I love that this guy loves nature I usually hear many people complaining about Rainy weather.Why?? It makes things look full of nature I usually appreciate when it rains unlike some weirdos that are annoyed by it
Studying thunderstorms for my pilot's license, this video was very helpful and informative. Thank you for making and posting. Greetings from north Phoenix.
I am a former pilot and instructor, so I am glad to hear that are studying thunderstorms! Leave them to the pros with the right airplanes and equipment!!! Continued flight in to deteriorating conditions is one of the main causes of aviation accidents. You have probably heard this "There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but not many old bold pilots!" All the best in your studies and training!!!
It's very interesting to see how the surrounding mountains shape the weather in Green Valley. Especially the view of a rain wall moving away from the mountains, with life-giving sun shining behind it, is breathtaking.
You are correct in saying that these mountains create their own weather! Many times we can see rain and storms in the mountains while less than 10 miles away, we get nothing! I am glad that you see the beauty in this place. This is why I am so happy to live here and see this beauty on a daily basis!
Thank you for the view and your kind comment Peter! I have been to Australia once many years ago for work. Two Weeks in Sydney. Dinner in the rotating tower, the Opera House and a ferry ride to Taronga zoo. I really loved it there. If I were to live anywhere beside the US, it would be Australia! Yes, I have to say it "G'day mate"!!!
Maaan! Arizona is one of the most beautiful places on earth! I just love the fact that it is a desert, but not a desert at the same time, ya know what I mean..! I wish I can live there for the rest of my life! Thank you massively for sharing this beautiful video brother, and yeah you right, water is good anywhere!
Mo! You sound like me when I was younger! It took me way too long to get here to southeastern AZ, but I here now and have been for 7 years. I absolutely LOVE it here!!! If you really want to be here, find a way to make it happen! It is sad to live your life in a place where you do not want to be. In the mean time, you can get a southeastern AZ fix whenever you want one by visiting my channel.
@@bartk85622 I can only imagine how much you are enjoying your time over there! The thing is I am not a U.S. citizen, I am only here for school, I am doing aviation at Utah State University. When I finish school in about three more semesters, I have to go back to my country Saudi Arabia, which is a desert too like Arizona, but far more dry desert lol, because I am on a contract with Saudi Airlines. I am obligated to work with them for at least 5 years. Maybe I will be able to move to AZ after that! Luckily, there are people like you who share the same nature-type interest as mine, that I can visit their channel and view their incredible work! Stay blessed brother!
@@thevigilant266 Congratulations Mo! You will soon be a pilot! I too am a pilot and I used to be an instructor. I would have liked to work for the airlines, but that was not possible, so I did do some pipeline flying. I really like that because it was low to the ground, and lots of steep turns! I also did some volunteer flying for the local blood bank. I loved doing that because I could help others while doing what I loved! I wish you well in your career, and I do hope you can come to Arizona when your 5 years are up!!! I am glad you found my channel. I wish cellphones and youtube were around when I was actively flying, I would have loved to make a ton of flying videos!!!
I agree Niels! I wish I had the equipment to do it! I now have the ability to bring real time lapse to you an hour or two at a time, and that is exactly what I plan to do this season which should start in 6 weeks, so please stay tuned!!!
I enjoyed watching this and listening to your commentary. Here in Germany we don't usually get strong thunderstorms. It is very interesting to see them form.
Rudolf, thank you for watching and your comment! I have many storm videos on my channel, just search for thunderstorm, storm or lightning on my channel and you will find many entertaining storm videos!!!
I really enjoyed this video watching a storm building up in the desert. I live in El Paso,Texas and love watching these storms come into the city. you have a beautiful home with beautiful views of the mountains. I could sit outside and admire the beauty of the desert. I also have a desert garden and 2 saguaro cactus.You have beautiful landscaping also. I always say thunder is the music to the soul of a cactus.
I used to live in El Paso when my Dad was in the military and based at Ft. Bliss. I have great memories of going over to Mexico and coming back with a case of orange fanta and some blown glass! The time in El Paso was where I got my love for the desert. I lived a lot of places, but now I am very happy to have my place in the desert here in AZ!!! I am glad you like the house and views, they are pretty amazing! Sounds like you have a nice place too! I love your thoughts on thunder and the soul of a saguaro!!! Thanks for watching and your comments!
Thanks koopey! I would think that you have had a lot to look at over the last few days in terms of storms! Not much down here in Green Valley, but it looks like we have a good chance over the weekend and early next week!
Definitely been an active week or so. The prediction was for a less active monsoon season here, but it's been anything but that so far. Hopefully it continues.
Green Valley, Arizona looks like a very beautiful area. Ive never been west of Chicago, having lived in both Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio my entire life. Ill bet that area is stunning when the vegetation is blooming. I really enjoyed watching the thunderstorms form over the mountains. Very lovely thanks for posting.
Greetings from Green Valley, AZ to you! Yes the storms do develop quickly and during monsoon season, the weather is very dynamic! Check out this video for some amazing action!!! Thanks for watching from the UK and your comment! Hopefully I will start posting more storm videos as monsoon season starts 6/15 here. We usually see our first storm the first week of July.
Please do not despise yourself Michael, I am sure there was a good reason at the time you decided to move back. What is stopping you from moving back??? Be where you want to be! Life is too short to live somewhere you do not want to be! Climate in Green Valley, Arizona. On average, there are 280 sunny days per year in Green Valley. The US average is 205 sunny days. Summer High: the July high is around 99 degrees Winter Low: the January low is 36.
The mountains are causing those thunderstorms. When the air is warmed below like in the desert, that makes the atmosphere unstable. When that unstable air is forced upslope like from those mountains, it causes the air to rise, and the moisture from those clouds (maybe from nearby lakes and rivers) causes that increase moisture, so those clouds start to become towering cumulus clouds. As the clouds continue to gather moisture and rise, they'll eventually have downdraft because they can't support anymore water. Once rain hits the surface it means the storm has reached it's maturity. Downdrafts and updrafts will keep happening until, the storm is predominantly by downdrafts and that's when it reaches its dissipating stage, the storm has run out of energy and its dying out.
Isn't it amazing how we go from a puffy little cloud to a huge Thunderhead? I have seen this many times from my home office, so I thought this time I was going to share. Next time I will not talk so much and make the video shorter!
I know most people want to see a 2 minute video, but I will post what I see and let people decide if they want to watch or not. I am glad you appreciated the video!
@@WeatherIsFun I am not worried about the work, but what I wanted to show cannot be shown properly in a short video. What I may be able to do is stop talking so much and just show the clouds! I hope you stick around for Monsoon season, I usually get some pretty good video!!!
You and I sound a lot alike Yanyan! I also love to go watch a good thunderstorm. I also try to capture some of it to share on my channel. I hope you liked the video!
0:01 - Puffy cumulus clouds 0:49 - towering cumulus clouds 1:43 - darking clouds on the bottem and other forming thunderstorms 3:06 - anvil cloud starting to form and bottem getting darker 5:11 - Anvil cloud getting bigger 6:35 big anvil cloud and dark on the bottem 7:28 - thunderstorm coming to his location 9:15 - thunderstorm at his location and big rain shaft to the right 10:40 - the end
Thanks for watching and your comment Joseph! A few months ago I made a trip to Sierra Vista and got to see the base and the Huachuca mountains, they are really impressive! I bet you guys got a lot of amazing storms there!
Sir I loved ur video from India.But can u help me how to recognise a thunderstorm cloud from a normal cloud..i mean u guessed it from the beginning itself...im quite interested in this topic....
Thank you for watching and your question Kidzeeplier! It is kind of a complicated answer, but let me give it a try. First of all, it was the right time of year (monsoon season June 15th thru the end of September), I also follow the weather forecast for a clue of possible thunderstorms. The view I show in the video is the view from my back yard, so I see it every day, and I have seen these small clouds grow in to thunderstorms many times, so I have a good idea if a cloud will grow in to a thunderstorm just from seeing the process many times. Lastly, there is the element of luck that the thunderstorm will grow while I am taking video. I made several tries that did not work out before I captured this particular storm. I hope this answers your question!!!
@@bartk85622 thanks..and yeah ure right it needs a lot of luck wish that we will also have thunderstorm here in kalyan India it's too hot here it was almost 42 degree Celsius in the afternoon.all are waiting for some showers 😂
We had one of those things before I came time too when I saw those clouds I was like what the heck are those and I saw that it came from a little too Melissa and the orography listing started the cloud started getting taller and taller until it turned into an anvil and actually it is in the thunderstorm so I love your shows and can I see more please
Well Eric, you would not have missed much this past year. The local news said it was the second driest monsoon season on record! We did have some storms, but just not much rain. Check out some of my videos from six months ago, I got some really great storm videos including some great lightning captures! I have high hope for this coming summer! Thanks for watching and your comment!
@@soumilyarlagadda9764 Yes it is Soumil! Monsoon season officially starts June 15th, but we usually do not see the first storms until the first week of July. We did get a little rain today, but not a real monsoon storm!
This is one of my most watched videos. I got some grief because it was not a true "time lapse". At the time I did this video, I did not have the hardware or software to do a real time lapse, but most people seem to like the video anyway! I am glad you found my channel, and I appreciate you watching and leaving comments!
You sure have that right! This happens on many days during our monsoon season here in southeastern Arizona. This is why I decided to try and capture this phenomena to share with all. Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
I see this happen over flat plains and oceans and seas. It has little to do with the mountains. They form at crustal fissures and plate boundaries, and other degassing features. This is primordial gas and water from the mantle.
Thank you for watching and your comment Christine! Your theory is interesting and possible I guess, but in this case I believe this is water already existing in the atmosphere being lifted by heat rising from the ground and also orographic lifting caused by the mountains.
@@bartk85622 yeah, thank you for posting. Here is what I'm talking about. Watch the columns rise in the same locations, as if we're watching steam coming out of multiple chimney stacks. The water diffuses through the Earth's crust in the form of primordial gasses, and recombines and condenses in the atmosphere to form brand new water from the depths of the mantle. ua-cam.com/video/dXi54xdi8oc/v-deo.html
@@christineyoutube2684 I get your point, and it is an interesting theory. I will do some additional research and see what I find. Thank you again for watching and commenting!!!
It really is! Pretty frustrating too sometimes as we watch it pour rain on the slopes of the mountains and we get nothing just a few mil;es away!!! Thanks for watching and your comment!
Hey Sticky, thanks for watching and your comment! It is very frustrating to see rain so close, but not at my location! The only positive is that the rain I am seeing is probably on my watershed, so I will see some benefit!
Thanks for watching and your comment! Monsoon season is only 5 or 6 weeks away now. I am hoping to bring more thunderstorm video to the channel when it starts!!!
Love your video man, very interesting capture! But you should have better setup your camera for a real time lapse movie. That movie would be more then awesome! Anyway thanks for sharing.
Back when I did this video, all I had was a cell phone camera and no editing software. Now I have a proper camera and editing software, now all I need is a storm, and the monsoon season starts in about 3 weeks!
Yes it did mean something different in 2017, for me anyway. Back then, I did not have the equipment or knowledge to do a true time lapse, so I showed the progression of the storm the only way I could at the time. If you look at some of my more recent videos, you will see some true time lapse segments. Thanks for watching and your comment!
@@bartk85622 Sou Um Amante da Natureza Também Tenho Um Simples Canal no UA-cam Divulgando o Rio Una Aqui no Estado de Pernambuco Brasil Parabéns Deus Abençoe e Sua família
Hail only comes from the most powerful storms which can lift the water up to the 40,000 to 60,000 altitude where the water can freeze and the droplets can merge as they fall back to earth as hail stones. From what I know, all thunderstorms eventually rain somewhere, but it may thunder and lightning where you are and drop rain further along the storms path!
Yes Michael, you are right. I am sad that I can easily pull the memory of the Challenger explosion into my mind. It is etched deeply in my memory! I look forward to monsoon season 2019 and I hope to bring interesting videos to my channel! Thanks for watching and leaving a comment!!!
Hey Gene, good question! As you know, tornadoes can happen anywhere, but in the 5 years I have lived here, I am not aware of any tornadoes in the area. Yes, there has been wind damage on occasion, but that is usually from straight line winds that come from thunderstorms, usually in the form of a micro-burst. If you have not seen this video yet, please take a look: ua-cam.com/video/uA5RGrc6P1k/v-deo.html Please see this link for a definition of a micro-burst according to the National Weather Service: www.weather.gov/ama/microbursts. As far as hail goes, I have rarely seen hail here and what I have seen has been small hail for brief periods such as a couple of minutes. I hope this answers your questions!
Thanks for the reply Bart. I’m going to be in Green Valley in a few weeks, unfortunately for only one or two days, to look around. I have many questions and things to learn about the area and purchasing.
@@kittykat999a If you have not been to this site yet, I suggest you have a look. www.city-data.com/forum/tucson/ It is a great place to get questions answered by locals. Kim Mazura was the agent we used when we were looking for a home remotely and she did a great job for us! Just search for Kim Mazura, Green Valley and you will find her if you are not already working with someone else. If I can be of assistance, just ask!
I love thunderstorms! unfortunately it just became October and for where I am in Central Oregon, that is the end of thunder season. Usually we get a, “storm of the year,” (we have for the past three including this year) and that usually brings small hail, but in Oregon, severe thunderstorms are _very_ rare, but possible. In 2017, the yearly big storm was on May 4th during like 10pm, which brought nickel sized hail and was apparently later severe warned, the 2018 one was on May 15th at about 9pm, it didn’t bring hail, but very heavy rain, in fact I looked at my neighbors lights and it looked like it was snowing, and this years (2019) storm was on June 29th, brought penny or dime sized hail, and happened at about 7:30pm. This year also we actually had severe storms, however none hit us, which is a good thing in a way, as I don’t want my roof destroyed by big hail, and those occurred during August 9th. What I find interesting is that all of the big storms occurred during the evening or the night, and I kinda wonder why, as during the night you get more rain since it’s colder, but it’s just interesting. Oh yeah, and the 2017 one was from all the way down in Crater Lake, and was tornado warned, but backed off a lot in intensity over the five hour course on when it hit us. Anyway thanks for the video!
My daughter just moved to Bend, so she is a central Oregon resident now. I lived in Oregon off and on for 20+ years. The best storm in Oregon I remember was in Eugene when we had a thunderstorm while it was snowing!!! When I lived in Jefferson, OR there was a tornado about 8 miles as the crow flies from our home there. It is not frequent in Oregon, but it does happen!!!
Bart Kolodziejczak Oh cool! I’m kind of wondering if this year I will get thundersnow, as we have gotten a lot of thunderstorms this year. My favorite thunderstorm was probably the May 4th one, as there was frequent lightning, and big hail.
@@Rainier214 if you have not seen this video of mine yet, it is worth the watch: ua-cam.com/video/gsH6eaFbWws/v-deo.html if you do not want to watch the whole thing, go to about 3:25 and see what happens. ;-)
Bart Kolodziejczak Dang, that’s pretty close, the closest one I remember was when I was on the bus, and a bolt hit the parking lot of the elementary school. Although according to my siblings back when I was 4 a bolt hit like at most 50 feet of our property, however I don’t remember that and can’t confirm it. But the closest one when I was at home and not in a vehicle was probably during the May 15th one, and that bolt sounded about a second after I saw it.
Yes, pretty dramatic! We are just about 1 month away from monsoon season, so please check back for weather videos around then. Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
Very interesting, but not a time lapse. If you set up a time-lapse camera to take a frame every one to five minutes we would be able to see the motion of the clouds even better as they grow.
You have a point there, it was not a true time lapse. That video was taken with a Samsung S6 cell phone camera which did not have time-lapse capabilities. I have a different camera now, so I will see if I can learn how to do a true time lapse. Thanks for watching and your comment!
@@WeatherIsFun Yeah, that camera was not too bad at that time, but now I use a Cannon PowerShot SX720 HS with a 40x optical zoom, I think the videos with this camera come out better, especially when I want to zoom in! This is a weather video from yesterday with the new camera: ua-cam.com/video/Frp3xaCdvWo/v-deo.html
Sí, Matías, me sorprendió lo rápido que pasó de una pequeña nube a una gran tormenta. Esto es lo que esperaba capturar, porque lo había visto otras veces. Estas montañas crean su propio clima. ¡Gracias por ver y por tu comentario!
Where are you Steve? Mars? I am not aware of any location on the surface of earth that reaches 200 degrees. Thank you very much for watching and your comment!!!
@@bartk85622 remember my days in Colorado. Every day in the summer storms would form along the front range of the Rockies. Sometimes big hail producers.
@@stevegungel4533 Yes, Colorado is famous for epic thunderstorms. I love thunderstorms, but not hail so much!!! If you search my channel for storm, thunderstorm or lightning, I have some pretty cool footage from our monsoon thunderstorms in the summer and fall including some amazing lightning shots that I show in slow motion!!! Thanks for the comment!!!
Bart Kolodziejczak Supercells are basically rotating thunderstorms, and you need high wind shear (60ish knots) and lots of CAPE (instability) (like 2000 in value). A mesocyclone would be visible in a super cell that would appear lower than the rest of the cloud. About 1/4 supercells also produce tornadoes.
Clouds are amazing to me Carmen. I think about the tons and tons of water just floating above us, and it never ceases to amaze me!!! I hope you enjoyed the video!!!
Welcome Bev! Thanks so much for subscribing! Please feel free to look all through the channel, there are all kinds of cool videos. I take it that you are a weather fan? From June to October here in southeastern Arizona, we have monsoon season which is when we get the most of our rain and storms, so you will probably not see much of that for a while. Anyhow, enjoy the channel and here are a few highlights from this last monsoon season: ua-cam.com/video/5XCW3gijT_Y/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/ChQKtYazdzo/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/uA5RGrc6P1k/v-deo.html
even a little vertical growth means the atmosphere is unstable enough to allow storm formation. which means red alert watch this shit its aboutta get thicc
It may not have been time lapse in the way you think of it, but the video did show the growth of the storm over time. Perhaps my use of the phrase "time lapse" was in error, and for that I apologize to you.
@@bartk85622 No need to apologize. I was just hoping to see those clouds develop into a storm in the dramatic fashion that a timelapse shows. And I kept watching and waiting for it but it didn't happen. It might be helpful if you edit the title to be a little more descriptive/accurate though. Something like, "Storm Clouds Developing..." and take 'timelapse' out of it. I did enjoy the content but felt mislead by the title.
@@JoeHTX I will consider making changes to the title, but out of over 19,000 views, you are only the second person who has made this complaint. Take a look at the comments below. Nearly everyone gets the spirit of the video which storm progression over time as opposed to the dictionary definition of time lapse.
@@bartk85622 I wasn't knocking your content, I actually said I enjoyed it, but I was disappointed that it wasn't what I was looking for. And yes, I felt a little ripped off because of that.. But the truth is, I wouldn't have clicked on it at the time I did because I was searching for a timelapse to watch. I suspect, highly, that that is what the vast majority of the 19,000 people who viewed your video did too. If your title for it more accurately described what the content was I highly doubt that you'd have over 19,000 views on it. I, like most people, would rather find what I'm looking for than spend the time watching a video only to find out that it wasn't what I wanted after all. Remember, honesty is always the best policy!
It was the best I could do at the time. I did show the growth of the storm over time, but it was not the true time lapse that people probably expected. My apologies that the video did not live up to your expectations, but thank you for watching and your comment!
@@cjever6625 I have made real time lapse videos since then. Some storms and some sunrises. I hope you might find and enjoy those. Thanks for being understanding!
Greetings from Chicago, Illinois, Cool video! Check out my time lapse music videos at: "time lapse videos by donald granger" of thunderstorms, moon rises, sun sets and snow melting. More will be coming in the near future.
Really? I have never heard that before! Just kidding. Back when I made this video, I did not have the hardware or software to make a real time lapse, but the video was made in the "spirit" of time lapse. Now I can make time lapse. If you like, please check out this recent video. ua-cam.com/video/bJe3fy6-A4s/v-deo.html
Thank you for watching. Yes, it is not the dictionary definition of a time lapse. At the time I did not have the capability for a true time lapse video, so that was the best I could do. I appreciate your understanding. If you check out some of my newer videos, I have some very nice true time lapse sunrises you might enjoy.
Thank you for watching and your comment Schody. I apologize for using the term "time lapse" improperly per the dictionary definition. This video was made in the spirit of time lapse ie. watching an event over time and showing clips of the progress to show a long event in a short amount of time.
They can be a harbinger of destruction, that is true. Where I live, they usually provide an awesome light show and much needed rain. Of course there are times when there is wind damage and flooding, but that is not the norm.
@@razorback9999able I can understand that completely. While living in Texas, I took my 2 year old daughter with me in the car to pick up my sister from work. While we were waiting for her to come out the door, and huge thunderstorm with large hail hit, and it seemed like the end of the world. My daughter is 39 now, and she still remembers that day like it was yesterday!
That was really cool watching it build!! I love to watch a good storm roll in. Glad you guys finally got some much needed rain. Thanks!! Lea
Thanks for viewing Lea, and thanks for the idea to do a time lapse video!!!
@@bartk85622 че че
@@thunderstorminarmavir2451 Not sure what your reply means, but thank you for watching!!!
Are you in Vegas
ua-cam.com/video/Pnr5vXEJVes/v-deo.html&feature=share
I love that this guy loves nature I usually hear many people complaining about Rainy weather.Why?? It makes things look full of nature I usually appreciate when it rains unlike some weirdos that are annoyed by it
I moved to Arizona from a place where it rains too much, so now I appreciate it when it rains here since it not a frequent occurrence!
ua-cam.com/video/Pnr5vXEJVes/v-deo.html&feature=share
Used to rain here in the UK most of the year.. the last two or three years however..
go say weirdos to all the persons working outside in the rain. you plain stupid!
Studying thunderstorms for my pilot's license, this video was very helpful and informative. Thank you for making and posting.
Greetings from north Phoenix.
I am a former pilot and instructor, so I am glad to hear that are studying thunderstorms! Leave them to the pros with the right airplanes and equipment!!! Continued flight in to deteriorating conditions is one of the main causes of aviation accidents. You have probably heard this "There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but not many old bold pilots!" All the best in your studies and training!!!
It's very interesting to see how the surrounding mountains shape the weather in Green Valley. Especially the view of a rain wall moving away from the mountains, with life-giving sun shining behind it, is breathtaking.
You are correct in saying that these mountains create their own weather! Many times we can see rain and storms in the mountains while less than 10 miles away, we get nothing! I am glad that you see the beauty in this place. This is why I am so happy to live here and see this beauty on a daily basis!
Great thing you enjoyed those mountains😃
Some of these work trucks have blue heads, the front. Nice 😃
And a stormed just showed up in here, and this guy felt a rain drop even😃🌵😃
Well presented Bart.
A nice progression throughout the day for the viewers.
Wonderful landscapes too 😀
Cheers from Australia 😀😀
Thank you for the view and your kind comment Peter! I have been to Australia once many years ago for work. Two Weeks in Sydney. Dinner in the rotating tower, the Opera House and a ferry ride to Taronga zoo. I really loved it there. If I were to live anywhere beside the US, it would be Australia! Yes, I have to say it "G'day mate"!!!
Maaan! Arizona is one of the most beautiful places on earth! I just love the fact that it is a desert, but not a desert at the same time, ya know what I mean..! I wish I can live there for the rest of my life!
Thank you massively for sharing this beautiful video brother, and yeah you right, water is good anywhere!
Mo! You sound like me when I was younger! It took me way too long to get here to southeastern AZ, but I here now and have been for 7 years. I absolutely LOVE it here!!! If you really want to be here, find a way to make it happen! It is sad to live your life in a place where you do not want to be. In the mean time, you can get a southeastern AZ fix whenever you want one by visiting my channel.
@@bartk85622
I can only imagine how much you are enjoying your time over there! The thing is I am not a U.S. citizen, I am only here for school, I am doing aviation at Utah State University.
When I finish school in about three more semesters, I have to go back to my country Saudi Arabia, which is a desert too like Arizona, but far more dry desert lol, because I am on a contract with Saudi Airlines. I am obligated to work with them for at least 5 years. Maybe I will be able to move to AZ after that!
Luckily, there are people like you who share the same nature-type interest as mine, that I can visit their channel and view their incredible work!
Stay blessed brother!
@@thevigilant266 Congratulations Mo! You will soon be a pilot! I too am a pilot and I used to be an instructor. I would have liked to work for the airlines, but that was not possible, so I did do some pipeline flying. I really like that because it was low to the ground, and lots of steep turns! I also did some volunteer flying for the local blood bank. I loved doing that because I could help others while doing what I loved! I wish you well in your career, and I do hope you can come to Arizona when your 5 years are up!!! I am glad you found my channel. I wish cellphones and youtube were around when I was actively flying, I would have loved to make a ton of flying videos!!!
@@bartk85622
Thank you brother, yeah,flying is lots of fun! Hopefully when my 5 years are up I can go to live in AZ! Keep posting these videos man!
A lot of rain in those mountains and hardly no rain in the main lands where people drive through, dang🌵😃🌵
A full day timelapse of this would be awesome!
I agree Niels! I wish I had the equipment to do it! I now have the ability to bring real time lapse to you an hour or two at a time, and that is exactly what I plan to do this season which should start in 6 weeks, so please stay tuned!!!
I enjoyed watching this and listening to your commentary. Here in Germany we don't usually get strong thunderstorms. It is very interesting to see them form.
Rudolf, thank you for watching and your comment! I have many storm videos on my channel, just search for thunderstorm, storm or lightning on my channel and you will find many entertaining storm videos!!!
I really enjoyed this video watching a storm building up in the desert. I live in El Paso,Texas and love watching these storms come into the city. you have a beautiful home with beautiful views of the mountains. I could sit outside and admire the beauty of the desert. I also have a desert garden and 2 saguaro cactus.You have beautiful landscaping also. I always say thunder is the music to the soul of a cactus.
I used to live in El Paso when my Dad was in the military and based at Ft. Bliss. I have great memories of going over to Mexico and coming back with a case of orange fanta and some blown glass! The time in El Paso was where I got my love for the desert. I lived a lot of places, but now I am very happy to have my place in the desert here in AZ!!! I am glad you like the house and views, they are pretty amazing! Sounds like you have a nice place too! I love your thoughts on thunder and the soul of a saguaro!!! Thanks for watching and your comments!
Beautiful house. I live in tucson and love watching these storms rolling in off the mountains.
Thanks koopey! I would think that you have had a lot to look at over the last few days in terms of storms! Not much down here in Green Valley, but it looks like we have a good chance over the weekend and early next week!
Definitely been an active week or so. The prediction was for a less active monsoon season here, but it's been anything but that so far. Hopefully it continues.
@@koopey I am with you! I hope your stays active and mine gets that way soon!!!
@@bartk85622 today is gonna be a big day friend. Get ready!
Green Valley, Arizona looks like a very beautiful area. Ive never been west of Chicago, having lived in both Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio my entire life. Ill bet that area is stunning when the vegetation is blooming. I really enjoyed watching the thunderstorms form over the mountains. Very lovely thanks for posting.
Great changes over a very short time, love this keep doing these
This season, I am going to try and get actual time-lapse video of storms building. We will see how it goes!!!
I love cumulonimbus
That makes two of us!
I think they look cool but at the same time they make me nervous
That makes us the three of us to⛈⛈⛈
@@ransomgamez5684 4
@@Eyiza 5
Greetings from the UK, What a beautiful place to live, so scenic and a beautiful house, it just shows how fast storms develop over there in Arizona.
Greetings from Green Valley, AZ to you! Yes the storms do develop quickly and during monsoon season, the weather is very dynamic! Check out this video for some amazing action!!! Thanks for watching from the UK and your comment! Hopefully I will start posting more storm videos as monsoon season starts 6/15 here. We usually see our first storm the first week of July.
Thank you Bart. I despise myself for moving back east .Cloudy days are the norm back here 59 sunny days annually
Please do not despise yourself Michael, I am sure there was a good reason at the time you decided to move back. What is stopping you from moving back??? Be where you want to be! Life is too short to live somewhere you do not want to be!
Climate in Green Valley, Arizona. On average, there are 280 sunny days per year in Green Valley. The US average is 205 sunny days. Summer High: the July high is around 99 degrees Winter Low: the January low is 36.
This is my favourite weather! Nice video
Thank you for watching and your comment! Glad you enjoyed this video!!!
I love watching clouds build in my town we get pop ups too
Where do you live Gavin??? The weather is always interesting to me!
North of USA
The mountains are causing those thunderstorms.
When the air is warmed below like in the desert, that makes the atmosphere unstable. When that unstable air is forced upslope like from those mountains, it causes the air to rise, and the moisture from those clouds (maybe from nearby lakes and rivers) causes that increase moisture, so those clouds start to become towering cumulus clouds. As the clouds continue to gather moisture and rise, they'll eventually have downdraft because they can't support anymore water. Once rain hits the surface it means the storm has reached it's maturity. Downdrafts and updrafts will keep happening until, the storm is predominantly by downdrafts and that's when it reaches its dissipating stage, the storm has run out of energy and its dying out.
Isn't it amazing how we go from a puffy little cloud to a huge Thunderhead? I have seen this many times from my home office, so I thought this time I was going to share. Next time I will not talk so much and make the video shorter!
Bart Kolodziejczak I like it ! I dont mind if it's long but others probably do sadly. I liked seeing the progression of the storms throughout the day
I know most people want to see a 2 minute video, but I will post what I see and let people decide if they want to watch or not. I am glad you appreciated the video!
@@bartk85622 Why not upload both. A short one and a lengthy one. Though it might be more work.
@@WeatherIsFun I am not worried about the work, but what I wanted to show cannot be shown properly in a short video. What I may be able to do is stop talking so much and just show the clouds! I hope you stick around for Monsoon season, I usually get some pretty good video!!!
@@bartk85622 I will. I just subscribed to you.
When there’s a thunderstorm at my location, I sometimes go outside to see the thunderstorm!
You and I sound a lot alike Yanyan! I also love to go watch a good thunderstorm. I also try to capture some of it to share on my channel. I hope you liked the video!
0:01 - Puffy cumulus clouds
0:49 - towering cumulus clouds
1:43 - darking clouds on the bottem and other forming thunderstorms
3:06 - anvil cloud starting to form and bottem getting darker
5:11 - Anvil cloud getting bigger
6:35 big anvil cloud and dark on the bottem
7:28 - thunderstorm coming to his location
9:15 - thunderstorm at his location and big rain shaft to the right
10:40 - the end
Btw I liked the video
I subscribed and there are timestamps
Excellent analysis of the video yanyan! I love the monsoon season. I hope I can capture more storms during the 2024 season!!!!
AMAZING TIMELASPE
Tho, even though its not really a timelapse
I LOVE IT
It was amazing!!
Wow that escalated quickly😃
I am glad you liked the video Ninja!!! Thank you for viewing and your comment!
SAME
I love thunderstorms.
That makes two of us! We are quickly approaching monsoon season in Arizona, so stay tuned for more thunderstorm videos starting probably in July!!!
ua-cam.com/video/Pnr5vXEJVes/v-deo.html&feature=share watch this video and enjoy the time lapse
I love storms too
When I worked at Fort Huachuca in July 2010, everyday thunderstorms would form in the mountains southwest of the base.
Thanks for watching and your comment Joseph! A few months ago I made a trip to Sierra Vista and got to see the base and the Huachuca mountains, they are really impressive! I bet you guys got a lot of amazing storms there!
Love this guy he sounds so Innocent😊
Innocent???? ;-)
Sir I loved ur video from India.But can u help me how to recognise a thunderstorm cloud from a normal cloud..i mean u guessed it from the beginning itself...im quite interested in this topic....
Thank you for watching and your question Kidzeeplier! It is kind of a complicated answer, but let me give it a try. First of all, it was the right time of year (monsoon season June 15th thru the end of September), I also follow the weather forecast for a clue of possible thunderstorms. The view I show in the video is the view from my back yard, so I see it every day, and I have seen these small clouds grow in to thunderstorms many times, so I have a good idea if a cloud will grow in to a thunderstorm just from seeing the process many times. Lastly, there is the element of luck that the thunderstorm will grow while I am taking video. I made several tries that did not work out before I captured this particular storm. I hope this answers your question!!!
@@bartk85622 thanks..and yeah ure right it needs a lot of luck wish that we will also have thunderstorm here in kalyan India
it's too hot here
it was almost 42 degree Celsius in the afternoon.all are waiting for some showers
😂
@@kidzeeplier2468 I completely understand, 42C is quite warm! I hope you will be getting the cooling rains soon!
Think of a puffy cumulus cloud, then imagine it being several kilometers tall and it covering your entire field of vision on one side of the sky.
We had one of those things before I came time too when I saw those clouds I was like what the heck are those and I saw that it came from a little too Melissa and the orography listing started the cloud started getting taller and taller until it turned into an anvil and actually it is in the thunderstorm so I love your shows and can I see more please
Thank you for watching and your comment Kaydra! Storm season is still a few months away, but when it gets here, I will certainly capture what I can!
I do these on my iPad. It does a really nice job making time lapse videos.
*so pretty, thanks for sharing!*
I am glad you liked the video! Thanks for taking the time to watch and leave a comment!!!
Really cool video. Thanks for sharing!
I really miss the awesome monsoons over the Tucson-Green Valley area!!
Well Eric, you would not have missed much this past year. The local news said it was the second driest monsoon season on record! We did have some storms, but just not much rain. Check out some of my videos from six months ago, I got some really great storm videos including some great lightning captures! I have high hope for this coming summer! Thanks for watching and your comment!
@@bartk85622 is it monsoon season yet?
@@soumilyarlagadda9764 Yes it is Soumil! Monsoon season officially starts June 15th, but we usually do not see the first storms until the first week of July. We did get a little rain today, but not a real monsoon storm!
I remember I watched this atleast a year ago and it had 100 views, congrats on 650 subscribers 😜
Thank you Karen for your kind comment! I am amazed at how many views this video has gotten, and at 650 subscribers as well!!!
And this is when i first saw your channel
This is one of my most watched videos. I got some grief because it was not a true "time lapse". At the time I did this video, I did not have the hardware or software to do a real time lapse, but most people seem to like the video anyway! I am glad you found my channel, and I appreciate you watching and leaving comments!
This is awesome
Glad you liked it! I am working on another storm video as we speak, so please check soon. Thank you for watching and your comment!!!
If that's a wall cloud on the right at 10:25, it's probably a storm front advancing due west. Idk tho lol
I do not think it is a wall cloud, I think it is just explosive cumulus development. Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
@@bartk85622 Welcome! Yeah you're probably right. Subscribed 👍
@@M-BLOC Thanks for the sub! Probably not much will happen weather wise between now and next July, but if it does, I will post what I see!!!
Gotcha, no problem!
Btw the top comment rn makes 3 of us lol
Great video!😊
Thanks for watching and your nice comment Lee!
Bart Kolodziejczak you’re welcome and is it in Arizona?? 😊
@@leezinke4351 Yes Lee, I am in Green Valley, AZ which is about 25 miles south of Tucson and about 35 miles north of Mexico.
Bart Kolodziejczak that awesome! I used to live in Scottsdale Arizona for long time. 😊
@@leezinke4351 Ahh yes, Scottsdale, home of the famous Barrett-Jackson collector car auction!!! Glad you enjoyed the video Lee!
This thing are expanding soo fast
You sure have that right! This happens on many days during our monsoon season here in southeastern Arizona. This is why I decided to try and capture this phenomena to share with all. Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
This is beautifil!
Thank you for watching and your comment! I am glad that you enjoyed the video!!!
I see this happen over flat plains and oceans and seas. It has little to do with the mountains. They form at crustal fissures and plate boundaries, and other degassing features. This is primordial gas and water from the mantle.
Thank you for watching and your comment Christine! Your theory is interesting and possible I guess, but in this case I believe this is water already existing in the atmosphere being lifted by heat rising from the ground and also orographic lifting caused by the mountains.
@@bartk85622 yeah, thank you for posting. Here is what I'm talking about. Watch the columns rise in the same locations, as if we're watching steam coming out of multiple chimney stacks. The water diffuses through the Earth's crust in the form of primordial gasses, and recombines and condenses in the atmosphere to form brand new water from the depths of the mantle. ua-cam.com/video/dXi54xdi8oc/v-deo.html
@@christineyoutube2684 I get your point, and it is an interesting theory. I will do some additional research and see what I find. Thank you again for watching and commenting!!!
Its amazing the micro-climate that gets generated from a mountain range.
It really is! Pretty frustrating too sometimes as we watch it pour rain on the slopes of the mountains and we get nothing just a few mil;es away!!! Thanks for watching and your comment!
Same here, usually we see it rain cats and dogs in Rawsonville and here there's nothing, They are at the foot of the mountain
Hey Sticky, thanks for watching and your comment! It is very frustrating to see rain so close, but not at my location! The only positive is that the rain I am seeing is probably on my watershed, so I will see some benefit!
I love Cumulonimbus clouds time lapse
Glad you liked the video! I hope to capture more storm this coming monsoon season! Thanks forr watching and your comment!
Thank you . Great video 👍
Glad you liked it Joey! I hope to get some good video from the upcoming monsoon season!!!
Still here and this shii still rocks
Thanks for watching and your comment! Monsoon season is only 5 or 6 weeks away now. I am hoping to bring more thunderstorm video to the channel when it starts!!!
@@bartk85622 yay
Love your video man, very interesting capture! But you should have better setup your camera for a real time lapse movie. That movie would be more then awesome! Anyway thanks for sharing.
Back when I did this video, all I had was a cell phone camera and no editing software. Now I have a proper camera and editing software, now all I need is a storm, and the monsoon season starts in about 3 weeks!
Thanks for your feedback. Wish you good luck to catch the next big thing with the new camera.
@@nikmotionmix Thanks for your understanding. Please check back now and then, I know there will be storms eventually!!!
@@bartk85622 I will stay tuned. Waiting for the next one!
This is great keep it up
Glad you liked it! Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
Did “time lapse” mean something completely different back in 2017??
Yes it did mean something different in 2017, for me anyway. Back then, I did not have the equipment or knowledge to do a true time lapse, so I showed the progression of the storm the only way I could at the time. If you look at some of my more recent videos, you will see some true time lapse segments. Thanks for watching and your comment!
The on the left at the back is already a cumulonimbus. XD See it's anvil. 1:57
Hey Darius, thanks for watching and pointing out the cumulonimbus!
Ye
Very nice!
Glad you liked it Dan! I am looking forward to bringing more storm video of monsoon season 2019!!!
Deslumbrante Espetácular Sensacional Parabéns
Obrigado pelas suas palavras gentis! Fico feliz que você tenha achado o vídeo interessante !!!
@@bartk85622 Sou Um Amante da Natureza Também Tenho Um Simples Canal no UA-cam Divulgando o Rio Una Aqui no Estado de Pernambuco Brasil Parabéns Deus Abençoe e Sua família
@@drailtonluiz5406 Drailton, obrigado por visitar meu canal. Eu irei verificar seu canal em breve. Meu Deus te abençoe e sua família também !!!
I've noticed it doesn't always rain during a thunderstorm as well
Or hail
Hail only comes from the most powerful storms which can lift the water up to the 40,000 to 60,000 altitude where the water can freeze and the droplets can merge as they fall back to earth as hail stones. From what I know, all thunderstorms eventually rain somewhere, but it may thunder and lightning where you are and drop rain further along the storms path!
NimBus And Cumulonimbus Are Thunderstorm Right?
My favorite clouds
Glad you like those clouds Tamil! Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
This was great.
Thank you Renzo, I appreciate that. Thanks for watching, and glad you enjoyed it!
@@bartk85622 I like weather
@@itzrenzo8960 So do I! We will get along well!
@@bartk85622its been a while im watching this again
Almost reminds me of the Challenger explosion with the big Y shape.
Yes Michael, you are right. I am sad that I can easily pull the memory of the Challenger explosion into my mind. It is etched deeply in my memory! I look forward to monsoon season 2019 and I hope to bring interesting videos to my channel! Thanks for watching and leaving a comment!!!
3:25 the pressure there is lower than on the ground sir because there isn't so much air molecules pressing each other
Thank you for watching and your observation!
Love your vids!
Is this in California?
No, this is in Green Valley, AZ in southeastern Arizona. Thanks for watching and the question!!!
Pretty cool 😎
Thank you for watching and your comment HM! It is now the time of year where I hope to get a bunch of storm video, so please stay tuned!!!
@@bartk85622 yes sure :)
Are tornados rare? What about hail, especially larger hail that can cause damage. Thanks.
Hey Gene, good question! As you know, tornadoes can happen anywhere, but in the 5 years I have lived here, I am not aware of any tornadoes in the area. Yes, there has been wind damage on occasion, but that is usually from straight line winds that come from thunderstorms, usually in the form of a micro-burst. If you have not seen this video yet, please take a look: ua-cam.com/video/uA5RGrc6P1k/v-deo.html Please see this link for a definition of a micro-burst according to the National Weather Service: www.weather.gov/ama/microbursts. As far as hail goes, I have rarely seen hail here and what I have seen has been small hail for brief periods such as a couple of minutes. I hope this answers your questions!
Thanks for the reply Bart. I’m going to be in Green Valley in a few weeks, unfortunately for only one or two days, to look around. I have many questions and things to learn about the area and purchasing.
@@kittykat999a If you have not been to this site yet, I suggest you have a look. www.city-data.com/forum/tucson/ It is a great place to get questions answered by locals. Kim Mazura was the agent we used when we were looking for a home remotely and she did a great job for us! Just search for Kim Mazura, Green Valley and you will find her if you are not already working with someone else. If I can be of assistance, just ask!
I love thunderstorms! unfortunately it just became October and for where I am in Central Oregon, that is the end of thunder season. Usually we get a, “storm of the year,” (we have for the past three including this year) and that usually brings small hail, but in Oregon, severe thunderstorms are _very_ rare, but possible. In 2017, the yearly big storm was on May 4th during like 10pm, which brought nickel sized hail and was apparently later severe warned, the 2018 one was on May 15th at about 9pm, it didn’t bring hail, but very heavy rain, in fact I looked at my neighbors lights and it looked like it was snowing, and this years (2019) storm was on June 29th, brought penny or dime sized hail, and happened at about 7:30pm. This year also we actually had severe storms, however none hit us, which is a good thing in a way, as I don’t want my roof destroyed by big hail, and those occurred during August 9th. What I find interesting is that all of the big storms occurred during the evening or the night, and I kinda wonder why, as during the night you get more rain since it’s colder, but it’s just interesting. Oh yeah, and the 2017 one was from all the way down in Crater Lake, and was tornado warned, but backed off a lot in intensity over the five hour course on when it hit us. Anyway thanks for the video!
My daughter just moved to Bend, so she is a central Oregon resident now. I lived in Oregon off and on for 20+ years. The best storm in Oregon I remember was in Eugene when we had a thunderstorm while it was snowing!!! When I lived in Jefferson, OR there was a tornado about 8 miles as the crow flies from our home there. It is not frequent in Oregon, but it does happen!!!
Bart Kolodziejczak Oh cool! I’m kind of wondering if this year I will get thundersnow, as we have gotten a lot of thunderstorms this year. My favorite thunderstorm was probably the May 4th one, as there was frequent lightning, and big hail.
@@Rainier214 if you have not seen this video of mine yet, it is worth the watch: ua-cam.com/video/gsH6eaFbWws/v-deo.html if you do not want to watch the whole thing, go to about 3:25 and see what happens. ;-)
Bart Kolodziejczak Dang, that’s pretty close, the closest one I remember was when I was on the bus, and a bolt hit the parking lot of the elementary school. Although according to my siblings back when I was 4 a bolt hit like at most 50 feet of our property, however I don’t remember that and can’t confirm it. But the closest one when I was at home and not in a vehicle was probably during the May 15th one, and that bolt sounded about a second after I saw it.
@@Rainier214 Yours sounds like a very close strike as well!!!
I love clouds
Yes, pretty dramatic! We are just about 1 month away from monsoon season, so please check back for weather videos around then. Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
You responded already?!??!? Wow good skills
Very interesting, but not a time lapse. If you set up a time-lapse camera to take a frame every one to five minutes we would be able to see the motion of the clouds even better as they grow.
You have a point there, it was not a true time lapse. That video was taken with a Samsung S6 cell phone camera which did not have time-lapse capabilities. I have a different camera now, so I will see if I can learn how to do a true time lapse. Thanks for watching and your comment!
@@bartk85622 Woah. I would have never thought that was an S6's camera. The quality is very good.
@@WeatherIsFun Yeah, that camera was not too bad at that time, but now I use a Cannon PowerShot SX720 HS with a 40x optical zoom, I think the videos with this camera come out better, especially when I want to zoom in! This is a weather video from yesterday with the new camera: ua-cam.com/video/Frp3xaCdvWo/v-deo.html
Muy bueno!!!
¡Gracias por ver y por tu comentario! Me alegro que te haya gustado el vídeo!!!
Es increíble de como pasa de ser una nubesita a ser una tormenta 😱
Sí, Matías, me sorprendió lo rápido que pasó de una pequeña nube a una gran tormenta. Esto es lo que esperaba capturar, porque lo había visto otras veces. Estas montañas crean su propio clima. ¡Gracias por ver y por tu comentario!
@@bartk85622 creo que cuando el aire caliente de la superficie plana sube a una Montana y el aire se enfría y forman esas nubes de lluvia o de nieve
@@matiasvelazquez8287 Según tengo entendido, tienes toda la razón Matías. ¡¡¡Parece que tienes buenos conocimientos de meterología!!!
@@bartk85622 lo aprendí en geografía de la alta presión y baja presión atmosférica
@@bartk85622 de nada
Nice video
Thanks for watching and your comment Donnell! I am glad you liked the video!!!
Where is da time lapse
Keep looking and you might find it!
you Live in Arizona
Yes, I live in Green Valley, AZ. It is a beautiful place!!! Thank you for watching and your comment!!!
That is Cumulonimbus calvis
Thanks for watching and the information Michael! It seems that you have quite a bit of knowledge of meteorology, are you a pro in the field?
Do you Live in Nevada
No, I live in Arizona!
"It is currently 110 degrees at 11 am headed for 200 degrees"
Where are you Steve? Mars? I am not aware of any location on the surface of earth that reaches 200 degrees. Thank you very much for watching and your comment!!!
@@bartk85622 remember my days in Colorado. Every day in the summer storms would form along the front range of the Rockies. Sometimes big hail producers.
@@stevegungel4533 Yes, Colorado is famous for epic thunderstorms. I love thunderstorms, but not hail so much!!! If you search my channel for storm, thunderstorm or lightning, I have some pretty cool footage from our monsoon thunderstorms in the summer and fall including some amazing lightning shots that I show in slow motion!!! Thanks for the comment!!!
It kind of looks like a supercell.
I am not sure exactly what makes something a supercell, but it was impressive either way to me! Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
Bart Kolodziejczak Supercells are basically rotating thunderstorms, and you need high wind shear (60ish knots) and lots of CAPE (instability) (like 2000 in value). A mesocyclone would be visible in a super cell that would appear lower than the rest of the cloud. About 1/4 supercells also produce tornadoes.
@@Rainier214 Excellent information Teague! Thanks for sharing that info and watching the video!!!
Love to photograph,video God's clouds
Clouds are amazing to me Carmen. I think about the tons and tons of water just floating above us, and it never ceases to amaze me!!! I hope you enjoyed the video!!!
Welcome Bev! Thanks so much for subscribing! Please feel free to look all through the channel, there are all kinds of cool videos. I take it that you are a weather fan? From June to October here in southeastern Arizona, we have monsoon season which is when we get the most of our rain and storms, so you will probably not see much of that for a while. Anyhow, enjoy the channel and here are a few highlights from this last monsoon season:
ua-cam.com/video/5XCW3gijT_Y/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/ChQKtYazdzo/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/uA5RGrc6P1k/v-deo.html
W capture
Sorry, but what does W capture mean? Thanks for watching and your comment!
@@bartk85622 It means “Winning capture”, which means nice capture!
Piękności
Thank you for watching and your comment!!!
Here’s something you should know. All thunderstorm clouds are Cumulonimbus
Thank you for watching and your informative post Cknmonster R! Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!!
@@bartk85622 thanks
Regards in Polish Storm hunters :D
Thank you for watching and your comment!!!
@@bartk85622 Epic video
@ Thanks for watching and your comment! I am glad you liked the video!!!
even a little vertical growth means the atmosphere is unstable enough to allow storm formation. which means red alert watch this shit its aboutta get thicc
Thanks for watching and your comment PFN!!!
Que manero!!!
¡Me alegro que te haya gustado el video! Gracias por mirar y tu comentario !!!
lunch time on cloud ☁️ mountain 🏔️🗻
Thanks for watching and your comment!!!
got this vid exactly 6 years ago
Thank you for visiting my channel for so long! That has been a popular video. I hope I get a chance to make another one like it this monsoon season!!!
Likely a supercell
Kind fo looks like one to me!
Nice
Thanks for watching Nick! I just uploaded an actual time lapse video of cumulus clouds growing over the Santa Rita Mountains, and I put it to music!
⛈
Thanks for watching and the interesting comment SAR!!!
I watched the whole video and there was no timelapse in it. Just video...
It may not have been time lapse in the way you think of it, but the video did show the growth of the storm over time. Perhaps my use of the phrase "time lapse" was in error, and for that I apologize to you.
@@bartk85622 No need to apologize. I was just hoping to see those clouds develop into a storm in the dramatic fashion that a timelapse shows. And I kept watching and waiting for it but it didn't happen. It might be helpful if you edit the title to be a little more descriptive/accurate though. Something like, "Storm Clouds Developing..." and take 'timelapse' out of it. I did enjoy the content but felt mislead by the title.
@@JoeHTX I will consider making changes to the title, but out of over 19,000 views, you are only the second person who has made this complaint. Take a look at the comments below. Nearly everyone gets the spirit of the video which storm progression over time as opposed to the dictionary definition of time lapse.
@@bartk85622 I wasn't knocking your content, I actually said I enjoyed it, but I was disappointed that it wasn't what I was looking for. And yes, I felt a little ripped off because of that.. But the truth is, I wouldn't have clicked on it at the time I did because I was searching for a timelapse to watch. I suspect, highly, that that is what the vast majority of the 19,000 people who viewed your video did too. If your title for it more accurately described what the content was I highly doubt that you'd have over 19,000 views on it.
I, like most people, would rather find what I'm looking for than spend the time watching a video only to find out that it wasn't what I wanted after all.
Remember, honesty is always the best policy!
Pileus in the part of the video 2:56
Is that the name of the cloud formation Henrique?
Guy name real of cloud is cumulus congestus
But look the top of clouds pileus form's in the top cumulus congestus have pileus in the top
🤡: Great video
Me: Where's the timelapse 🥲
It was the best I could do at the time. I did show the growth of the storm over time, but it was not the true time lapse that people probably expected. My apologies that the video did not live up to your expectations, but thank you for watching and your comment!
@@bartk85622 I understand and very informative tho ✨
@@cjever6625 I have made real time lapse videos since then. Some storms and some sunrises. I hope you might find and enjoy those. Thanks for being understanding!
we need some rain also
I know the feeling, I hope you get it soon!!!
Greetings from Chicago, Illinois, Cool video! Check out my time lapse music videos at: "time lapse videos by donald granger" of thunderstorms, moon rises, sun sets and snow melting. More will be coming in the near future.
Thanks for viewing and the comment! I will check out your channel as soon as I have a free moment. Welcome to the channel!!!
Thats nt timelapse
It was the spirit of time lapse if not the dictionary definition. Thank you for watching!!!
This ain’t no time lapse
Really? I have never heard that before! Just kidding. Back when I made this video, I did not have the hardware or software to make a real time lapse, but the video was made in the "spirit" of time lapse. Now I can make time lapse. If you like, please check out this recent video. ua-cam.com/video/bJe3fy6-A4s/v-deo.html
its not a time lapse but ok
Thank you for watching. Yes, it is not the dictionary definition of a time lapse. At the time I did not have the capability for a true time lapse video, so that was the best I could do. I appreciate your understanding. If you check out some of my newer videos, I have some very nice true time lapse sunrises you might enjoy.
⛈🌧⛈🌦🌩
Hey Ryan, not sure how you made those characters, but that is pretty cool! Thanks for watching and leaving tour interesting comment!
It's NOT a Time-lapse!
Thank you for watching and your comment Schody. I apologize for using the term "time lapse" improperly per the dictionary definition. This video was made in the spirit of time lapse ie. watching an event over time and showing clips of the progress to show a long event in a short amount of time.
Cumulonimbus Cloud
Absolutely! Merry Christmas and a happy and healthy 2024!
@@bartk85622 ok
Thunderstorms - Harbringer of Destruction.
They can be a harbinger of destruction, that is true. Where I live, they usually provide an awesome light show and much needed rain. Of course there are times when there is wind damage and flooding, but that is not the norm.
@@bartk85622 For me, it puts a bad memory of my lifetime.
@@razorback9999able I can understand that completely. While living in Texas, I took my 2 year old daughter with me in the car to pick up my sister from work. While we were waiting for her to come out the door, and huge thunderstorm with large hail hit, and it seemed like the end of the world. My daughter is 39 now, and she still remembers that day like it was yesterday!
I subscribe
Rodriguez Patricia Johnson Anthony Young Jessica
You should change your name to Bart Unpronounceable
If I did that Joe, my last name would be one more letter longer!!! It is pronounced Kolojcheck, so actually easy to pronounce if you know how!
@@bartk85622 Naw, change it to "Just Bart"
@@joeschizoid7762 That is generally what I go by.........it makes it easier on everyone!
Droga que filmagem
Thank you! I hope you enjoyed it!