My son is a Rough Terrain Wildland Firefighter (now retired) with Oregon Department of Forestry and spent at least 15 seasons where he was sent south to California to help with wildfires. He was on the Carr Fire and saw the fire tornado. Being very experienced, he saw it was the most amazing and incredibly terrifying event he has ever witnessed.
Last Summer, 2013, forest fires in Ontario and Quebec blanketed New York State and New England with a dark smoky haze. The smell of burning wood lingered in the air for days. I recall getting weather alerts on my phone advising to keep windows closed.
back in the late 70's in Florida it rained fish at my house, mostly minnows and small fish, I put the ones in my birdbath into an aquarium where they got bigger and ate all my other fish, we also have walking catfish which after heavy rains cause flooding can be seen walking across roads.
So true. As the contiguous lower 48 American states stretch from the frozen north to the tropics in the south, & are bracketed east & west by the Atlantic & Pacific oceans, enormous bodies of climate-regulating water, the USA is certainly subject to some VERY extreme weather events. Thanks for your reaction.
@Cashcrop54 unfortunately, many of these UA-camrs (not the reactors) don't know what they're talking about. They just read something to us. It makes it hard for them to catch their own mistakes.
Very few places in the US where you can escape insane weather. I had a tornado tear through my property about 500 feet from my house last spring. That's the third tornado I experienced in my lifetime and I don't even live in tornado alley. Was right in the middle of one in 2011. Fortunately, the building I was in was protected by a massive concrete and steel building next door rated for over 200 mph. Unfortunately the mobile home park a mile away (about a hundred mobile homes) was obliterated with a few deaths. Now that blizzard with 2 feet of snow...
In the fire that included the fire tornado, the residents had to drive through an area with fire on both sides of the road. There was a family with the Dad telling his little boys not to look out the windows, which I thought was such a good idea, to limit what they see of the fire, especially if it was going to cross the road. (I’m pretty sure it was the same fire. There was one summer of many fires in California)
@TheyCallMeMr.Fahrenheit difference is 100 degrees in Texas with extreme humidity. I lived in Vegas for awhile and 100 there is nothing compared to 100 here in Dallas.
i live in san antonio,texas,the highest i have ever seen was 110F this year and it was 3 digit for like 2 weeks on and off for like 2 months or something,the cold started late for us. another thing that happened was when it started straight snowing few years back and ALOT of people lost power. snow usually happens in the north like austin but barely in san antonio,we get hail though lol
@SassyCassi in 1998 it reached 118 here in Dallas. Add the humidity, the heat index was 126 degrees that day. I stayed inside and read The Green Mile lol
My son is a Rough Terrain Wildland Firefighter (now retired) with Oregon Department of Forestry and spent at least 15 seasons where he was sent south to California to help with wildfires. He was on the Carr Fire and saw the fire tornado. Being very experienced, he saw it was the most amazing and incredibly terrifying event he has ever witnessed.
Last Summer, 2013, forest fires in Ontario and Quebec blanketed New York State and New England with a dark smoky haze. The smell of burning wood lingered in the air for days. I recall getting weather alerts on my phone advising to keep windows closed.
Your minus 8 Celsius is very different than minus 8 farienheght lol
For anyone that is curious:
-8° C is equal to 17.6° F
-8° F is equal to -22° C
@lauren3224 exactly !! Big difference!
Whatever though.
@@colinvannurden3090are you 11? Or just a weird Brit who wants desperately to be able to whine about something 😂
He frequently looks up the differences. He’s aware.
In the year 2000, a severe thunderstorm over the North Sea spawned a tornado that sucked up sea water and rained fish on Great Yarmouth in Norfolk.
Wooh I'm early!Kabir keep up the good work. Me and my family love your reactions!
back in the late 70's in Florida it rained fish at my house, mostly minnows and small fish, I put the ones in my birdbath into an aquarium where they got bigger and ate all my other fish, we also have walking catfish which after heavy rains cause flooding can be seen walking across roads.
We’ve had raining fish in Arkansas before too.
At time stamp 4:49 on video, thermometer shows that 100°F equals 38°C
So true. As the contiguous lower 48 American states stretch from the frozen north to the tropics in the south, & are bracketed east & west by the Atlantic & Pacific oceans, enormous bodies of climate-regulating water, the USA is certainly subject to some VERY extreme weather events. Thanks for your reaction.
100 degrees F in most of Arizona is not bad because it’s so dry here.
Interesting video. But, I never heard of a tornado 5 miles wide. The widest I think was El Reno at 2.5 miles.
I think they meant 5 km wide
@ definitely possible. I was overwhelmed by imagining a 5 mile wide tornado. Thanks. I'm sure you are right.
@Cashcrop54 unfortunately, many of these UA-camrs (not the reactors) don't know what they're talking about. They just read something to us. It makes it hard for them to catch their own mistakes.
@@Tateorsomething right again. I more often refrain from pointing out stuff like that but seemed so off target of reality I couldn't!
The El Reno tornado size was updated later on to 4.3 miles wide. I tried posting the link to the source but UA-cam keeps deleting it 😒
A couple years ago it was negative 40 for two weeks
I live in northern California and every year it gets hotter. This past summer we had 4-5 days of 117 and the air quality was awful!
Very few places in the US where you can escape insane weather. I had a tornado tear through my property about 500 feet from my house last spring. That's the third tornado I experienced in my lifetime and I don't even live in tornado alley. Was right in the middle of one in 2011. Fortunately, the building I was in was protected by a massive concrete and steel building next door rated for over 200 mph. Unfortunately the mobile home park a mile away (about a hundred mobile homes) was obliterated with a few deaths. Now that blizzard with 2 feet of snow...
The ice incased car was probably the Quebec Ice storm. I'm not sure if you've covered that. But if you haven't, check it out. It was horrible.
In the fire that included the fire tornado, the residents had to drive through an area with fire on both sides of the road. There was a family with the Dad telling his little boys not to look out the windows, which I thought was such a good idea, to limit what they see of the fire, especially if it was going to cross the road. (I’m pretty sure it was the same fire. There was one summer of many fires in California)
Snow in July? Have seen it in New Hampshire at a high elevation.
Normal body temp is 98.6F
9:33
Can you imagine how bad it smellt after all them fish died & it was hot as balls outside 🤮🤮🤮
Think I got number one this time
100° in Texas, summer, is a cool front 😂
Arizona: hold my beer. 🤣
@TheyCallMeMr.Fahrenheit difference is 100 degrees in Texas with extreme humidity. I lived in Vegas for awhile and 100 there is nothing compared to 100 here in Dallas.
@@TateorsomethingAnd even more nothing in Houston.
i live in san antonio,texas,the highest i have ever seen was 110F this year and it was 3 digit for like 2 weeks on and off for like 2 months or something,the cold started late for us. another thing that happened was when it started straight snowing few years back and ALOT of people lost power. snow usually happens in the north like austin but barely in san antonio,we get hail though lol
@SassyCassi in 1998 it reached 118 here in Dallas. Add the humidity, the heat index was 126 degrees that day. I stayed inside and read The Green Mile lol
You wondering how many bugs there are reminded me of this true fact.....
All the ants in the world OUTWEIGH all the humans in the world.....
Firenado is nothing compared to sharknado.
Global warming though 🙄
You reacted to this video before, you need to check if you have already done a video. You repeat videos alot
All the biblical plagues explained by unusual weather events.
The cold doesn't cause pneumonia 😂