how deeply entombed things are that get sucked into one.
😮yep, that an earthquakes; can't imagine the feeling of having the forever( sturdy) ground beneath u suddenly splitting open like eggs as u disintegrate into the earths core
thats called phobia :)
There is this little area that was across the lake from me. It was woods with an old cemetery in it. My parents would take us over to explore and look at the graves. I can still hear my mother, becareful there are sink holes.
@@Marie.king06 MORE STORIES
To the 2 animal shelter owners that died trying to save their dogs, God bless you you were both real life heroes
I'm sure their parents are happy for the dogs...
Le type a trouvé le mot juste :” OH putain !”
C'est pas une coulée c'est carrément un laar, surtout aux vues de la couleur. 😮
@@gillesguillaumin6603yeah that made no sense at all
How stupid.
@@gillesguillaumin6603 Cela n'a aucun sens traduit en anglais, très perturbant
That white house in the landslide must have been REALLY well built-it held up amazingly
If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. 1 John 1:9 ☦
Afterward Jesus findeth him in the temple, and said unto him, Behold, thou art made whole: sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto thee. John 5:14☦
Truly, these times of ignorance God overlooked, but now commands all men everywhere to repent. Acts 17:30☦
It was build by slaves
Just circling back around and place me back please. Thank you
No fr whoever built that needs to build my house on god. That shits armoured
That is why Jesus instructed us to not build your house on Sand
Which applies to Real sands and spiritual sand..
great video! really loved how you showcased these incredible moments. but honestly, i can't help but feel that some of these clips almost glamorize the devastation. shouldn't we be more focused on the human impact and recovery rather than just the spectacle of the disasters?
Excellent video. Kudos to you for not talking at certain times and double kudos for not spraying music all over the image :-)
I guess the level of sheer terror felt by those guys in the avalanche is indicated by the volume of their on-camera laughter.
Stupidity should be a crime.. sheer terror my ssa!!!!!... idiots, in the wake of an avalanche
Snow won't hurt you, it's all soft and fluffy. I know, I've played in it.
@@binkwillans5138ur dumb tht shi is ice
Respect for the guy who recorded the footage.
Thank you for showing the location of each disaster on a map. Most people these days are sadly lacking when it comes to geography. Maybe your maps will help remedy that in some small way.
I agree. Very useful and informative. Gives a more complete picture.
@@cherylmacvane8791 yeah my geography isn’t that good, but what a disaster. Just been watching the news on turkey, just terrible
They can't read maps either!
@@jimamizzi1 Devastating.
Definitely a terrible and deverstating situation for the people of Turkey 🇹🇷 and Syria 🇸🇾 poor people. But also amazing when someone is pulled out alive especially when the death toll is over 22000
Norway moving into the sea was truly an incredible sight!👀🤯
👀
The filming of those disasters are very good ty to the people who put this together. I am sorry for the loss of lives and property. This is as close to these disasters I ever want to be. Again ty for sharing. 🙏🙏🙏
My husbands uncle lost his home in that Fire tornado in Redding, not even several months later, we lost our town of Paradise Ca, our home, everything we knew. It is crazy what nature can throw at you.
Thanks for the video, very highlighting.
Im so sorry
I worked on both the Carr and Camp fires. I'm glad you made it.
RIP Firefighter Stokes. So very sad.
great video, really well put together! it's fascinating to see these moments captured, but i can’t help but wonder if recording these disasters for entertainment is crossing a line. i mean, aren’t we kind of desensitizing ourselves to real tragedies just for views?
'But that soon turned to fear when they saw the avalanche heading straight for them'
*skiers laughing and joking throughout*
Yeah, those skiers survived in spite of their own foolishness.
@@justaskin8523 I dunno, they seem pretty confident in knowing that if there's a rather steep, wooded valley between them and the avalanche that they wouldn't bear the brunt of it. They look like this isn't their first rodeo 😅
Laughing in the face of death?? Not too smart!
I guess if they were pros and read the avalanche report beforehand- what you should do before starting a Tour - they knew it was safe enough. But you can always be mistaken.
Unfortunately theses people are breeders.
Excellent video, thanks for sharing, the clear narration is very helpful for us the English Language Learners.
Greetings from Ecuador.
These natural disasters serve as powerful reminders of the awesome power of nature and the importance of preparedness, resilience, and community support in the face of adversity.
I live in the Redding area where the Carr Fire took place. We are prone to wildfires every year, but this one was the scariest of them all. It approached Redding more than any other fires weve had. I'll never forget that year.
My parents home survived the Caldor fire, it's one of the few homes left, the whole town is gone, sadly wildfires don't get the kind of attention and financial support that hurricanes and tornadoes get
Curious what happened to the rv owner
The hail storm guy sounded like a panicked GTA NPC lol
Years ago in my rural tiny town we had BASKETBALL SIZE HAIL! Damage was unbelievable. No one reported it though. The sky glowed red. It seemed to be the apocalypse.
The landslip at Alta is crazy. You can litereally see a tsunami from cause to finish ( allbeit a relatively small one)
And the houses!!! Damn they are built good! Lol
There was a dog on that bit of land. By accounts found (in a different video) the dog was okay. Muddy and scared, but uninjured
The tragedy was compounded by the fact that those people don't even have the land anymore to rebuild on.
There was an even larger mudslide caused by quick clay in Gjerdrum, Norway on 30.12.2020. It covered an area of 210 000 m². 10 people lost their lives, and 14 houses with 31 apartments were claimed by the mud.
Wasn't that something? It was strange to watch the water swirl back into the area of the slide with the houses floating and bobbing around. >.
Thank you for your wonderful commentary. You gives the viewer to watch and take in the video before commenting.
Mankind is so vulnerable before the power of nature 😢😢😢😢😢
correction Power of God not power of nature
@@angelawaithira6558 wrong, sorry. nature exists whether or not you believe in god.
I hate god-botherers so much :( go to church or something and leave the rest of us alone.
Many tnks for makinG video 💜💜💜🖤🖤🖤🖤lots of love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩🇧🇩
2024 wayanad chooralmala landscape 😢
great job on the video! it’s fascinating to see these natural disasters up close. however, i can’t help but feel that sometimes, the way these events are presented can overshadow the real human impact they have. shouldn’t we focus more on the communities affected rather than just the spectacle of the disasters?
Even the mud in Switzerland looks beautiful
That what I thought. I was like that's some rich looking soil. Would have taken buckets of it for growing.
We got some mudslides last year in austria too. They are often laden with stones, on one occasion half of the mountain came tumbling down. Stones as big as a small house just lying around. Bridges and streets torn away. Try cleaning THAT up..that one here was peanuts.
Great vídeo. The voice and entonation of the speaker is perfect and clean. Make easy understand his english. Congratulations.
Excellent videos well done.
Matatan.🤔. Ribirin HS,
2:45 The sinkhole in Schmalkalden formed in the middle of the night, thats why there's no footage of it
Das ist Nachterstett und nicht Schmalkalden! Der Erdrutsch war am Tag und nicht in der Nacht!
@@meinnameisthase5215so why no footage?
Imagine the people just chillin in there house and there whole property starts to move
Then they wake up in the middle of the ocean💀
@@chaoticnovaplaysshorts126 67h
I get that regularly - I live in a caravan does that count ?😁
great title and great video now
The collapsing ancient clay, was formed in a salty sea. With many thousands of years of rain the salt has leached out. Similar slides are well known in Scandinavia.
Welcome to planet Earth where NOTHING is normal
I love the fact that people like to say:this is my piece of land....from these videos we can realize that nothing belongs to humans except the soul
And that belongs to the devil.
@@christiano8088 wrong, all souls belong to God.
Tell em again@@galewinds7696
That mudslide’s mud looked like such rich dirt! Looked amazing.
bahaha I said almost the same thing then reda yr comment right after!!! lol Id love to have some that dirt!!😁🤙💯💥💥 greetings form Paducak Ky!!!
I thought the same thing! I was ready to start filling some landscape pots and wheelbarrow full of that rich topsoil. The soil was so dark and rich and would be great for growing plants!!
HAH I'm glad I'm not the only one that thought that. That looked like some beautiful rich soil right there.
That's what I was thinking!
My thought also☺️
Imagine the veggies you could grw in that!
YUM
This channel is great at taking other people's videos and adding new audio. _!_
In 1980, my cousin was buried by an avalanche for 10 hours in Durango, Colorado on Christmas day. He survived, but he got a little frostbite. Almost lost his toes, tho.
Did ne movė to Florida after that
Oh my gosh that's wild I'm from Durango Colorado
I really enjoy your videos. You are one of the best online doing this work. Always an eye for detail. You demonstrate a great level of pride in your work. Keep it up! also, thanks for helping others in need.
I like the narration voice too. It may be an A.I. but if so, it sounds better than most.
@@JustMe-vk4fn y0
Very interesting video to learn🤔👍
5:08 Ok seriously?? Those were some IMPRESSIVELY BUILT homes. The stick built crap around here would fall apart and those things are floating like they're boats... This slide is absolutely the most insane footage I've seen...
Imagine that one person is like:
“Ah finally cleaned every part of my house…”
Then the mud flood comes
“Bro that took 3 days ;-;”
To get the mud off your property... Takes weeks with heavy Equipment. Once it dries, you got concrete. The.mud is laden with stones, too.
The journalist wearing a vest but no helmet 😏
2018 Kerala flood 60000 house vanished 😢😢
Where 60000 houses ? Is it officially announced?
2024 10 days before kerala wayanad landslide 😢😢 oh god i never forgot 😢
2018 & 2024 wayanad
Alta was amazing. A whole section of the coast with those properties just floating out to sea.
I’ll bet the guy in the hailstorm is glad he has a metal roof now lol
those hail stones have done a lot of damage to women legs and arse.
"one man was brave enough to stand in an alley and record the twister as it tore down the street" ... uh ... no ... one man was STUPID enough
Exactly!
Standing in front of a glass door or window of some kind with all of that whipping around. Dude was about to win a Darwin award.
Yeah bravery would involve saving someone.
@@email6743 Excellent point!
@@email6743 Absolutely false. Bravery isn't reserved specifically for people who save others, and while it is commonly an aspect of a person or persons saving one another, bravery isn't always required to save a person. Are you implying that someone who was abused, but finds the courage to stand up to their abusers aren't brave? Do you really think that when one person speaks out against corruption at great risk to themselves and typically with no other reward than to know that they, in spite of the potential risk involved in such an act, chose to do what was right, aren't brave? Bravery at it's core isn't hinged upon the morality or reasoning behind it, it is simply choosing to do something with little or no regards to one's own well being. A philosophical person might say that bravery is when that for whatever reason, a person or people caring more about something in those moments than they care of themselves.
In Johanesburg South Africa, they frequently get hail storms that kill people particularly in cars. The cricket ball sized ice balls smash through windows and will crush a car roof down! It is quite common and happens every year.
If the storms happen every year, and they are a known risk, then cars should be designed accordingly. People should stop whinging and adapt to the conditions they already know will occur.
Anyone watching 2024 because natural disasters are fkin up the world rn
It's hard to believe that these disasters are bigger than the Indonesia or Japan tsunamis, which were each captured on video from many different angles.
It’s hard to believe you think a channel that wants viewers would post the same two disasters, when it does “filmed natural disaster” videos every few months.
Like everyone doesn't know about those 2 already.. They made world wide news for a while.. Most people haven't heard of these.
Stolen images and spoken blabla = very, very good channel. Never sée better in the entire human world.
Most people don't know that Denver has regularly occurring hail storms as well! The automobile body shops and roofers do a booming business in May and June.
I have to watch this stuff rn to remind me that things could've been a lot worse. The storm we had last week here in Ohio flooded our entire basement with 3 feet of water. And of course our homeowners insurance isn't paying for any of it. Took our 15k dollar car and wedged it in our garage, ruined our brand new washer and dryer, we have no heat or hot water. We just bought this house 4 months ago. I lost pictures and letters from my deceased father and birthday toys for my children and so much more. Over half of our clothes and strollers and beds and I could go on. However, as of now, nobody was hurt and the only damage to the actual house is the door from the basement to the garage that ripped off it's hinges. Other than that, the walls and floors are just fine (thank God they're solid concrete) and I was able to save some of my pictures, they look like they were wet but as long as I have the ones of my dad I don't care, I can take pictures of everyone here alive but I can never replace a picture of my father. Anyhow, seeing this makes me feel like that's just stupid. Like my house didn't get swept into the ocean and my other daily car still runs. We can buy new clothes and toys. And the main thing, we are alive!
There was a landslide in Gjerdrum on the 30 of December in 2020 just before the new year, and became a big case for everyone involved in it.
That was also a quick clay slide just like the Alta Slide, and 14 houses was taken by the slide.
Also 31 units got involved in it.
It was marked with less fireworks on new years eve to salute to the 10 people who died in the landslide.
I'm from iowa, lived 30 miles northwest from Marshalltown. I watched this tornado form 2 miles east of Zearing, Iowa, population 535. Watched 7 small tornadoes merge together. 3 came from the north(spread 2 to 5 miles apart), 3 came from the west about 4 miles spread out(1 of these took out part of a friend's farm), 1 was coming from the south west(another friend had this one kiss their property). Once these 7 tornados hooked up it was massive. There were storm chasers all over northeast story county. Law enforcement was behind the storm, totally aware of it.
Needless to say the noise in town and the sky to the east as each tornado was sucked into the growing EF3 was like a sci-fi movie. Once they all got sucked up with iowa dirt, trees, and buildings it took off like a switch was flipped. At that point I was outside watching standing next to a truck w a storm chasing team inside. The 3 guys looked at each other w a wild look and one guy said this is huge and it going to leave a big path of destruction. He looked at me and asked how to get to Marshalltown fast, i told him and they went from 0 to 70 out of town towards the destruction.
Went inside to flip on tv to watch it unfold.
This part of iowa has many wind events that continue to increase every couple of years, in size and frequency. Many times in the last 50 years I have stood outside and feel and watch the clouds form and atmosphere churn.
A must-watch for anyone fascinated by the awe-inspiring and, at times, terrifying beauty of natural disasters.
Another drastic incident happened in one of the small coal mining towns in northeastern Pennsylvania. An underground fire started in 1962 in Centralia, PA, when someone burning trash (no formal trash pick up at that time) in a small hole set a coal vein on fire. It’s been burning since. Residents have long gone. My home with my parents was about 11-15 miles from that area. Mother Nature is difficult sometimes, but beautiful other times.
Agreed, but that one was 100% man made! So sad for the entire area
That is such a tragedy. I always thought I wanted to go see that area but I really don't want to. I'm from SW PA
@@susanjlainemills3201 Who knew that a huge coal vein was underneath that small group of houses? Only Mother Nature!
That is not a natural disaster. It is covered in another video.
Wow.. that's incredible!
This is how civilizations disappear from history.
I have experienced a baseball-sized hail storm here in Queensland Australia.
Within a min of running in the door after seeing the blackest cloud in my life.
Hearing roof tiles shatter,sounded like boulders hitting my garage door was frightening.
No foliage on plants & trees anywhere for a full year.
Same here in Texas. My mom kept a softball sized piece as a trophy
@@wyattb20 Lost mine when my ‘fridge died
Agree back in Kansas I had my car total heil the size of baseballx
I can't believe Tracey or black Tuesday aren't mentioned
@@kellythomas1933 Being that Tracey was so long ago now is probably why it isn’t mentioned.
"Brave enough to stand in an alley and record?" I say "Stupid enough to stand in an alley and record."
In Johannesburg yesterday we had 4 hailstorms which was bizarre
He aint just showing us disaters footage
He also doing geography
Wow, this video is super well put together! The footage is just incredible. but honestly, I can't help but wonder if capturing these disasters on camera is more about sensationalism than raising awareness. I mean, shouldn't we focus more on prevention and helping victims rather than showcasing their suffering for views?
I'm surprised the hail one made this list. We've had many many worse than that. One of my siblings survived being battered while camping by hail the size of baseballs. There were holes where it went through the roof of their camper. Luckily they had a wood shelter near by to take cover in. That was one of the worst. A lot of people don't make it in some of the hailstorms here.
The biggest natural disaster in Australian history (based only on insurance claims) was a hailstorm that hit metropolitan Sydney in 1999. People recorded it on video cameras. It completely destroyed all the rooves in two suburbs. Over $2B in damages.
OMG
THIS IS SO SOOOOOOOOO SCARY
@@jimhenry7156 there was a big push to get more panel beaters cause a lot of. Cars were damaged.
I honestly saw the hail storm and thought that happened in Texas like last month.
Seeing a lot of disaster videos where debris falls into the ocean makes me wonder how much stuff is at the bottom of the ocean? Supposedly only 5 percent of the ocean floor has been "discovered"/explored...
In Africa we only have 1 natural disaster which is POVERTY
When Hongatongahalahaopei a massive volcano exploded...
That name...😢
7:18 .... Jeezus how heavy are those company trucks?
Brother Thanks for your wonderful videos
And nice of Explaining 🙏
God bless you 🙏
There were 19 deaths at a base camp on Mt. Everest, 10 of which were Sherpas, from an avalanche that was triggered by the earthquakes that hit Nepal.
Our obsession with living by the water can be costly
agree! About 20 years ago, I heard a weather expert talking about how we were going to be getting more and stronger weather events like hurricanes because of the global warning. He stated that at that time, 50% of the U.S. population lived within approximately 50+ miles of a coast line. His point was actually about how “in the near future” FEMA was not going to be able to provide the necessary help to victims of catastrophic weather events, particularly floods from hurricanes, because there would be too much damage. I’m guessing he knew what he was talking about!
@@cydkriletich6538 Well, when you can see your life just “float away” as it were, then the realisation hits. I live in Australia and we have been experiencing catastrophic floods not long after catastrophic bushfires and it’s hard to take in! Nature is the apex predator!! We can’t control it, tame it but we have to live with it.
It’s not an obsession Rod. It’s who we are. The Earth is 80% water man so naturally we’re going to be close to it somewhere. Besides we’re water based animals. But yes it will always be costly. But somehow I bet you’ve never felt the affects to your wallet.
There are natural reasons why we live near water, number one, we need it to live. Most of the cities close to water are there because it was used for ships to carry goods and people in and out of the harbors. Many logging companies, for example, used rivers to carry their logs back in the day before we had cars or trucks, those villages where the companies were located still exist today and it's not like we'll move the whole village, only Kiruna does that as far as I know but not because of water. My mothers hometown moved a year after it was founded closer to the water, that was 400 years ago, (not in an area where disasters happen.)
It's literally how animals survive... where the hell else do you go?
I live in Oklahoma and the famous May third tornado went through about half a mile from my house on my grandpa’s birthday
That hailstorm looks like spring in Texas. Not uncommon at all, I'm afraid.
Mother Nature can strike mercilessly.
HRISTOS să indure spre omenirea acestei planetă și căință oameni buni și rugăciune multă vreme vremurile așa cum sunt DOAMNE AJUTA la toți căință și BUNUL DUMNZEU să indure de păcate grele și căință oameni buni
What about the non-Christians?
5:00 the 2-story white house is doing great as a boat.
Incredible!!
Amazing
The landslide was so enormous it was honestly difficult to discern what my eyes were looking at until you panned the camera back further. At that time I was able to detect a gigantic piece of Earth slowly being washed into the sea. I was hoping to myself no people or animals were drowning in that footage
you recorded it?
Love how Nature hits back after Humans Destroy for Profit. ROCK ON NATURE She's Beautiful.
great video! it's really impressive how you showcased these natural disasters. that being said, I sometimes wonder if there's an ethical line when it comes to filming such tragic events. shouldn't we be focusing more on the people affected rather than just the spectacle of the disasters?
I was born in California in 65 and lived there several years.I remember seeing houses with dried out cedar shingles on the roof and sometimes for siding.Also too houses built right on top of dirt cliffs,some held up by long poles.These 2 things alone have caused so many disasters out there.Dont know if they still do.
Are you talking about the fire in Shasta County? It was started by a trailer wheel making sparks when one of it's tires went flat........what wasn't mentioned was that the guy who was towing the trailer knew the tire was flat and still continued to drive along side the road. Also, the three other tires on the trailer were dated December of 1992, so basically the guy was using 25+ year old tires.
I live in Paradise, California. Paradise is the mountain town where everything burned to the ground.
The only houses built on the sides of cliffs are the old ones built decades ago.......no new construction on cliffs is allowed anymore.
Another thing, here's how dumb California is: If you own residential property, above 1,500 feet elevation (hills & mountains) you can't remove any dead trees/branches from the ground because it "disrupts wildlife habitat".
@megatonesilva6546 I spent 45 days working on the Carr fire, but only about 2 weeks on the Camp fire clean up.
@@megatonesilva6546 No.Just in general.Those house that were made of dried out cedar or other dried wood literally only took a small spark to set them off.They looked nice,but....
You said the Biden presidency. Ok b👀mer 😂
Wow, Mother Nature is powerful. Rain⛈🌪⚡🌊
Gaw damn! that white house slipping into the Alta was well built
as someone who lives in iowa… seeing the video of the dude outside recording during a tornado is the most iowan thing i’ve seen
All these intense disasters are absolutely mind blowing
Great video
That white two story house at the 3:25 point and on was really well built to withstand all that movement. WOW!
Any new house would be fine.
@@katedaphne4495 Because you have seen new houses do this, but old houses do not? Video evidence, not your opinion, please.
You are aware that older houses typically had heavier studs (true 2" X 4") on 12" centers instead of 16"? In addition, Joists and trusses were the actual dimensions instead of "class" to save money and materials and were installed, again at 12" instead of 16"
Corners, headers, sills, everything was more robust in older houses. It's fine if you don't actually know anything about house construction but have been led to believe that new=better.
@@contumelious-8440 it’s cool that you know all that abt houses 😮
@Sir Ridesalot, that is what I said too! 😳
@@contumelious-8440
I'm not sure why he said that
( My roommate uses my tablet sometimes )
Maybe because he is a builder
He was trying to be funny
I don't know
great video, really enjoyed the footage and the way you presented the information! but i can't help but think that maybe showing these disasters can desensitize people to the real-life devastation they cause. it’s a fine line between education and entertainment, ya know? what do u all think?
There was a hailstorm that hit in the 70’s where I was living in nrthn NSW. It was so heavy that 6-7 cows that took shelter in a gully were covered in hail there and died, from cold and asphyxiation. My siblings and I had never seen snow and didn’t realise how cold it was when we walked up there in thongs. The dump of hail was very narrow, less that 300 yards but quite long. It was unbelievable to see feet of hail.
Ohs hope you guys are safe abd should leave that place to a more safer place to avoid lost
Wow. Crazy. I grew up in NSW (Wollongong, Sydney, Newcastle) but have lived in the USA for many years. Where was it?
@@JillofAllTrades2 you lived in US?
@@JillofAllTrades2 Just out of Murwillumbah, on the Tweed.
Wow! Amazing 😮😮😮
I’m curious as to how this narrator would describe the hailstorm (May 9, 2017) in Lakewood. Not Denver. Denver got just pea-sized! Lakewood got… wrecked.
Definitely not the best time to be trying to help a stranger through a panic attack and be high on lidocaine. I’d gotten dental work done just before the hail hit. It was pretty intense
We had a devastating hailstorm this summer in France, one of the most terrifying experiences of my life. Some hailstones were the size of a baseball. ua-cam.com/video/8jSWaZKnQ7Q/v-deo.html
Esa granizada no es nada x la región donde yo vivo he visto granizo del tamaño de pelotas de golf...en España Aragón Zaragoza la Almunia
I’ve never ever heard of anyone using lidocaine to get high lol. Not saying it didn’t happen, just find it amusing
@@goodbyebluesky27 dental work. And I just react oddly to strong painkillers
@@icarusbinns3156 But I mean honestly lidocaine is one of the weakest pain killers, it’s usually only used for topical issues like shingles. Novocaine is the much stronger of the two which is why it’s used for dental work usually like extractions. But neither of them are narcotic or even controlled substances 🤷🏼♀️
The Tonga volcanic eruption has affected all of the weather in the southern hemisphere. It sent a massive amount of water into the atmosphere changing the normal weather dynamics. The weather we have had since the eruption it vastly different from the norm. Our weather in Australia has been very uncharacteristically wet, very unstable, hot cold hot cold..
Hard to even imagine the hardships in Pakistan. Those numbers are soul crushing.
lololol. done to themselves.
@@kookoo6128 archaic religious practices.
In Pakistan -
Fresh meat !
It's not what it is.
It's how you prepare it.
@@riderinsanjose337 Have some shish-kabob?
great video........just a small taste and a glimpse of what is to come
That white home was very well built.
great video! i really appreciate the effort put into showcasing these natural disasters. however, i can't help but feel that some clips are a bit sensationalized. i mean, while it's fascinating to see how nature can be so powerful, do we really need to focus so much on the destruction? it's kind of a double-edged sword, right?
I was raised in tornado alley and we’ve had close calls with twisters. It’s a shame that we never had video footage of it like seen here. But, we were able to jump in the car and see the damage done.
How you guys are safe and there is no more disaster there
I grew up in a state that had a lot of tornadoes. When I tell people that I refuse to live in a house that doesn’t have a basement/storm shelter they say that I am overreacting. I’ll tell you though, go through it once and you’ll never want to do it again!
@@ryzzie9610 yeah I understand my friend has gone through it and she told me all that happened that alone has made me to go to any countries that has alot of tornados. Greetings from Miami how are you doing hope the weather condition over there is favourable
I was raised in a lift
@@eriosyce688 really?
Whatever you can do, stay safe out there.