Our next door neighbors lost their house in Katrina, along with everything they had. They moved in next to us around 5 years ago, and they have a party Every. Single. Day. All thru the pandemic they had pool parties, barbecues, holiday parties, non holiday parties, and somehow had tons of guests over every day, while the rest of us were hibernating and watching reruns...during an imminent tornado warning one evening, I saw them on their front porch having cocktails and thought they might not have heard the, "take shelter now" warning, as it was headed right for us...but they knew, they just didn't care! While we were crouching with our pets in the strongest part of the house, we could still hear them screaming with laughter and talking next door. The storm barely missed us, and I went out to see the damage. They were still on the porch, surrounded by branches and blown down bushes, having the time of their life! I love them!! I hope they never move away. They might be crazy, but they make me happy and optimistic. Besides, hearing them laughing and celebrating all the time makes me realize the importance of LIVING, not just surviving, a great lesson, one we all need to realize, especially in these times....
I still think of those poor souls. Not allowed to evacuate pets. Stuck in the stadium with no flushing toilets. The ship with water waiting there and not being ordered to deliver the water. Red Cross nearly went bankrupt. Glad some help was given though.
@@snowmiaow That operation to shelter people was the most shameful, botched travesty of all time! How many hurricanes does it take to learn what to do?? The top workersc at the red cross were earning half a MILLION DOLLARS in salary a year, of our donated money, and they sure weren't spending it on the victims! They had no interest in even monitoring the whole thing, because all they ever do is go to meetings and talk, and do nothing. A third grader could have planned better. I'm never giving a cent to those con artists, in my opinion, they sure have been charged with manslaughter for leaving so many to die in hospitals...
A somewhat entertaining landslide story came from Mom. She inspects the state’s coal mines. One mine, looked awful, like nothing had been done to restore the landscape. Bare mud, no stabilizing vegetation mats, and a large land mover half-buried in solidifying mud. Mom was getting ready to write up citations, when the mine manager explained, “We had a landslide two days ago. I have pictures of our progress, but we’ve been trying to dig that mover out since it got stuck. I was more concerned with getting my guy out.” That manager retired after the repair work the state told him to do… planting a deep-rooted weed to stabilize the dirt. And then burn it off. This poor guy was told to set a fire next to an active coal mine! I’d retire, too!
@@icarusbinns3156 That’s an unfortunate story but luckily it sounds like no one was hurt. That’s the most important thing. The manager worrying about his men means he thought of the moral thing first.
As far as Ida, there are time lapses. Look into port Fourchon Ida time-lapses. Absolutely unreal the amount of water that storm brought with it. I live only a few miles north of where Ida made landfall. Miraculously my mobile home is still here as brick structures that have been here for many years are completely gone.
seeing the material, lack of painted in lines, and how small it probably is given the outside area, it's probably not a parking lot. Most likely just some old, thin, weak concrete for people to walk on because there was a building nearby Nonetheless the landslide was powerful
The Japan tsunami is one of the most horrific things I have ever seen in my lifetime. I will never forget it. I remember all our channels were temporarily shut to cover the tsunami and we saw footage right from Google earth where the waves originated to the destruction it did in real time.
The seawalls in Japan were actually tall enough… before the earthquake. That shoved the whole country eight feet to the west, and pulled it down by five feet. So suddenly… those walls weren’t tall enough. The quake also sped up Earth’s rotation by a fraction of a second.
@@theokguy9837 startlingly, the tsunami came well after it was expected. Nearly every warning for it had expired. One of the people I used to work with was an English teacher in Japan. She got her class to the roof after the quake, and insisted they stay there. Because she knew there’d be a tsunami. Her entire class survived, thanks to the ‘crazy American lady’
Nothing is quite as humbling as realizing that Mother Nature was here before us and it will be here after us. We live under her thumb and all we can do is wait for the day she decides to take Earth back from us.
I was in Okinawa during the 2011 earthquake, we were all warned about evacuating to higher grounds, luckily everyone was safe here. Most recent tsunami from the underwater volcano we had, we got a warning a little over midnight, however the wave arrived at 11 pm, but the wave was hardly noticeable
A tornado struck the Australian city of Bathurst this year. Tornados are rare in Australia, but that certainly was one of the most extraordinary things I've seen. Thankfully no lives were lost.
I was visiting Australia as a kid over the Christmas holidays in 1974-75. We were staying with a childhood friend of my mom and her family in Perth. I was the first person to see the newspaper on Christmas Day because I brought it in from the porch. The headline was “Cyclone Tracy Destroys Darwin”. They were still evacuating people two weeks later when we were flying from Melbourne to Sydney. They were actually overfilling airplanes to accommodate the evacuees. My parents, my younger sister and I were seated in a 3-person section with the armrests raised because the seats on planes back then were larger. I remember being quite put out that my sister and I had to be squished in between my parents and we couldn’t have our own seats. Grownup me now fully understands the gravity of what happened and why they were doing it.
I'm surprised they didn't present any footage of Hurricane Maria that hit my island of Puerto Rico back in 2017. It was a category 4/5 hurricane. I will never forget that day.
Fun facts about microbursts: you can usually see them from the air before they happen as a downdraft of air will fall before any rain falls and will kick up a sort of wall of dust before the real destruction hits. It’s also these downdrafts that make microbursts one of the most dangerous weather phenomenon for aviation as their downdrafts can reach an excess of -6000 feet per minute. Only a very few military jets can out-climb that severe of a downdraft and 99% of all other aircraft would be pushed into the ground.
I guess that was a microburst my sister and I were in. Our parents were at a concert, and sent us a photo of this dark grey, almost black column. Mom asked, “Can you guys see this?” “Yeah, Mom… we’re IN it!” Radar showed that it was an oval, with a little hook in the middle, the very worst of which was sitting right over our street. We were pretty scared, as were the dogs. We had a lot of cookies, since I stress-bake Mom walked in after getting home, sees the cooling racks, “That bad, huh?”
I was in Lake Charles, Louisiana when Ida rolled in; mind you, I'm from Missouri, so I've never experienced or witnessed a hurricane. While visiting my friends in Lake Charles, we watched hurricane Ida roll in. I'll never forget how menacingly beautiful it looked.
this video is really fascinating and well put together! i love how you captured those unexpected weather events. but honestly, i can't help but think that some of these might have been exaggerated for entertainment. i mean, do we really need to see tornadoes spinning so dramatically? sometimes it feels like it's more about the drama than the reality. what do you guys think?
That lady in red walking towards the landslide… whichever 30 seconds of that day that she wasted on social media, watching tv, arguing about something unimportant, anything that put her 30 seconds behind schedule literally saved her life.
what an amazing compilation of weather events! it’s really interesting to see how unpredictably nature can behave. however, i can’t help but wonder if some of these moments are just a bit exaggerated for views. like, are we sure every single clip is legit?
This video reminded me of a line from a Godzilla movie from the 80's to paraphrase the quote "Mother nature has a way of reminding us how insignificant we truly are, be it fire, flood or a volcano."
I loved bad weather until I moved to Arizona. Most monsoons are tolerable, as long as the power does not go out; haboob is fun to say but obnoxious to experience (and a nightmare to clean up after); and microbursts are absolutely terrifying and have destroyed my car's windows on more than two occasions. During the summer of 2020, a neighboring town less than fifteen miles away had its first tornado in almost fifty years. It was an EF0/EF1 (winds were 75-95 mph) and, fortunately, in the middle of a field, so fairly harmless. Regardless, I crossed "storm-chasing" from my bucket list and started pricing storm shelters. 😶🌫
I've experienced multiple microbursts up here in p.a. there absolutely terrifying and in so many cases come before the main part of the storm. They are so powerful, my first experience with one that I vividly remember was around the time of blm protests. We were all matching outside a local administration and high school and then they're were some large drop of rain before what looked like a low lying clouds rolled over the neighborhood and the highway and wet saw it throwing trees around. It popped over the highway and sent almost all of the crowd running to the high school entrance as the wind route the trees apart and threw anything not anchored to the ground into the air. And then 1 year later in September ida hit giving me my first tornado experience with an ef2 and wind of 130 mph. I count myself lucky to have a home after these events, and those are just the 2 worst storms I've seen so far, who knows what's next.
@@cainealexander-mccord2805, right? We midwesterners who grew up with basements take these things for granted. Then the sirens and our phone weather alerts go off and we head downstairs.
Microbursts are scary as hell. We were building a house doing some inside work because it was raining pretty hard and out of nowhere these huge hail balls and serious winds that were hidden within the storm hit us. We had the roof on but no shingles and no windows yet and we got smashed. Wind and hail coming from all directions it seemed. Plyboard and sheet metal flying around. Only lasted about 3 minutes or so but we didn't know if a tornado was hitting us or what. That's the second one I've experienced in the last two years here in Virginia.
Pity you didn't cover the Easter Quake of '64 in Anchorage, AK. It was a 4 minute long 9.2 that happened in Prince William Sound. There is camera footage of the quake and lots of before and after shots. However, like the quake in Chile, CCTV wasn't as common at the time. But the footage that exists is honestly terrifying. Part of the city broke off and fell into the inlet. The only reason that the body count wasn't higher is because it's Alaska in the 60s, after Fur Rondy, but before tourist season.
Told out of towner next door homeowners to leave for Katrina. They refused. Husband died & wife clung to tree & watched tornadoes wipe our home & their 3 story home away. She wished she had listened & left.
Past summer, there were severe floods in Europe. In my country, Belgium, there were places where the water reached a height of 4 meters! in the streets and home. Unfortunately 42 deaths and a lot of damage (there are still people without their own home)... Luckily there are a lot of volunteers because our country and big organizations fail to help properly. An example is the Red Cross, they received millions of euros to help the victims, but nobody knows where most of the money is gone (probably to their own personnel and administration, and only a small percentage goes to food?). Companies and volunteers from Flanders helped (and are still helping) the locals with necessities, cleaning the homes and streets, repairing damaged infrastructure, food... The only thing I know that the red cross did this summer, was prevent people to donate money to other organizations besides their own and discourage people to help on their own. Luckily a lot of people didn't listen and brought goods on their own to the victims. I will never donate anymore to the Red Cross, there were better initiatives that were more efficient.
I've experienced multiple microbursts up here in p.a. there absolutely terrifying and in so many cases come before the main part of the storm. They are so powerful, my first experience with one that I vividly remember was around the time of blm protests. We were all matching outside a local administration and high school and then they're were some large drop of rain before what looked like a low lying clouds rolled over the neighborhood and the highway and wet saw it throwing trees around. It popped over the highway and sent almost all of the crowd running to the high school entrance as the wind route the trees apart and threw anything not anchored to the ground into the air. And then 1 year later in September ida hit giving me my first tornado experience with an ef2 and wind of 130 mph. I count myself lucky to have a home after these events, and those are just the 2 worst storms I've seen so far, who knows what's next
We had a fue tornadoes hit by us for ida but one tornado passed so close it blowup our home the ceiling came down in 200+ winds we got swoop up off our feet I saved my parents life's that day ...I'm not scared of bad weather well I wasn't before ida in dulac
@@mansionbookerstudios9629 I've watched her interviews with Jordan Peterson, she's one incredible young girl who's faced unimaginable cruelty. I know she's just one of millions going through the same cruelty every day in North Korea.
really enjoyed this video, it’s amazing how technology can capture nature’s fury. but honestly, i can't help but think that some of these moments also make us a bit desensitized to the real impact of extreme weather. like, seeing it on screen is one thing, but the reality can be so much more devastating for those affected. what do you guys think?
Ohhhh yeah I got some vids of a tree going from vertical to near horizontal and like 50kmh winds (Melbourne) and it was hectic I think it was a Brough off of a micro burst
During hurricane ida Houma residents suffered greatly. They came all the way to bayou Vista to get gas, thats in a whole new parish, around a 45 minutes away if traffic is good.. Lines to get gas were miles long, some people pushing their car. I was in Morgan City, which was not hit too badly, which is about 15 minutes from Bayou vista, and waited in line for 2 hours and 40 minutes for gas. While in line people got out of their cars and talked to strangers like they were old friends. Some people are rude, but the majority of the people in Louisiana come together in times of need. The Cajun Navy was founded and has helped thousands of people. I love this state.
what a fascinating compilation! it’s amazing how nature can surprise us like that. however, i can't help but wonder if some of these moments were actually staged. i mean, it would be easy for someone to set up a security camera and create dramatic weather events for views, right? just a thought!
In some of these areas such as New Orleans people didn't know that or things changed over time. New Orleans for example, when it was founded it was actually above sea level. Over time as the city grew the land slowly sank below sea level, either because water was pumped out for usage, or because the land was sinking anyways. With faultlines, in most cases when a city was started, such as San Francisco people didn't know about them. With volcanoes it's because the soil they produce is extremely fertile. You can easily, with little or no effort grow up to 4 crops per year. No fossil fuels, no synthetic fertiliser, just sunlight, water and a bit of pesticides.
Agreed. This includes the idiots who decided that building nuclear power plants on fault lines beside the ocean in California would be a splendid idea!😡😒
@@sigisoltau6073 But that doesn't answer why people build homes on mountains like along the Appalachian mountains in Pennsylvania or on islands or in tornado valley. It's about time we stop trying to inhabit land that isn't fit to build on.
I got to say it shocked me when you said hurricane Ida. I live in Louisiana and stayed for the hurricane in Houma but the first place hurricane Ida affected the worst was Grand Isle it’s pretty much flattened the island and all the houses that were on it and water levels got up to 22 feet.
I used to live in Houma when I was a little girl in the 90's. I went to West Park. Lol. And my dad used to take us fishing at the Grand. I still have family there but I live in MS now. Seeing your comment gave me nostalgia. ☺️
wow, this video is fascinating! it’s really amazing to see how unpredictable weather can be. however, I have to say, while these moments are entertaining, I often wonder if we’re giving too much attention to extreme weather events. like, shouldn’t we be focusing more on solutions for climate change instead of just watching dramatic clips? just a thought!
great video, very impressive how you captured those weather moments! but honestly, i feel like some of the footage might’ve been staged or exaggerated for views. what do you all think?
Ida left us with no cell service and no power for a week. Some places are still not recovered and it’s ALMOST FEB 2022. There’s still people living in tents. Like plastic tents.
i live in rehoboth beach de and i’m from ocean city maryland so i’ve seen quite a few hurricanes. luckily they weren’t as bad as it is down south. i live no more then 2 miles from the ocean so let’s hope we never get those big bad bosses of storms.
we were directly hit by Ida, and I’m about 20-30 mins from New Orleans. they’re still things to this day that aren’t back to normal, stores that aren’t opened, and people still displaced from their homes.. almost 8 months later. i still remember that horrible september like it was yesterday
I was in Japan when that earthquake hit, scary experience even though I was never near the main area where the tsunami hit, I was at a pool and then you just start seeing all this water in the pool go all over the place then pow, lights out. A good choice to put in a video like this one for sure. Funny thing being that I was still a just a kindergarten kid when it happened.
I really don't understand why everyone focuses on Japan's Tsunami. It was horrible and heartbreaking but Indonesias Boxing Day Tsunami was magnitudes worse. With over 1/4 MILLION DEAD! How can you call this one worse than the one in Indonesia?
the tsunamis killed an estimated 227,898 people in 14 countries, making it one of the deadliest natural disasters in recorded history. And at least 13x more dead than Japan's tsunami
Oregon coast gets nasty winds and rainstorms. Was working out there few years back and had gusts up to 115mph. And 50-80 mph solid. They call it “harsh winds” out there. But on the east coast they call it hurricanes. Makes sense.
Actually, there was a warning for that landslide , the color of the run off from the hillside, where you see the staining and where you don't is an indicator of a possible collapse!!
On the second one, looked like they had lots of warning as there was liquefaction so bad it was running across the road. I guess the tarps they put up weren't enough to stop it.
Great video !!! Is it possible to see videos from the devastating hurricane Maria that hit Puerto Rico . All the populating from Barbuda had to be removed from this Island due to the severe damage by this hurricane it could not be reconstructed, still today it is empty no one can live there.
Before I watch this good morning make sure you drink plenty of water and keep safe
Thanks for the reminder. Have a great (disaster-free) day.
Shut up
@@leonleon2276 Someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed.
Ffs.
@@ErvinandMFantasyFootball happy new year
“The only storm worse was Hurricane Katrina, 16 years earlier”
ITS BEEN THAT LONG ALREADY?!
I know! Katrina seems like just a few years ago
Yep 2005, time flies.
Our next door neighbors lost their house in Katrina, along with everything they had. They moved in next to us around 5 years ago, and they have a party Every. Single. Day. All thru the pandemic they had pool parties, barbecues, holiday parties, non holiday parties, and somehow had tons of guests over every day, while the rest of us were hibernating and watching reruns...during an imminent tornado warning one evening, I saw them on their front porch having cocktails and thought they might not have heard the, "take shelter now" warning, as it was headed right for us...but they knew, they just didn't care! While we were crouching with our pets in the strongest part of the house, we could still hear them screaming with laughter and talking next door. The storm barely missed us, and I went out to see the damage. They were still on the porch, surrounded by branches and blown down bushes, having the time of their life! I love them!! I hope they never move away. They might be crazy, but they make me happy and optimistic. Besides, hearing them laughing and celebrating all the time makes me realize the importance of LIVING, not just surviving, a great lesson, one we all need to realize, especially in these times....
I still think of those poor souls. Not allowed to evacuate pets. Stuck in the stadium with no flushing toilets. The ship with water waiting there and not being ordered to deliver the water. Red Cross nearly went bankrupt. Glad some help was given though.
@@snowmiaow
That operation to shelter people was the most shameful, botched travesty of all time! How many hurricanes does it take to learn what to do??
The top workersc at the red cross were earning half a MILLION DOLLARS in salary a year, of our donated money, and they sure weren't spending it on the victims!
They had no interest in even monitoring the whole thing, because all they ever do is go to meetings and talk, and do nothing. A third grader could have planned better. I'm never giving a cent to those con artists, in my opinion, they sure have been charged with manslaughter for leaving so many to die in hospitals...
3:36 Unbelieveable, that woman in pink with the umbrella just keeps taking a stroll while the landslide passes only a few feet behind her.
she was like "i've seen this before. no big deal."
A somewhat entertaining landslide story came from Mom. She inspects the state’s coal mines. One mine, looked awful, like nothing had been done to restore the landscape. Bare mud, no stabilizing vegetation mats, and a large land mover half-buried in solidifying mud. Mom was getting ready to write up citations, when the mine manager explained, “We had a landslide two days ago. I have pictures of our progress, but we’ve been trying to dig that mover out since it got stuck. I was more concerned with getting my guy out.” That manager retired after the repair work the state told him to do… planting a deep-rooted weed to stabilize the dirt. And then burn it off. This poor guy was told to set a fire next to an active coal mine! I’d retire, too!
@@icarusbinns3156 That’s an unfortunate story but luckily it sounds like no one was hurt. That’s the most important thing. The manager worrying about his men means he thought of the moral thing first.
@@Picachki He was one of those people that would do the humane thing rather than the profitable thing. There aren’t enough people like that.
@@icarusbinns3156 Agreed. He sounds like a good guy. I hope he found work elsewhere and is still standing up for people.
I wish the "before and after" comparisons were time lapses instead.
Same
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Heck the whole video is an I wish, I wish he talked faster.
As far as Ida, there are time lapses. Look into port Fourchon Ida time-lapses. Absolutely unreal the amount of water that storm brought with it. I live only a few miles north of where Ida made landfall. Miraculously my mobile home is still here as brick structures that have been here for many years are completely gone.
@@JM-yx1lm I would love if he just didn't talk at all lol
7:16 that landslide was so powerful that it tore up the corner of the parking lot! THAT'S power!
seeing the material, lack of painted in lines, and how small it probably is given the outside area, it's probably not a parking lot. Most likely just some old, thin, weak concrete for people to walk on because there was a building nearby
Nonetheless the landslide was powerful
The Japan tsunami is one of the most horrific things I have ever seen in my lifetime. I will never forget it. I remember all our channels were temporarily shut to cover the tsunami and we saw footage right from Google earth where the waves originated to the destruction it did in real time.
People: **given hours and hours of notice for tsunami or hurricane**
People: **still die** hahahahaha
@@theokguy9837 Why are you commenting this on all of the tsunami comments
@@deffycool for a better reason than you reading all them 🤦🏻♂️🤣🤡
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@@theokguy9837 seek therapy. It will be good for you.
The seawalls in Japan were actually tall enough… before the earthquake. That shoved the whole country eight feet to the west, and pulled it down by five feet. So suddenly… those walls weren’t tall enough.
The quake also sped up Earth’s rotation by a fraction of a second.
So it wasn't tall enought
@@nosatier9460 after the quake, no. Before that, though… they were
The power of earthquakes....
People: **given hours and hours of notice for tsunami**
People: **still die** hahahahaha
@@theokguy9837 startlingly, the tsunami came well after it was expected. Nearly every warning for it had expired.
One of the people I used to work with was an English teacher in Japan. She got her class to the roof after the quake, and insisted they stay there. Because she knew there’d be a tsunami. Her entire class survived, thanks to the ‘crazy American lady’
Nothing is quite as humbling as realizing that Mother Nature was here before us and it will be here after us. We live under her thumb and all we can do is wait for the day she decides to take Earth back from us.
The earth doesn't even control the earth. Most severe weather comes from actions on the sun and the magnetic field
@@danimotherofchickens479 if you're taking the sun into account then you also need to take Earth's gravity and tectonic plate movement into account.
You can help save 35 millions of people in river park to
You can help save 24 million of North Korea people by watch yeonmi park to save *
I was in Okinawa during the 2011 earthquake, we were all warned about evacuating to higher grounds, luckily everyone was safe here.
Most recent tsunami from the underwater volcano we had, we got a warning a little over midnight, however the wave arrived at 11 pm, but the wave was hardly noticeable
A tornado struck the Australian city of Bathurst this year.
Tornados are rare in Australia, but that certainly was one of the most extraordinary things I've seen.
Thankfully no lives were lost.
I was visiting Australia as a kid over the Christmas holidays in 1974-75. We were staying with a childhood friend of my mom and her family in Perth. I was the first person to see the newspaper on Christmas Day because I brought it in from the porch. The headline was “Cyclone Tracy Destroys Darwin”.
They were still evacuating people two weeks later when we were flying from Melbourne to Sydney. They were actually overfilling airplanes to accommodate the evacuees. My parents, my younger sister and I were seated in a 3-person section with the armrests raised because the seats on planes back then were larger. I remember being quite put out that my sister and I had to be squished in between my parents and we couldn’t have our own seats. Grownup me now fully understands the gravity of what happened and why they were doing it.
My uncle lives in Bathurst
Copper Shortsword as do I. Do you know if he was hurt?
@@didgereemedia194 no he wasn’t hurt bc I saw him the same Christmas in the year it happened
Melbourne had an earthquake this year, which is extremely rare
I'm surprised they didn't present any footage of Hurricane Maria that hit my island of Puerto Rico back in 2017. It was a category 4/5 hurricane. I will never forget that day.
HAPPY 1,00,000 MILLION SUBSCRIBERS TO YOU UNDERWORLD!
Fun facts about microbursts: you can usually see them from the air before they happen as a downdraft of air will fall before any rain falls and will kick up a sort of wall of dust before the real destruction hits. It’s also these downdrafts that make microbursts one of the most dangerous weather phenomenon for aviation as their downdrafts can reach an excess of -6000 feet per minute. Only a very few military jets can out-climb that severe of a downdraft and 99% of all other aircraft would be pushed into the ground.
I guess that was a microburst my sister and I were in. Our parents were at a concert, and sent us a photo of this dark grey, almost black column. Mom asked, “Can you guys see this?”
“Yeah, Mom… we’re IN it!”
Radar showed that it was an oval, with a little hook in the middle, the very worst of which was sitting right over our street.
We were pretty scared, as were the dogs. We had a lot of cookies, since I stress-bake
Mom walked in after getting home, sees the cooling racks, “That bad, huh?”
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At least and I give you thumbs up for this you do not blame global warming for any of these events!!!
Gifted narrator with a velvet voice. Wishing you much continued and future success.
I was in Lake Charles, Louisiana when Ida rolled in; mind you, I'm from Missouri, so I've never experienced or witnessed a hurricane. While visiting my friends in Lake Charles, we watched hurricane Ida roll in. I'll never forget how menacingly beautiful it looked.
Nola👋
Lake Charles as well
@@jonjon-vx7rh Which part? I’m from Cameron
Not to mention lake charles had been struck by Laura the year before Ida struck
We call it the call before the storm
this video is really fascinating and well put together! i love how you captured those unexpected weather events. but honestly, i can't help but think that some of these might have been exaggerated for entertainment. i mean, do we really need to see tornadoes spinning so dramatically? sometimes it feels like it's more about the drama than the reality. what do you guys think?
Ty for not being a annoying narrator
God bless whoever reads this❤️❤️I pray you receive love, grace and mercy. The truth, the way and the life😆❤️❤️
This was another excellent video!
Excellent and informative!
That lady in red walking towards the landslide… whichever 30 seconds of that day that she wasted on social media, watching tv, arguing about something unimportant, anything that put her 30 seconds behind schedule literally saved her life.
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She was walking away not towards
@@TheJizZyLord ok, so invert my comment
Yup I live in Malaysia and can confirm it is notorious here with the landslides and floods. Especially in the end of 2021 and early 2022.
what an amazing compilation of weather events! it’s really interesting to see how unpredictably nature can behave. however, i can’t help but wonder if some of these moments are just a bit exaggerated for views. like, are we sure every single clip is legit?
This video reminded me of a line from a Godzilla movie from the 80's to paraphrase the quote "Mother nature has a way of reminding us how insignificant we truly are, be it fire, flood or a volcano."
I loved bad weather until I moved to Arizona. Most monsoons are tolerable, as long as the power does not go out; haboob is fun to say but obnoxious to experience (and a nightmare to clean up after); and microbursts are absolutely terrifying and have destroyed my car's windows on more than two occasions. During the summer of 2020, a neighboring town less than fifteen miles away had its first tornado in almost fifty years. It was an EF0/EF1 (winds were 75-95 mph) and, fortunately, in the middle of a field, so fairly harmless. Regardless, I crossed "storm-chasing" from my bucket list and started pricing storm shelters. 😶🌫
Harrowing. Makes me grateful for my good old-fashioned freezer of Ohio winters, etc. Stay safe!
I've experienced multiple microbursts up here in p.a. there absolutely terrifying and in so many cases come before the main part of the storm. They are so powerful, my first experience with one that I vividly remember was around the time of blm protests. We were all matching outside a local administration and high school and then they're were some large drop of rain before what looked like a low lying clouds rolled over the neighborhood and the highway and wet saw it throwing trees around. It popped over the highway and sent almost all of the crowd running to the high school entrance as the wind route the trees apart and threw anything not anchored to the ground into the air. And then 1 year later in September ida hit giving me my first tornado experience with an ef2 and wind of 130 mph. I count myself lucky to have a home after these events, and those are just the 2 worst storms I've seen so far, who knows what's next.
@@cainealexander-mccord2805, right? We midwesterners who grew up with basements take these things for granted. Then the sirens and our phone weather alerts go off and we head downstairs.
I also live in Arizona. It's not THAT bad 😂
Depends on which part... though this year was quieter than usual. We did drop from 82 degrees to 65 degrees overnight. 🌨
Nice informative video. Thanks
👑🌴🌴💞🌐🌐🏆👍👍👍
Terrific presentation. ❤️ new subscriber.
Microbursts are scary as hell. We were building a house doing some inside work because it was raining pretty hard and out of nowhere these huge hail balls and serious winds that were hidden within the storm hit us. We had the roof on but no shingles and no windows yet and we got smashed. Wind and hail coming from all directions it seemed. Plyboard and sheet metal flying around. Only lasted about 3 minutes or so but we didn't know if a tornado was hitting us or what.
That's the second one I've experienced in the last two years here in Virginia.
Here in Australia we have a phenomenon called Dusty Martin, it’s been going since 2017 and Can’t be stopped!
As an Aussie what is that? I need to know the Aussie slang haha
???
Isn’t that an athlete?
@@Stephanie-tc4kj yes!
The landslide at 4:00 was crazy but the one at 3:29... that was a whole freaking forest sliding past.. wow
Pity you didn't cover the Easter Quake of '64 in Anchorage, AK. It was a 4 minute long 9.2 that happened in Prince William Sound. There is camera footage of the quake and lots of before and after shots. However, like the quake in Chile, CCTV wasn't as common at the time. But the footage that exists is honestly terrifying. Part of the city broke off and fell into the inlet. The only reason that the body count wasn't higher is because it's Alaska in the 60s, after Fur Rondy, but before tourist season.
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I went there in 2016. You can still see areas that are sunken in.
Told out of towner next door homeowners to leave for Katrina. They refused. Husband died & wife clung to tree & watched tornadoes wipe our home & their 3 story home away. She wished she had listened & left.
Also a fun fact about hurricane ida, it stayed at Cat 4 strength 6 hours after landfall due to its track.
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UNDERWORLD YOU ALMOST 1,000,000 SUBSCRIBERS
At this moment you have exactly 1million subs 👍
Past summer, there were severe floods in Europe. In my country, Belgium, there were places where the water reached a height of 4 meters! in the streets and home. Unfortunately 42 deaths and a lot of damage (there are still people without their own home)... Luckily there are a lot of volunteers because our country and big organizations fail to help properly. An example is the Red Cross, they received millions of euros to help the victims, but nobody knows where most of the money is gone (probably to their own personnel and administration, and only a small percentage goes to food?). Companies and volunteers from Flanders helped (and are still helping) the locals with necessities, cleaning the homes and streets, repairing damaged infrastructure, food... The only thing I know that the red cross did this summer, was prevent people to donate money to other organizations besides their own and discourage people to help on their own. Luckily a lot of people didn't listen and brought goods on their own to the victims. I will never donate anymore to the Red Cross, there were better initiatives that were more efficient.
People: **given hours and hours of notice for tsunami**
People: **still die** hahahahaha
I don't donate to the Red Cross. I help through other organizations and aide agencies. That is plain and simple.
I've experienced multiple microbursts up here in p.a. there absolutely terrifying and in so many cases come before the main part of the storm. They are so powerful, my first experience with one that I vividly remember was around the time of blm protests. We were all matching outside a local administration and high school and then they're were some large drop of rain before what looked like a low lying clouds rolled over the neighborhood and the highway and wet saw it throwing trees around. It popped over the highway and sent almost all of the crowd running to the high school entrance as the wind route the trees apart and threw anything not anchored to the ground into the air. And then 1 year later in September ida hit giving me my first tornado experience with an ef2 and wind of 130 mph. I count myself lucky to have a home after these events, and those are just the 2 worst storms I've seen so far, who knows what's next
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Damm I'd love to live in America just for the weather sounds hella fun
@@Diddleurdad 😂 there are a lot of entertaining aspects of Murica’
We had a fue tornadoes hit by us for ida but one tornado passed so close it blowup our home the ceiling came down in 200+ winds we got swoop up off our feet I saved my parents life's that day ...I'm not scared of bad weather well I wasn't before ida in dulac
Heck, I'm glad I live in Africa where there is almost no distractive weather 😨🙏
We are so lucky
@@user-ce5yh3zx4v you hit the jackpot.
Y’all have sandstorms and locust storms
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2022 not gonna get any better. We already have had a horrible wind colour red I think.
Man nobody noticed that kid dribbling while running away in that gym? Hilarious
The tsunami off Sumatra on 26 December 2004, resulting in the death of 220,000+ was the deadliest on record I believe.
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@@mansionbookerstudios9629 I've watched her interviews with Jordan Peterson, she's one incredible young girl who's faced unimaginable cruelty. I know she's just one of millions going through the same cruelty every day in North Korea.
Is very thank you that's really i was
really enjoyed this video, it’s amazing how technology can capture nature’s fury. but honestly, i can't help but think that some of these moments also make us a bit desensitized to the real impact of extreme weather. like, seeing it on screen is one thing, but the reality can be so much more devastating for those affected. what do you guys think?
The most common culprit water.
Deforestation : Aim i a joke to u?
👍👍Thank you! Thank you!
Have you heard about the flooding in Australia? It made Parts of Queensland "islands"
Ohhhh yeah I got some vids of a tree going from vertical to near horizontal and like 50kmh winds (Melbourne) and it was hectic I think it was a Brough off of a micro burst
JUDGEMENT IS UPON THIS WICKED EARTH.
During hurricane ida Houma residents suffered greatly. They came all the way to bayou Vista to get gas, thats in a whole new parish, around a 45 minutes away if traffic is good.. Lines to get gas were miles long, some people pushing their car. I was in Morgan City, which was not hit too badly, which is about 15 minutes from Bayou vista, and waited in line for 2 hours and 40 minutes for gas. While in line people got out of their cars and talked to strangers like they were old friends. Some people are rude, but the majority of the people in Louisiana come together in times of need. The Cajun Navy was founded and has helped thousands of people. I love this state.
what a fascinating compilation! it’s amazing how nature can surprise us like that. however, i can't help but wonder if some of these moments were actually staged. i mean, it would be easy for someone to set up a security camera and create dramatic weather events for views, right? just a thought!
God bless u all❤🙏
WoW such recordings ! Hope all life was spared in each incident. Fearful yet nature has to be respected
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This is truly a weather moment 💯
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Watching this with a tornado warning and a confirmed siting of a tornado 30 minutes away lol
Cant understand why people build below sea level, on fault lines, volcanoes, and below old dams which are ready to burst (and have done). Madness.
In some of these areas such as New Orleans people didn't know that or things changed over time. New Orleans for example, when it was founded it was actually above sea level. Over time as the city grew the land slowly sank below sea level, either because water was pumped out for usage, or because the land was sinking anyways.
With faultlines, in most cases when a city was started, such as San Francisco people didn't know about them.
With volcanoes it's because the soil they produce is extremely fertile. You can easily, with little or no effort grow up to 4 crops per year. No fossil fuels, no synthetic fertiliser, just sunlight, water and a bit of pesticides.
I saw a video where natural gas left the ground and drop the entire landscape at least two feet. I was stunned by it.
People will build on anything. Why they repeatedly rebuild, l don't get.
Agreed. This includes the idiots who decided that building nuclear power plants on fault lines beside the ocean in California would be a splendid idea!😡😒
@@sigisoltau6073 But that doesn't answer why people build homes on mountains like along the Appalachian mountains in Pennsylvania or on islands or in tornado valley. It's about time we stop trying to inhabit land that isn't fit to build on.
This flooding is why they built the houses up on pilings to keep them above the water level in the old days!
So much for Weather moments.
I got to say it shocked me when you said hurricane Ida. I live in Louisiana and stayed for the hurricane in Houma but the first place hurricane Ida affected the worst was Grand Isle it’s pretty much flattened the island and all the houses that were on it and water levels got up to 22 feet.
I used to live in Houma when I was a little girl in the 90's. I went to West Park. Lol. And my dad used to take us fishing at the Grand. I still have family there but I live in MS now. Seeing your comment gave me nostalgia. ☺️
@@iammetee8003 😂
@@iammetee8003 that sounds nice
wow, this video is fascinating! it’s really amazing to see how unpredictable weather can be. however, I have to say, while these moments are entertaining, I often wonder if we’re giving too much attention to extreme weather events. like, shouldn’t we be focusing more on solutions for climate change instead of just watching dramatic clips? just a thought!
An excellent video. 💙 T.E.N.
Yes Mother Nature got revenge and is showing proof she ain't defeated yet
Your so into weather >:
great video, very impressive how you captured those weather moments! but honestly, i feel like some of the footage might’ve been staged or exaggerated for views. what do you all think?
Man I hate that stupid Google/Samsung ad "get it let it rollllll" what? Nice video and interesting.
Mother nature is a beautiful thing just not to be messed with
Mother Nature is like lavar ball ..neva lose😁
Nice 😊
Excellent video. A tsunami is not a weather event but geological.
Ida left us with no cell service and no power for a week. Some places are still not recovered and it’s ALMOST FEB 2022. There’s still people living in tents. Like plastic tents.
Seek shelter from a 120 foot wave? Pshhh I’m accepting fate and praying lmao
i live in rehoboth beach de and i’m from ocean city maryland so i’ve seen quite a few hurricanes. luckily they weren’t as bad as it is down south. i live no more then 2 miles from the ocean so let’s hope we never get those big bad bosses of storms.
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we were directly hit by Ida, and I’m about 20-30 mins from New Orleans. they’re still things to this day that aren’t back to normal, stores that aren’t opened, and people still displaced from their homes.. almost 8 months later. i still remember that horrible september like it was yesterday
I was in Japan when that earthquake hit, scary experience even though I was never near the main area where the tsunami hit, I was at a pool and then you just start seeing all this water in the pool go all over the place then pow, lights out. A good choice to put in a video like this one for sure. Funny thing being that I was still a just a kindergarten kid when it happened.
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Keep your head up for the 1 day and the best wishes for your best wishes to your best wishes
I’m surprised Hurricane Maria 2017 wasn’t on this list. It was a Cat 5 hurricane, and destroyed several islands and economies.
stay safe everyone, love your families
I’m from Louisiana and I just want to say thank you for making me laugh, the way you say New Orleans is funny to me
I really don't understand why everyone focuses on Japan's Tsunami. It was horrible and heartbreaking but Indonesias Boxing Day Tsunami was magnitudes worse. With over 1/4 MILLION DEAD! How can you call this one worse than the one in Indonesia?
over 18,000 dead, including several thousand victims who were never recovered.
the tsunamis killed an estimated 227,898 people in 14 countries, making it one of the deadliest natural disasters in recorded history. And at least 13x more dead than Japan's tsunami
Storm Arwen just damaged the electricity service in the north of the UK last week. Some people have been without electricity since last week. 😒
3 weeks without power in lake Tahoe, CA due to a blizzard
I ❤️ Mother Nature.
okay, not gonna lie
this is a certified weather moment
I live in Louisiana myself and was there during hurricane ida the storm itself was strong but it’ll never compare to hurricane Katrina
2:30 "but the fun wasn't over yet." ... the fun? the FUN??
When was Hurricane Ida and where was I? I truly don’t remember NyC being shutdown 🤯
I watched Hurricane Ida all night long. My magnolia trees wiggled.
This is a good list, not a mojo list
It’s funny that you never see or hear anything about Hurricane Laura which was twice as bad as Hurricane Ida.
This really be a weather moment
Microbursts are insane. They show up more frequently now in north central Kentucky(Louisville), and the Ohio river valley area just makes that worse.
5:27 Ils ont mis le paquet sur les effets spéciaux cette année-là le club théâtre, même aux répétitions XD
Oregon coast gets nasty winds and rainstorms. Was working out there few years back and had gusts up to 115mph. And 50-80 mph solid. They call it “harsh winds” out there. But on the east coast they call it hurricanes. Makes sense.
because they arent tropical cyclones mate
They are different though.
Actually, there was a warning for that landslide , the color of the run off from the hillside, where you see the staining and where you don't is an indicator of a possible collapse!!
I peeped that, too. It also looks like a landslide happened there before. Making whatever was above even more unstable.
OMG those cars that were turning around in the traffic cam - they are gonna need some clean shorts
The Japanese tsunami had nothing to do with weather. Why have it on this video????
New Orleans residents should move. A city/area so prone to flooding, is it worth staying?
Agreed
chị iu ơi cover bài đón xuân của cô như quỳnh nhen, đang trend tóp tóp ạ hehe
On the second one, looked like they had lots of warning as there was liquefaction so bad it was running across the road. I guess the tarps they put up weren't enough to stop it.
Great video !!! Is it possible to see videos from the devastating hurricane Maria that hit Puerto Rico . All the populating from Barbuda had to be removed from this Island due to the severe damage by this hurricane it could not be reconstructed, still today it is empty no one can live there.
2:32 I wouldn't equate Ida's flooding to fun with many having lost their lives even in NYC.
He's ... being ... sarcastic ... ? ...
😅
@3:34, he says "back in 2019".. When "back in" is the description 2019 gets, you know time is flying by at hurricane-speed.....
Wowww, earth is scary