🌪️ Tornado Alley may not be where you think it is...

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  • Опубликовано: 18 апр 2024
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Комментарии • 141

  • @criticalmoss
    @criticalmoss Месяц назад +62

    April 27th and 28th has entered the chat.

    • @reviewforthetube6485
      @reviewforthetube6485 Месяц назад +1

      Yeah lol

    • @goondudefr
      @goondudefr Месяц назад +2

      4 tornado warnings today, 3 tornados hit one town last night.

    • @TheTrainGuy1355
      @TheTrainGuy1355 Месяц назад +4

      Yeah the short didn’t age well... We may actually receive a EF5 damage report here in Nebraska if the storm damage surveys say it was powerful enough (the results haven’t came in yet so I’ll let you guys know). In addition, Nebraska hasn’t had an EF4 tornado since the Pilger, Nebraska tornadoes in 2014. I don’t think Tornado Alley is moving eastward, but rather we had a 10-year break…
      Edit: apparently the strongest tornado in Nebraska this year so far was a high-end EF3. So high it was 1mph away from EF4 status (although I think the Elkhorn/Blair tornado should have been an automatic EF4 based on the destruction that I’ve seen)

    • @johnschwalb
      @johnschwalb Месяц назад +2

      @@TheTrainGuy1355one night of multiple tornadoes doesn’t mean the ally isn’t further east than expected.

    • @TheTrainGuy1355
      @TheTrainGuy1355 Месяц назад +1

      @@johnschwalb Yes, you’re right, I could still be wrong after all. Only time will tell I suppose.

  • @paulslater9555
    @paulslater9555 Месяц назад +43

    I live in Kansas and have been saying this for years. But not just tornadoes. Annual rain and snow fall amounts as well.

    • @josegonzales4869
      @josegonzales4869 Месяц назад +3

      Same in okc people don’t believe me

    • @QueenishTheReal
      @QueenishTheReal Месяц назад +1

      Same! I’m in Kansas and i definitely remember 20 years ago having a WAY more eventful storm season around here. I’m in northeast Kansas near Missouri. And we have been getting less snow less rain less storms and most of all, more fires on the grasslands nowadays

    • @OneFedUpMF
      @OneFedUpMF Месяц назад +1

      @@QueenishTheRealI live in Eskridge Kansas 30 minutes southwest of Topeka and I’ve never seen a tornado in my 20 years on this planet living in Kansas

  • @rachelle4907
    @rachelle4907 Месяц назад +7

    April 27 one day. Something like 27 tornados formed yesterday. Norman had twins, Ardmore had 2 and Sulpher had 3. It destroyed many things. One day. Yeah, I think we still got the corner market on tornado alley.

  • @kakumee
    @kakumee Месяц назад +26

    I knew about "Dixie alley" since I was a kid in the 90s. We called it the 2 and tornado Alley.

    • @TheLastJayL
      @TheLastJayL Месяц назад +2

      Exactly. I don’t see a shift. Just seems like more of the same.

    • @jeffbryan4019
      @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад +1

      Yes and it's actually the deadliest .

    • @jeffbryan4019
      @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад +2

      I live in Carolina Alley which is the fourth most active .

    • @Bergen1920
      @Bergen1920 Месяц назад

      @@jeffbryan4019 Because you cant see the tornadoes as well since theres more trees and more mountains

  • @petragonzalez-xi6ff
    @petragonzalez-xi6ff Месяц назад +23

    The sad thing is that most houses aren't built with shelters or basements. It's scary. Often times there is a focus on hurricanes but not tornadoes. Here in Southern Texas, there are no sirens to warn people. We rely on weather apps to track the weather. At least, that is what I do.

    • @steved6149
      @steved6149 Месяц назад +1

      I feel like depending on sirens in the 21st century is archaic when there's so many other ways to be alerted, and people should be encouraged more to use weather apps or NOAA weather radio. Many people depending on sirens and have been caught off guard from not being able to hear the sirens(heavy rain/tstorm can easily drown out the noise) or being in the shower, or just simple being out of range of hearing it.

    • @petragonzalez-xi6ff
      @petragonzalez-xi6ff Месяц назад +1

      I can't imagine being in a shower if a storm is approaching. I hear it could be dangerous if there is lightening, or so I've heard.

    • @ELH603
      @ELH603 Месяц назад +1

      Yeah.. and in south Mississippi our ground soil is way too soft to build any type of basements.

    • @jeffbryan4019
      @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад

      Exactly and tornado winds are more deadly than hurricane winds . We need shelters here in the Carolinas as we are the fourth most active tornado alley . Had one in 1984 that was 2.5 miles wide .

    • @jeffbryan4019
      @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад

      When the 1984 tornadoes rolled into Bennetsville SC fire chief Dixon Odom stated that the tornado roar was so loud that it drowned out the sirens wailing . There's your answer .

  • @ShakesSphere
    @ShakesSphere Месяц назад +65

    Of course it's changing, as the climate shifts. But here in ohio, seems most people don't realize this point!! You have tornadoes hitting from Missouri, Iowa, to all over the SE quadrant, up through the Carolinas, etc. For the main, it simply isn't Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma anymore!

    • @colefrench5146
      @colefrench5146 Месяц назад +2

      It has always been this way, YOU just didn’t realize it

    • @petragonzalez-xi6ff
      @petragonzalez-xi6ff Месяц назад +1

      I don't know. I lived south of Toledo for over 15 years but only 1 time did i hear of a tornado that hit near Holland Ohio. I believe it was on Palm Sunday. Driving home that evening I did see a lot of lightening in the near distance. But that's about it. Crazy stuff all around. I live in Southern part of Texas. Mostly we've gotten severe thunderstorms. Scary. Laguna Heights did get an EF 1 tornado with one fatality. Scary stuff.

    • @ShakesSphere
      @ShakesSphere Месяц назад +3

      @colefrench5146 Perhaps you are younger than I. You're wrong, if you check with NOAA. It was quite a different alley back in the 60s and 70s. Just may have been begore your time! Or you just don't know what you're talking about.

    • @user-gf5oq4nc6d
      @user-gf5oq4nc6d Месяц назад +1

      There are two different areas in America that are hotspots for tornadoes the more common one today is tornado alley but there’s the southern Dixie alley too

    • @senatorjosephmccarthy2720
      @senatorjosephmccarthy2720 Месяц назад

      ShakeSphere, He should make a video with a map showing that.

  • @duhdims
    @duhdims Месяц назад +8

    I'm 100% certain tornado alley will never leave Oklahoma.
    Moore did have the last officially rated F5 (1999) before the EF scale was implemented in 2007 and, as of today, the last officially rated EF5 (2013) in the US.
    The last F5 and, as of today, the last EF5 in the US to hit the same suburb of Oklahoma City

    • @realixx9375
      @realixx9375 Месяц назад

      I mean El Reno definitely should have be rated EF5 but the point stands

    • @HemiSlant6828
      @HemiSlant6828 Месяц назад +1

      @@realixx9375 Not enough ground damage to even be considered an EF4, let alone an EF5. And, to be honest, despite the 2.6 mile wide size and the 295mph windspeed, El Reno is considerably a weaker tornado than ones like the 1997 Jarrell, Texas F5, 1999 Bridge Creek - Moore F5, 2011 Joplin EF5, 2011 Rainsville EF5, etc.

    • @realixx9375
      @realixx9375 Месяц назад +1

      The only reason for that is because it didn't hit anything at peak strength, mobile doppler radar may not be a perfectly accurate measurement but considering it indicated winds near 300mph, it has a massive margin of error to still be considering EF5

    • @jeffbryan4019
      @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад

      Dixie Alley is more deadly though . Look at the statistics since 1950 .

    • @jeffbryan4019
      @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад

      Red Springs NC

  • @thetrueblanket
    @thetrueblanket Месяц назад +12

    Thats just dixie alley

    • @jeffbryan4019
      @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад

      Dixie Alley is the deadliest on earth .

    • @thetrueblanket
      @thetrueblanket Месяц назад

      @@jeffbryan4019 no. That would be Bangladesh

    • @Romanticalman
      @Romanticalman Месяц назад

      @@thetrueblanket1989

  • @magnolia31611
    @magnolia31611 Месяц назад +5

    I’m definitely seeing the Change here in Louisiana. As a kid growing up the only time I ever remember hearing people say there were any tornadoes near where I live was during hurricane Katrina, but in the last 5 years we have had so many times where we had an elevated chance for tornadoes, and several times there have been tornadoes down in the New Orleans area, and other surrounding areas. In fact they just had an outbreak a couple weeks ago and several hit on the very east side of Louisiana into Mississippi.

  • @jasonjones7686
    @jasonjones7686 Месяц назад +2

    I would love to answer his questions but he whispered them like he didn’t want to wake his mom up in the next room…

  • @TheTrainGuy1355
    @TheTrainGuy1355 Месяц назад +2

    …yeah I think you guys just jinxed us here in the Great Plains (April 26-28 2024 tornado outbreak). 😬

  • @LOGANEDITZ.
    @LOGANEDITZ. Месяц назад +3

    Says this then seven days later there are a total of 28 tornados happened not all touched the ground but the ones that did where big

  • @Vivi_1_1
    @Vivi_1_1 Месяц назад +2

    Oklahoma would respectfully disagree

    • @sixteezchild
      @sixteezchild Месяц назад

      West Texas has definitely changed and doesn't see near as much tornadic activity as we used to get. It seems to start just west of the Hill Country or smack dabe in the Hill Country. It's strange to see your weatheer shifting over a matter of 30 years or so. We also have a hotter and dry climate and we are still in drought mode. We don't have enough of a chance for humidity to gather before it blows eastward.

  • @BubbasndRayEarl
    @BubbasndRayEarl Месяц назад +4

    It's true. Sad part is here in the deep South we have tv weather guys that can't spell tornado.

    • @jonathangoin
      @jonathangoin Месяц назад

      RIGHT... But, I'd be more than willing to bet that they have absolutely no problem spelling "I LUV MY SISTER/WIFE and/or COUSIN/WIFE!!!" on the local water tower with John Deere green spray paint!!! :) :) :)

  • @AlabamaTrumpeter
    @AlabamaTrumpeter Месяц назад +1

    I think the information in this video is incomplete. Tornado alley shifts every year, with Dixie Alley seeing more tornadoes in the fall/winter and traditional Tornado Alley seeing more in the spring.

  • @randytracy1742
    @randytracy1742 Месяц назад +3

    Who cares where tornado alley is? It always has been where it is in the states of Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma,Nebraska and others! 😮😮😮😮

  • @whereisthehook
    @whereisthehook Месяц назад +1

    Well it's not changing. Even your graphic shows that tornado Alley is still statistically receiving more tornadoes.

  • @gramarmy
    @gramarmy Месяц назад +1

    The last few days has caused this short to not age well :D hahahahahahaha

  • @reviewforthetube6485
    @reviewforthetube6485 Месяц назад +1

    Then 9 days after this right in the old alley they get hit hard af.

  • @DRDRADR4
    @DRDRADR4 Месяц назад +1

    Tornado alley is only labeled that because of the size and visibilty of the tornados because of flat land.

  • @kaitlyndanielle7889
    @kaitlyndanielle7889 Месяц назад

    As a teenager I barely remember tornadoes and tornado warnings in Arkansas. Now its multiple times a year every single year

  • @dylanscalfscalf9488
    @dylanscalfscalf9488 Месяц назад +1

    I live in Mississippi, and have for the last 34 years almost. We’ve had a MASSIVE spike in tornados over the last 10-15 years. I’m under a tornado warning close to a dozen times a year now. We’ve had like 5-6 tornado warnings since January.

  • @user-mv7gs7up9l
    @user-mv7gs7up9l Месяц назад +5

    Oklahoma, Texas, Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, and Colorado have had more severe storms over that time period of course climate changes but it didn’t change severely

  • @TNS17
    @TNS17 Месяц назад

    Tornado alley isn’t shifting, that’s called “Dixie alley” which is another tornado hotspot

  • @Eddie80580
    @Eddie80580 Месяц назад

    He needed to wait a week. It’s back.

  • @call_me_JJ
    @call_me_JJ Месяц назад +2

    I live in Tennessee and I am hoping that this is fake

    • @surferboi2005
      @surferboi2005 Месяц назад

      By the way tornadoes have been popping up recently on the east I don’t think so. Plus there have been a few good f5 tornadoes in the last few years in the east

  • @ATF-US
    @ATF-US Месяц назад

    tornado alley, dixie alley, hoosier alley, and the carolina alley

  • @kaygee2121
    @kaygee2121 Месяц назад

    It's not shifting...it's just that Dixie alley tornadoes are much more recorded now. They used to only know most of them in tornado alley because of their high visibility. Now that we have better forecasting and storm spotters here in Dixie alley, more of them get documented. Add the fact that in dixie, there's more hills and trees (and often rain-wrapped) obstructing the view (and therefore the documentation) of said tornadoes.
    I grew up/live in Alabama. We are certainly no strangers to twisters here but you wouldn't know that because until fairly recently, all the attention was placed on tornado alley since that's where you could SEE them.

  • @MacGyver2154
    @MacGyver2154 Месяц назад

    No tellin.
    What I do know is that there is a Disaster relief organization called "Eight Days Of Hope " that responds to these disasters with emergency response teams to clear downed tree's, put tarps on damaged roofs, feed volunteers and residents.
    I just trained with this organization and I am looking forward to assisting in the future. 🌪🌨🌊

  • @jeffbryan4019
    @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад

    Every household in the south and southeast should have a tornado underground shelter or at least have a basement . Of course this isnt possible for everyone due to a myriad of different reasons . Ive seen so many devastating paths in the Carolinas during my lifetime but i never get used to it . Its always very sad and shocking to see neighbors property and loved ones gone .

  • @sharondowns3606
    @sharondowns3606 Месяц назад

    The tornado alley did shift.
    It shifted with when the poles shifted!

  • @quintinloganii4640
    @quintinloganii4640 Месяц назад +6

    I noticed and mentioned this to people about 10 years ago. I live in Oklahoma and the storms we get now just aren't what they once were.

    • @jeffbryan4019
      @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад

      Yeah there hasn't been an EF5 since 2013 in the nation .

    • @Jesse78
      @Jesse78 Месяц назад +1

      Same as DFW...

  • @Tamarajo
    @Tamarajo Месяц назад

    I agree. I live in southern MN and remember a lot more tornado activity when I was younger. The last several years have been quieter.

  • @anthonyboddie5615
    @anthonyboddie5615 Месяц назад

    I've been saying this & I'm no meteorologist...

  • @erikp2004
    @erikp2004 Месяц назад +1

    Gonna have to speak up dude.

  • @Lilshywolfswag
    @Lilshywolfswag Месяц назад

    A couple weeks ago there were like 19 tornadoes in 1-2 days here in KY, including 1 in my town & at least 1 each in a couple counties within 30 or so mins of me 😭

  • @terrywade3696
    @terrywade3696 Месяц назад +1

    As an Oklahoman, I’ve known about “Dixie Alley” as being the other tornado alley for most of my 70+ years. It’s the movement of the dry line colliding with the gulf humidity that generates tornadoes. The western U.S.has been in a very long period of drought so I would think that would have an effect on the dry line advancing east. But not for 20 years. Let’s not forget the huge F5 1999 Bridge Creek/Moore tornado with 318mph wind. The EF 5 Joplin, Missouri tornado and the 2.6 mile wide 2013 El Reno EF5 tornado! These were the fastest, strongest, largest and most destructive tornadoes and all occurred in Tornado Alley!

    • @Thissomerandomness
      @Thissomerandomness Месяц назад

      Oklahoman to Oklahoman here, I don’t really think tornado alley is changing for us, like ever, because we live in the perfect place. Also, the EF4 in Nebraska a couple days ago just shows that it didn’t really move all that much! Plus the 40 tornadoes we got on Saturday proves even further that nothing is changing. Which all this is what you were saying, but just wanted to say!

    • @terrywade3696
      @terrywade3696 Месяц назад +1

      @@Thissomerandomness That’s right! You can’t fool an Okie! Good to hear from you! Stay safe from the storms.

    • @Thissomerandomness
      @Thissomerandomness Месяц назад

      @@terrywade3696 you stay safe too!

  • @charlesandrews2360
    @charlesandrews2360 Месяц назад

    This video must have been made before last week when 500 tornadoes ripped through taxes in Kansas

  • @hardwaterhiker2657
    @hardwaterhiker2657 Месяц назад +1

    I have three tornadoes for sale. They're 6,8 and 9. Let me. Know

  • @nathanbourquin6554
    @nathanbourquin6554 Месяц назад

    Ryan Hall yall has a video about this years tornado season. My understanding is that the switch to dixie alley these last 3 years was caused by el niño. Now el niño is gone and we’re back to Oklahoma and Nebraska tornados

  • @dillyboyq
    @dillyboyq Месяц назад

    As someone who lives in Michigan generally outta the way of violent-intense tornadoes, I’m nervous that they will start to become more common. Tornadoes terrify but also interest me in the craziest way possible. They’re so destructive yet they’re also so delicate at the same time. An EF3 hit 10miles away from me 2 years ago, so I’m hoping they don’t keep coming..

  • @kellywilliams5112
    @kellywilliams5112 Месяц назад +1

    Well no.. actually if you watch a actual weather history channel such as Swegle Studios.. you will see all this going way back to 1884 to the first recorded outbreak, it's really not changed all that much. people think it is because now they have this available news right at their fingertips, and it clouds history, and what happened on April 26th shows this didn't age well.

    • @kaygee2121
      @kaygee2121 Месяц назад +1

      Hehe...."clouds history" 😂
      Pun intended, or no?

  • @INEEDTOREST_
    @INEEDTOREST_ Месяц назад

    I’m love my radar. Been using it for 4 years. Shocked I just found the channel

  • @bubbawubba2307
    @bubbawubba2307 Месяц назад

    Reading weather history in the U.S. and there was a shit ton of tornadoes in the 1880s in the south and were devastating. Description was F5 level damage. Tornadoes in the south are harder to see with the terrain compared to treeless flat country in the plains where you can see a tornado miles and miles away. In the south they were hidden before nexrad radar

  • @stephensarmento3529
    @stephensarmento3529 Месяц назад

    Dont think tornado alley would agree with you on this one considering the monsters that ravaged the midwest the past few days. Their environment will always be prime location for monster nadors. If anything tornado alley is expanding east, not shifting

  • @cheryl8466
    @cheryl8466 Месяц назад

    I don't necessarily know if it's changed or if things are just reported on more... There wasn't ever "Just" tornado Alley. There's the southern valley and the Midwestern valley as well (I believe that's what they were called). So.. these "Alley's" have already existed throughout the US... For years certain areas were hit more often than others.. Regardless ,Tornados have Always hit in these areas. Even F4's+ up in Ohio back in the 70's or 80's. The fact is that tornado Alley was popular for chasers because of the flat plains. So they were "easily "studied and reported on more. That's why most people only know of tornado Alley and not so much of the others. You also have to consider the other changes that have happened over the last 20+ years.
    I think there needs to be more research to make a claim like that.

  • @nickawilliams5175
    @nickawilliams5175 Месяц назад

    Louisiana is staring to get hit w /tornadoes on too of Hurricanes so things are definitely shifting.

  • @dadcochran852
    @dadcochran852 Месяц назад

    True, it does shift. Haven't had a tornado in my general area of kansas for a few decades. At one time it was a yearly occurrence to have at least one tornado withing 50 miles of my house

    • @Lm-hm3kj
      @Lm-hm3kj Месяц назад

      Seems like my area in Iowa has gotten all your tornadoes.. in the Des Moines surrounding area we have around 9-10 per year just had 3 on April 26

  • @Ker0ker0ker0pp1fan
    @Ker0ker0ker0pp1fan Месяц назад

    it's just Dixie Alley!!

  • @wesleyjackson714
    @wesleyjackson714 Месяц назад

    Not shifting. Dixie alley has always been another tornado hotspot. Especially from dec-April. As the weather pattern changes and the moisture from the gulf is able to be pulled more northward “tornado alley” is generally more active.

  • @ThistleKing
    @ThistleKing Месяц назад +1

    Not really. Of course there will be outliers but the majority of severe weather is still in the central heartland

  • @bamaboyburns8079
    @bamaboyburns8079 Месяц назад

    I’m from Alabama and can confirm we do get a lot of tornadoes Mississippi gets lit up too

  • @JG3RTR
    @JG3RTR Месяц назад

    Tornado alley hasn't moved. There's 2 different tornado alleys the one in the midwest and Dixie alley in the south.

  • @LezUnicorn
    @LezUnicorn Месяц назад

    I live in Texas and past few times we’ve had storms we’ve seen tornadoes in a few areas. So idk maybe they were just an unlucky mishap

  • @sir_crumplehorn
    @sir_crumplehorn Месяц назад

    i think its going to be a big one, there has been three tornado watches in the past month were im from, and plus, theres already been big tornado out breaks

  • @andrethegiant3035
    @andrethegiant3035 Месяц назад

    Just keep that nasty weather away from Jersey! I have enough bs to deal with!

  • @416Rival
    @416Rival Месяц назад

    All I know is climate must be changing, when I was a kid I would shovel 6-7ft of snow every winter now it's lucky to be a foot lol

  • @EclipseVR-Real
    @EclipseVR-Real 27 дней назад

    Dixie ally has always been there buddy

  • @zeabobql3923
    @zeabobql3923 Месяц назад

    Nope it's still where it's always been

  • @michaelrichardson754
    @michaelrichardson754 25 дней назад

    Even Canada too

  • @TheBlkpilot
    @TheBlkpilot Месяц назад

    What you said is what’s happening now

  • @Duo12483
    @Duo12483 24 дня назад

    What if people connect it

  • @jeffbryan4019
    @jeffbryan4019 Месяц назад

    It's in the deep south and southeast states

  • @ricmarrs8376
    @ricmarrs8376 Месяц назад

    Dude, you have tornado alley and you have dixie alley. Your gonna have to do some more googling.

  • @anthonyanthonymorones4226
    @anthonyanthonymorones4226 Месяц назад +1

    Why do you grow up in Tornado Alley and tornado alley is changing, however Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas from all the way up to Ohio is still gonna be tornado alley, but like I said tornadoes are peering in different parts of the country that don’t get tornadoes like California and also New York gets tornadoes as well too and tornadoes go up as far as into Canada

  • @collinmarlow9094
    @collinmarlow9094 Месяц назад

    Expanding, not moving.

  • @gooldenpug-yd1tp
    @gooldenpug-yd1tp Месяц назад

    So Tornado alley is mixing with Dixie alley and Hoosier alley?

  • @kittredge5167
    @kittredge5167 Месяц назад

    wooo east coast, represent!

    • @call_me_JJ
      @call_me_JJ Месяц назад

      Yeah! ....we might die this season but yeah!

    • @SortaRicann
      @SortaRicann Месяц назад

      East coast all day

  • @Chicanoking
    @Chicanoking Месяц назад

    Irish things will go back to the way they were how come only one section gets all the beautiful views of gorgeous supercells
    Play give us some action over here please Southwest

  • @nickheumiller5529
    @nickheumiller5529 Месяц назад

    I live in SD and I can tell you we definitely don’t get the tornado’s we use too and I’m not mad about it but at the same time body lives here so it’s problem best we get more

    • @Lm-hm3kj
      @Lm-hm3kj Месяц назад

      I’m in Iowa and it seems like it’s the opposite for us… just like April 26-27 we had like 20 tornados here

  • @senatorjosephmccarthy2720
    @senatorjosephmccarthy2720 Месяц назад

    Your music is drowning your voice. But I was able to hear three or four words.

  • @FreezerBurn.
    @FreezerBurn. Месяц назад

    I love how southern Ontario can’t even be included in the colour map. Ridiculous.

  • @JohnnyDanger36963
    @JohnnyDanger36963 Месяц назад

    ME,ME,ME,LOOK AT MEEEEEEEE!!!

  • @223Nebraska
    @223Nebraska Месяц назад

    Getting larger is different than changing.

  • @danielhooper502
    @danielhooper502 Месяц назад

    And yes f6 does exist

  • @colefrench5146
    @colefrench5146 Месяц назад

    Please don’t spew such ignorance when you’re clearly not qualified with any tangible knowledge and evidence of what you speak

  • @janmaccabee2496
    @janmaccabee2496 Месяц назад

    Harp

  • @lancerogers9694
    @lancerogers9694 Месяц назад

    Yankee and Dixie alley has always been there. Ohio has had huge F5 tornados like Kentucky and Indiana. 🏌️‍♂️

  • @astrolotl528
    @astrolotl528 Месяц назад

    Can you please speak louder next time you make a video, I literally can't hear you at all. But great video!