Paradise Valley residents say flooding unlike anything they've seen before

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  • Опубликовано: 12 июн 2022
  • Residents say seeing the Yellowstone River so high is unlike anything they’ve seen before

Комментарии • 305

  • @rickysmith2248
    @rickysmith2248 2 года назад +23

    Its ok to camp by the river but it's never a good idea to build a house by the river.

  • @Y.d.o.b.o.n
    @Y.d.o.b.o.n 2 года назад +12

    (Builds a house next to a river)
    "How could this happen to me? Why me?"

    • @jimc4839
      @jimc4839 2 года назад +3

      Never understood that. Houses on stilts by the ocean. There needs to be a law prohibiting building so close to rivers and oceans. No wonder insurance is high.

  • @johndavis1140
    @johndavis1140 2 года назад +6

    I believe it rained 30 days straight in Coloma, Ca. USA. We lived on the American River during the winter of 1962 near Sutter's MIll where gold was discovered in 1849. I was blown away by the fury of the rising river where huge pine trees bobbed up and down the raging flood like toothpicks!

  • @desertdweller4316
    @desertdweller4316 2 года назад +9

    I grew up in Nor Cal with the Sacramento river running through town. MANY times it flooded and closed town off from outside travel. Homes were flooded. It happened so often it didn't seem that out of the ordinary. As a kid it was exciting; as an adult it's tragic. Hope everyone stays safe out there!!!

  • @jamesfountain6183
    @jamesfountain6183 2 года назад +21

    I live in central Texas, we had floods back in 2018 that destroyed a bridge & flooded/destroyed 100's of homes. I feel for anyone up there. Stay safe!

    • @mikewilliams117
      @mikewilliams117 2 года назад +2

      i worked in llano at that time and that flood was fucking intense i watched it come down river before it rose 42ft and it sounded like a freight train coming down stream.

    • @PenelopePitstop888
      @PenelopePitstop888 Год назад

      Omg, 42 feet!?! I would've been absolutely terrified! 😨Houston floods, but I don't think we've ever seen that magnitude of water.

  • @pmrose18
    @pmrose18 2 года назад +9

    Valley...the word tells you all you need to know

  • @caidyc
    @caidyc 2 года назад +15

    I have gotten used to a lot in my lifetime but the power of water always, ALWAYS surprises me.

    • @Ryan-rh8rn
      @Ryan-rh8rn 2 года назад +3

      Gives more credence to the global flood destroying the world in Noah's time, doesn't it?

    • @chasbodaniels1744
      @chasbodaniels1744 2 года назад +1

      @Ryan4 That “global” flood probably was regional. The Bosphorus straits may have been created by the Black Sea busting through into the Mediterranean.

    • @Ryan-rh8rn
      @Ryan-rh8rn 2 года назад +3

      @@chasbodaniels1744 the problem with the regional flood concept however doesn't fit the geological data collected from the continent covering sedimentary layers that span the globe.

    • @randallmarsh1187
      @randallmarsh1187 2 года назад +1

      @@Ryan-rh8rn For those that believe in the whole Noah's Ark global flood fairy tale, here's a few simple science questions and info.
      Where does rain come from? It comes from water evaporating from oceans, lakes, rivers, ponds etc. In order for that much rain to fall it had to have evaporated from those bodies of water by evaporation, thus lowering the water level. It's utterly impossible for there to have been a flood of those proportions when all the rain was doing was replacing the evaporated water, thus no global flooding at all. Yes there could have been isolated flooding the likes of which occurs now but nothing near the global flooding that the fairy tale portends!

  • @kelligray1848
    @kelligray1848 2 года назад +5

    I lived in Livingston the last time the Yellowstone flooded like that in 1996. Was in labor having a baby during it.

    • @karapurser8825
      @karapurser8825 2 года назад +2

      The Yellowstone hasn't flooded like this in recorded history. Record was over 100 years ago at 33000 cfs, this time the monitor broke at over 50000 cfs... almost double the record from 100 years ago, not to mention that's just when the meter broke... it kept rising.

  • @francespicard7460
    @francespicard7460 2 года назад +1

    We were on I 90 Going from Idaho into Yellowstone National Park, back in 2012. My Mom was born in northern Idaho & we went to see where she grew up. We were going back home via Yellowstone & Grand Teton, so we went into Yellowstone thru the Northern Entrance. It's sooooo SAD to see ALL that GORGEOUS area washed away. We even stayed in a little motel in Livingston that was owned by a former Marine. My husband was a Navy Corpsman attached to the Marine's, so we got treated "Royally" by the family. I wonder if they're all OK or if their Motel survived??

  • @MrMauidiver
    @MrMauidiver 2 года назад +4

    Come visit Houston Texas we seem to have an event like this every few years

  • @bestamerica
    @bestamerica 2 года назад +2

    '
    beautifully heavy cloudy pourly the rainy / rivery in the weather season...
    keep gooing more rainy allday - allnight...
    bring clean water to the hoover dam and los angeles area that help less drought

  • @joycemclean3894
    @joycemclean3894 2 года назад +7

    Don’t build close too rivers and build better bridges that higher, we live in a areas that can flood every 100 or 200 years.

  • @smallfootprint2961
    @smallfootprint2961 2 года назад +21

    We were there at this time of the year, some years ago, and after a few days were asked to leave because there was a snow storm coming in. You never know. These are rugged areas. We are the intruders.

  • @fireprooof101
    @fireprooof101 2 года назад +11

    Dang you mean all the money in the world doesn't just stop nature? Maybe they should move back home

  • @gary-dc9st
    @gary-dc9st 2 года назад +4

    The Mill Creek bridge at the start of the video was the only bridge left open between Livingston and Gardiner as of 6pm June 13th. I'll have to see if it is still open this morning.

  • @dwagon41
    @dwagon41 2 года назад +12

    The road between Cooke City and Tower has been wiped out as well - 2 of the 5 entrances to the park will be out of commission for at least the summer - they had better hurry up and rebuild those roads as both are vital to Cooke City's existence during the winter.

    • @AtarahDerek
      @AtarahDerek 2 года назад +2

      There's no way they'll be able to build even a working bypass between Gardiner and Mammoth before winter hits. Cost of living in YNP just got a lot more expensive, and for once we can't blame the Dems.

    • @vickimeyers2672
      @vickimeyers2672 2 года назад +2

      There is access to Cooke City coming from Cody, WY. before winter snowfall. Has that road been affected by flooding, as well?

    • @dwagon41
      @dwagon41 2 года назад +4

      @@vickimeyers2672 not that I'm aware of, but the only route into Cooke City during winter is through the park.

    • @vickimeyers2672
      @vickimeyers2672 Год назад

      @Mr. chicano if the EV you're driving on an interstate runs out of fuel, do you take a bucket, walk to the closest charging station, fill up the bucket with electricity, then walk back to your EV and fill it up?

    • @vickimeyers2672
      @vickimeyers2672 Год назад

      @@dwagon41 I lived and worked in Cooke City. Drive through the Lamar Valley to Livingston often during the winter months.

  • @DMills-un1tl
    @DMills-un1tl 2 года назад +4

    They’ve got too much water and we haven’t had a drop of rain in Arizona in so long I can’t remember 😕

    • @meaghanstreufert2229
      @meaghanstreufert2229 2 года назад +1

      We. Had a lot of rain this winter and last monsoon season. How soon we forget

  • @endofunk2174
    @endofunk2174 2 года назад +17

    Proving why building anything adjacent to a river; even worse at the same elevation and / or in a flood plain is a bad idea. One only need to study historic weather patterns of the last century to realise this is not the first time this river has burst its banks.

    • @chasbodaniels1744
      @chasbodaniels1744 2 года назад +3

      Agree 100%. I cringe at the arrogance of folks building on short-term shorelines.

  • @AtarahDerek
    @AtarahDerek 2 года назад +9

    Water: The most powerful erosive force on earth. By a lot. The second place finisher isn't even close. Water is to wind, earthquakes, volcanoes, humans and chemicals as Secretariat is to the rest of the Belmont field.

    • @danhenderson5198
      @danhenderson5198 2 года назад +1

      @sali gandu So can a kiss. If someone uses one of those fake lips and puts poison on it....You would think a kiss is sweet but you should really think again about those who kiss you.... You never know which ones want you 6 feet under... Hahhaha, trust me I know, I know about this. This is very common where I live.

  • @WildlifeObsessed
    @WildlifeObsessed 2 года назад

    Great video to see the difference between Vertical & Horizontal.

  • @kevinwilson2536
    @kevinwilson2536 2 года назад +2

    Undoubtedly many were warned of settling and building in flood zones like this. Which is where my sympathy stops. Unreal amount of ignorance in this world

  • @theyclosechannelsthatspeak428
    @theyclosechannelsthatspeak428 2 года назад +22

    Why are grown adults driving through flood water? Not the brightest bulbs are they?

    • @pinkrose5796
      @pinkrose5796 2 года назад

      Hope they don't expect ANYONE to try and rescue them!! Why should others die trying to save those with no brain cells!!!!

    • @hewystudio7832
      @hewystudio7832 2 года назад +8

      Because if they don’t they are trapped as conditions get worse

    • @brianvail9212
      @brianvail9212 2 года назад +3

      Retrieving family members?

    • @forthefunofit3230
      @forthefunofit3230 2 года назад

      darwin will get those idiots sooner or later...

    • @kookiedabear
      @kookiedabear 2 года назад

      Because this bloke wouldn't let them borrow his helicopter! Improvise; the bulb gets brighter.

  • @lukeallen3696
    @lukeallen3696 2 года назад +4

    Pity this rain couldn’t have fallen in the Colarado River basin

    • @timwhite7127
      @timwhite7127 2 года назад

      Nature's way of giving us the finger...

  • @annhartel4426
    @annhartel4426 2 года назад +2

    It would be nice to see before footage also.

  • @teeple1877
    @teeple1877 2 года назад +8

    Love how the newscaster said “secondhand nature” talking about the lad with the helicopter.

    • @1rexrex
      @1rexrex 2 года назад +4

      Must be a Goodwill there selling old helping outs?

  • @anne_n_nimity
    @anne_n_nimity 2 года назад +2

    Secondhand nature.. that’s a new one ☝️

  • @samidu492
    @samidu492 2 года назад +2

    Pray all animals are safe

  • @jayd5228
    @jayd5228 2 года назад

    Thank You, Dowsers!! Smart way to keep the filthy tourists out !!

  • @gloriagehring8676
    @gloriagehring8676 2 года назад +2

    Wow...had no idea.

  • @casaysutton3439
    @casaysutton3439 2 года назад +3

    Watch out on your water and your water heater you might need a different coil due to sulfur and high and heat index....//proper distance evacuation from Yellowstone 1st spring {what it takes to cool off)might be another down front to specific area please beware and safe

  • @stolearovigor281
    @stolearovigor281 2 года назад +3

    Plant trees and build on the hills

  • @dorenehendricks6627
    @dorenehendricks6627 2 года назад +4

    Sad but what we have destroyed and killed sad but pay back prayers to all

  • @sywnetteroberts9298
    @sywnetteroberts9298 2 года назад

    Where did the water come from? Was it heavy rain?

  • @samuelcantley5500
    @samuelcantley5500 2 года назад +6

    That's what the lava flow will look like coming through there

    • @tmak4699
      @tmak4699 2 года назад +2

      yellowstone will never erupt..failed science class did ya?

    • @hardrockminer-50
      @hardrockminer-50 Год назад +1

      @@tmak4699 It only erupts about every 600,000 to 800,000 years. How long has it been now? About 800,000?

    • @tmak4699
      @tmak4699 Год назад

      @@hardrockminer-50 okay i stand corrected..it will never erupt at any significant level..

  • @Cosmicsurfpro
    @Cosmicsurfpro 2 года назад

    I'm just thinking of that weight on the super volcano! 🌋

  • @867diesel
    @867diesel 2 года назад +3

    every time it rains , americans say " ive never seen anything like this before " . lmao

  • @dmcdaniel2009
    @dmcdaniel2009 2 года назад +1

    THATS WHY IT'S CALLED "A VALLEY". I AM SORRY FOR YOUR ISSUES.

    • @SegoMan
      @SegoMan 2 года назад

      We built in a flood plane and it flooded...

  • @hardrockminer-50
    @hardrockminer-50 Год назад +1

    That's the thing with 100+ year storms. They only happen every couple generations. It has happened before, it will happen again. Maybe not in our lifetimes. That's why the valleys are as wide as they are.

  • @patriciaribaric3409
    @patriciaribaric3409 2 года назад +8

    Will any of this water make it to the Colorado River?

    • @cjbrooks749
      @cjbrooks749 2 года назад +8

      No

    • @jons5898
      @jons5898 2 года назад +6

      Patricia Ribaric Nope, water from the Yellowstone River eventually flows into the Missouri River then into the Mississippi River and on to the Gulf of Mexico .

    • @patriciaribaric3409
      @patriciaribaric3409 2 года назад +4

      @@jons5898 Thank you.

    • @babydaddy1930
      @babydaddy1930 2 года назад +7

      Wrong side of the Rockies dear

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 2 года назад +4

      @@babydaddy1930 even if it was on the other side, the answer is still no.....it would go to the Columbia.

  • @sidboraus6151
    @sidboraus6151 2 года назад +2

    Wow 😲

  • @oldcrone
    @oldcrone 2 года назад +2

    I had a vacation planned in Aug. I cancelled.

    • @Don-md6wn
      @Don-md6wn 2 года назад

      Good move. Crowds at Yellowstone are bad enough during a normal summer. Big sections of the park and the Loop Road will be closed and traffic jams and crowds for the parts that are open will likely be ridiculous. It can take a long time for parks in remote areas with short seasons for rebuilding and maintenance to recover. Waterton Lakes National Park in Canada had a huge wildfire in 2017. I was there in late August, 2019 and probably 80% of the park was still closed.

  • @SegoMan
    @SegoMan 2 года назад +2

    Ah gee whiz I built in a flood plane and it flooded..........

  • @petemitchell6788
    @petemitchell6788 2 года назад +12

    It’s natures way of saying “Go Back To California” 🤣

  • @Sabrina-01
    @Sabrina-01 2 года назад +6

    Prayers for all in its wake .

    • @gregwilvert
      @gregwilvert 2 года назад +3

      That’ll really help!

  • @andik859
    @andik859 2 года назад

    Too much water on wrong place. Lake Mead needs it. Damn.

  • @terryalford955
    @terryalford955 2 года назад +24

    This is as commonplace as a teenager with acne, in geologic time . You ain't seen anything yet .

  • @ravimahalay610
    @ravimahalay610 2 года назад +2

    Flood nature way of cleaning river from time to time

  • @ntuselala9400
    @ntuselala9400 2 года назад

    where is this place? South Africa or UK?

    • @Don-md6wn
      @Don-md6wn 2 года назад +1

      Yellowstone National Park is the oldest national park in the U.S. and very large, mostly in the state of Wyoming but partially in the states of Montana and Idaho. It is a high elevation area with a very cold climate and the Yellowstone River is already at high flow in June from snow melt. Add in a lot of rain and this is the result.

  • @deanpesci8484
    @deanpesci8484 2 года назад +28

    Second-hand nature? Local news is always hilarious.

    • @purplepixie274
      @purplepixie274 2 года назад

      🙄😬😒

    • @ccenda3109
      @ccenda3109 2 года назад

      Definitely man made fasho

    • @lockedon8953
      @lockedon8953 2 года назад +1

      They put hallmark to shame when it comes to drama

    • @lilolmecj
      @lilolmecj 2 года назад +3

      Better than national which isn’t even reporting.

    • @teeple1877
      @teeple1877 2 года назад

      That’s what I was thinking..

  • @jeff9062
    @jeff9062 2 года назад

    OMG we've never seen flooding before!!! 🤨🤨

  • @elmerkilred159
    @elmerkilred159 2 года назад

    I wonder what drives people to build on the banks of a river?

  • @nosoupforyou425
    @nosoupforyou425 2 года назад +3

    Everything is brand new to these types... 😆

  • @vikings3799
    @vikings3799 2 года назад

    It comes and goes

  • @dennismitchell1934
    @dennismitchell1934 2 года назад +1

    Will any of that flood water meet the Colorado River at some point ? Lake MEADE sure could use some help !

    • @timhansn362
      @timhansn362 2 года назад +1

      NO!!! Different water shed. Going to ND SD Neb then into the Mississippi River and on to the Gulf.

  • @4kfamilyfunwalk206
    @4kfamilyfunwalk206 2 года назад +2

    I was so lucky went to Yellowstone National Park on weekend of June 4th 5th 6th and pass by Montana too

  • @rayjay238
    @rayjay238 2 года назад

    Is this from rain in canada

  • @stephaniecannon410
    @stephaniecannon410 2 года назад +4

    Historically high levels. 😱

    • @fernarias
      @fernarias 2 года назад +2

      It's a short history of 5 years.

  • @battles423
    @battles423 2 года назад +15

    It’s a valley. Of course it’s going to flood eventually. I don’t understand why people are shocked when a stream, creek, river, pond, lake, or ocean floods. It flooded in the past thousands of years ago and it will again in the future.

    • @ediewall6360
      @ediewall6360 2 года назад +3

      It does take visitors by surprise and puts them danger

    • @dgrfsthrgsergwrtghasefq
      @dgrfsthrgsergwrtghasefq 2 года назад

      @@ediewall6360 Maybe "visitors" should pay more attention to their surroundings and the "weather". Our National Parks are not Disneyland, last time I checked that was in California.

    • @ediewall6360
      @ediewall6360 2 года назад +1

      @@dgrfsthrgsergwrtghasefq Hey, I agree. I think that we have far too many irresponsible “ adults” in this country. People act as if cause and effect does not exist. Do no harm is an important way of thinking. Parents aren’t parenting perhaps and adults are’t adulting.

  • @mightymikethebear
    @mightymikethebear 2 года назад

    This is a reminder that planet Earth is an often changing, sometimes dangerous thing.

  • @profhortsunlover1536
    @profhortsunlover1536 2 года назад +2

    is yellow stone in australia?

    • @timhansn362
      @timhansn362 2 года назад

      Yes on the east side by the White House.

    • @FloridaGirl-
      @FloridaGirl- 2 года назад

      @@timhansn362 🤣

    • @profhortsunlover1536
      @profhortsunlover1536 2 года назад

      @@timhansn362 i was joking, reference to the australian accent of narrator

  • @emmaathome2902
    @emmaathome2902 2 года назад

    That’s some flood!

  • @MrJfrederici
    @MrJfrederici 2 года назад +19

    This flooding is devastating and tragic. And...this news report is awful. Better off just showing video with subtitles of the locations.

    • @kirstenjohnston7100
      @kirstenjohnston7100 2 года назад +3

      Did you catch where they said that it was “second hand nature” for that man to help out ? 😆

    • @MrJfrederici
      @MrJfrederici 2 года назад +1

      @@kirstenjohnston7100 Yes! And he said that the residents say they've never seen the river this high before and then puts the mic in front of the lady who said "I've never see the river this high before"

  • @danstrayer111
    @danstrayer111 2 года назад +10

    Call someplace Paradise, kiss it goodbye. Humans will destroy it.

  • @buffaloman5042
    @buffaloman5042 2 года назад +2

    It will be months before yellowstone roads are repaired....

    • @SegoMan
      @SegoMan 2 года назад

      Get the WH press secretary on the job and all roads will "circle back"

    • @gooldenwending
      @gooldenwending 2 года назад +1

      I don't see it happening in months. Next year if we're lucky...

    • @jeffmorrison8909
      @jeffmorrison8909 2 года назад

      Try several years until they are completely fixed, they might be able to build a couple temp fixes to get around a few places, but w/a short construction season up there, it’s going to take years to fix all that!

  • @AhJodie
    @AhJodie 2 года назад +2

    If there were nomads living there...it would be no big deal...just move for a while...😃

  • @donavon8824
    @donavon8824 2 года назад

    They should send Tom Yorke from radoihead to help....Especially in that dangerous river.....No..Floaties!!

  • @mickeymarchwick4752
    @mickeymarchwick4752 2 года назад

    Yellowstone park closed until further notice,and may be closed all summer. Due to torrential rains

  • @newsnowtammylynnlynn484
    @newsnowtammylynnlynn484 2 года назад +5

    I seen it that high in the 80s

    • @montanarailroads7367
      @montanarailroads7367 2 года назад

      No, you haven't. The Yellowstone flooded in 1981. This is 3 feet higher.

    • @gooldenwending
      @gooldenwending 2 года назад

      Nope. Broke all previous records.

  • @thublit
    @thublit 2 года назад

    Building on flood plain?

  • @babydaddy1930
    @babydaddy1930 2 года назад +1

    Meanwhile the western slope is so far in drought it's horrible

    • @montanarailroads7367
      @montanarailroads7367 2 года назад +1

      Really? I live on the western slope and and all we have had this spring is rain and snow. It's pouring out right now.

  • @MassiveBrainTrauma
    @MassiveBrainTrauma 2 года назад +1

    They're all wearing jackets in June. Does it stay cold all Summer?

    • @Don-md6wn
      @Don-md6wn 2 года назад +2

      It doesn't stay cold all summer, but it can get cold at night and snow at the highest elevations during the summer. Most of the campgrounds are at 7000-9000 feet elevations and you can usually figure the temperature is about 4 degrees F lower every 1000 feet up, so lows at night in the high 30's and low 40's aren't unusual. If you're hiking at high elevation and don't carry some layers and a rain jacket you are at risk of hypothermia at any time of year if you get caught in the rain or snow.

    • @Chrisdabeastman34
      @Chrisdabeastman34 2 года назад +1

      Well if you’ve ever crawled out of your basement you’d understand that high winds follow strong storms.

  • @m118lr
    @m118lr 2 года назад

    SOOOOO sad man..

  • @kookiedabear
    @kookiedabear 2 года назад +5

    Is this news provided by the local middle school?

  • @rebeccacombs8781
    @rebeccacombs8781 2 года назад

    Mother nature taking it back...

  • @samallardyce2522
    @samallardyce2522 2 года назад +4

    mother nature is healing herself

  • @catlover6382
    @catlover6382 2 года назад +12

    This is why you all need to leave these places alone.

    • @ezakustam
      @ezakustam 2 года назад

      The pollution from one high-population city had more of an effect on this flood than Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho COMBINED. Many people lived there their entire lives. Some for generations and generations. Yellowstone National Park is one of the few relatively untouched environments and began the concept for not only for the US, but the world. The wilderness there is similarly protected by federal law. Most billionaires and people in government would raze the entire country for short-term profit, if they could. Love of this land is what protects it from harm. I've seen what passes for nature in meteopolitan areas. Why is utter destruction of the environment accepable there? Will you and your entire family leave your home? Where will you go? THIS IS THEIR HOME.

  • @jdc8352
    @jdc8352 2 года назад +8

    The drought caused this

  • @babylov3r
    @babylov3r 2 года назад +1

    This is Mother Nature wrath which no one able to stop it until it stop by itself

  • @kevindunlap5525
    @kevindunlap5525 2 года назад +5

    You might want to get out of the house a bit more if you've never seen anything like this before.
    Also, you'll find some stuff on the interweb thingy.

  • @CrazyFunnyCats
    @CrazyFunnyCats 2 года назад

    Rescue the homeless dogs and cats too!
    🐱🐶❤️

  • @someone-iz3oc
    @someone-iz3oc 2 года назад

    The sky is falling, the sky is falling...
    Chicken Little 👍

  • @normansmith1459
    @normansmith1459 2 года назад +3

    Volcanic, Run. I think it was in the movie. Maybe wrong but I take the movie role of first to say RUN. Whose taking the Nothing's wrong, the beaches are open go swimming.

  • @tomgunn8004
    @tomgunn8004 2 года назад

    Second ''hand'' nature!

  • @redbarchetta8782
    @redbarchetta8782 2 года назад

    The Yellowstone looks more like the Mississippi.

  • @therecitizen1144
    @therecitizen1144 2 года назад +4

    God heard the prayers from Lake Meade

    • @gooldenwending
      @gooldenwending 2 года назад +7

      This water isn’t flowing that way

    • @tmak4699
      @tmak4699 2 года назад +3

      goes to North Dakota then south to Atlantic via Missouri River.

  • @bigshrimpin6992
    @bigshrimpin6992 2 года назад

    The out of state people have pissed off Mother Nature! She’s taking back what’s hers

  • @sarge4455
    @sarge4455 2 года назад +1

    Good for the drought

  • @montanarailroads7367
    @montanarailroads7367 2 года назад +20

    "It's sad." "It's alarming." Actually, it's just rivers doing what rivers do.

    • @gsftom
      @gsftom 2 года назад

      Totally agree and made the same exact comment. Nothing sad or alarming at all abt any of this. Just nature doing what it does.

    • @ezakustam
      @ezakustam 2 года назад +1

      @@gsftom
      When you lose everything in a natural disaster or terrible accident, come back and comment again. Not everyone affected was on the riverbank. Roads that have stood for over a hundred years are gone. People are stranded without power, food, and shelter, FFS.

  • @conniewolf7300
    @conniewolf7300 2 года назад

    Yellowstone is closed because of the flooding!

  • @rodneynorfolk9737
    @rodneynorfolk9737 2 года назад +6

    this area has flooded many times and just as bad or worse. someone who has lived in the area for 10 or 30 or 60 years has seen NOTHING compared to the life of the river valley. silly people

    • @0ldf0lk5henshaw
      @0ldf0lk5henshaw 2 года назад +4

      Biggest flows on that river in 100 years.

    • @karapurser8825
      @karapurser8825 2 года назад

      @@0ldf0lk5henshaw yep, and by double the highest record over 100 years ago.

  • @inharmonywithearth9982
    @inharmonywithearth9982 2 года назад +6

    Yellowstone Park closes in the winter and exterminates over 2,000 bison each winter because cattle business leases wont allow herd to make it to 5,000 bison. The cattle men are not willing to share grass with bison. Glacier and Olympia National Parks just exterminated ALL the white antelopes in those parks ( called mountain goats). There are no more mountain goats in Glacier or Olympia Park.

    • @jimc4839
      @jimc4839 2 года назад +2

      That sucks.

    • @arthurbrumagem3844
      @arthurbrumagem3844 2 года назад +4

      I’ll bet those same ranchers are using leased govt land

    • @inharmonywithearth9982
      @inharmonywithearth9982 2 года назад

      @@arthurbrumagem3844 Yes due to the 1937 Taylor Grazing Act. Politicians kinfolks get to graze cattle and sheep on public land. Some like Cliven Bundy dont even pay that tiny lease. These business men spray non biodegradable herbicide toxins on all the broadleafed plants and exterminate every wild animal that consumes grass. Even the prairie dog towns are exploded. The reason they are called " welfare ranchers" is because they declare " disaster relief grants" constantly to get YOU to buy all their hay and feed and chemicals, and even pay for government wildlife exterminators to keep the leased areas devoid of wildlife. I am well acquanted with this corruption. These areas are not historic cattle regions anyway. The grasses stay dead too long all winter and summers too dry. The bison were migratory to survive on the shortgrass prairie until the Buffalo Soldiers exterminated them by 1857 to starve out the Sioux and Frontiersmen. The real true cowboy heritage is from the southwest where millions of truely wild LONGHORNS were rounded up and literally driven to extinction for wealthy stockyard owners.

    • @arthurbrumagem3844
      @arthurbrumagem3844 2 года назад +2

      @@inharmonywithearth9982 millions of bison may have been killed but it wasn’t just the Buffalo soldiers doing it. I agree with the rest of your assessment however. The longhorns however weren’t native to the SW. They were brought there by settlers and managed to grow exponentially in the arid areas when they became wild.

    • @inharmonywithearth9982
      @inharmonywithearth9982 2 года назад

      @@arthurbrumagem3844 If you consider the math you might want to question that Longhorn theory. Remember history is His Story. How could a few lost cattle in the late 1500s become millions of feral cattle by the late 1700s? The feral horse theory also is challenged. How come the Baskir Curly Mongolian Milk horse has been found among the feral horse bands as well as a thriving breeding operation by Nez Pierce in the Palouse Valley of Washington that is NOTHING genetically simular to Spanish horses? Also the Buffalo Soldiers were able to fully decimate the migratory bison in only 3 years. By 1857 the Buffalo Soldiers were finished and after monutains of bison bones were burned to make lime they became a black regiment until discontinued a hundred years later.

  • @darlenewallace8469
    @darlenewallace8469 2 года назад

    So bad house flooding water down the river

  • @sheanwalsh5892
    @sheanwalsh5892 2 года назад +2

    as comments on previous sites...... people are saying they have never seen this before !!! 🤔🤔 weather manipulation 🤔😏 god you yanks are gullable folk

  • @playhooky
    @playhooky 2 года назад

    Thanks for the coverage and details, but gosh, your audio quality is pretty bad!

  • @graphguy
    @graphguy 2 года назад

    it is normal

  • @davidvincent980
    @davidvincent980 2 года назад

    I started building a boat and rounding up animals...

  • @whynot8901
    @whynot8901 2 года назад +6

    pretty sure the original inhabitants saw this before

  • @BigDogRidgeback
    @BigDogRidgeback 2 года назад

    Well guess what now you know.

  • @davidgoosen1633
    @davidgoosen1633 2 года назад +2

    Prayers obviously won't help. But for non-believers, you can believe that climate is changing

    • @suspendeddisbelief401
      @suspendeddisbelief401 2 года назад

      No it is NOT climate change & plain ignorance to say so. Rivers flooding is as old as the rivers themselves.

  • @4892wyvern
    @4892wyvern 2 года назад

    Guess that lil crap wasnt long for this
    world