March-june 2019 was hellllllaaa rainy for new england and I thought I was over exaggerating until I saw this. We legit got hit with weather every other day and had record rainfall for the nation it sucked
@FrostProZone 21 June 29th, 2012. When the Derecho hit hard in Indiana, Ohio and West Virginia. Never going to forget that storm. It looks small on here, but the damage it did wasn't small.
2010 Hurricane Alex 6:01 tropical depression 2? 6:17 tropical storm Bonnie 6:46 Tropical depression five 7:26 Hurricane Earl 8:09 tropical storm Hermine 8:18 extra-tropical hurricane Karl 8:41 extra tropical tropical storm Nicole 9:02 Hurricane Paula near the bottom of Florida 9:28 2011 Pre tropical storm Bret near Georgia/ South Carolina 18:42 Tropical storm Don 19:09 tropical storm Emily 19:25 Hurricane Irene 20:19 outer bands of hurricane Katia near Massachusetts 20:31 Tropical storm Lee 20:19 extra-tropical hurricane Rina 22:09 2012 Tropical storm Alberto 28:58 tropical storm Beryl 29:14 Tropical Storm Debby 30:09 Hurricane Isaac 32:20 Hurricane Sandy 34:17-34:24 2013 Tropical storm Andrea 41:43 Tropical storm Dorian 43:38 Hurricane Ingrid near the bottom of Texas 45:07 2014 oof Hurricane Arthur 54:47 tropical storm dolly near the bottom of Texas 56:52 2015 Tropical storm Ana 1:05:09 Tropical storm bill 1:06:25 pre tropical storm claudette 1:07:15 2016 Tropical storm Bonnie 1:17:58 tropical storm Colin 1:18:16 Tropical depression 8 1:21:05 hurricane Hermine 1:21:11 Tropical storm Julia 1:21:35 Hurricane Matthew 1:22:21 2017 Tropical storm Cindy 1:30:56 Tropical storm Emily. 1:32:16 hurricane Harvey 1:33:07 Hurricane Irma 1:33:38 Hurricane Jose 1:33:57 It's brief but hurricane Katia near the bottom of Texas 1:33:36 Outer bands of hurricane Maria near Maryland and New Jersey 1:34:14 Hurricane Nate 1:34:34 Extra-tropical tropical storm Philippe 1:35:16 2018 tropical storm Alberto 1:42:19 Hurricane Chris 1:43:44 Hurricane Florence 1:45:56 Tropical storm Gordon 1:45:36 Hurricane Michael 1:46:50 2019 Hurricane Barry 1:56:02 Tropical depression 3 1:56:21 Hurricane Dorian 1:57:44 Outer bands of tropical storm Erin 1:57:35 Tropical storm Fernand 1:57:47 very briefly hurricane Humberto on top of the Bahamas 1:58:09 Tropical storm Imelda 1:58:15 Tropical storm Melissa near Massachusetts 1:59:01 Tropical storm Nestor 1:59:18 Tropical storm Olga 1:59:30
At roughly 48:58 (the night of January 9th) in this video, there’s a small blob of rain that works its way from just off the Treasure Coast of Florida to a little below the halfway point of Palm Beach County and stays pretty much stationary for about 6 hours or so. I remember this night well because I was working in retail at the time. I got off late in the evening, maybe around 7 or 8pm. As I walked to my car, it was absolutely pouring down rain; absolute buckets the likes I don’t think I’d quite seen in the 24 years or so I had been living there. As I left the parking lot of the store I worked at in Lantana, Florida, I noticed the streets I normally took home were absolutely flooded. These weren’t just typical Florida showers from a weak cool front. It was a biblical-type of rainfall. I made it home just fine that night. I thought about that night a lot years later. I looked it up not too long ago and apparently it was a weird weather phenomenon that included about three or four different perfect things colliding together to produce upwards of 22 inches in one spot within a span of about 6-8 hours from the late evening of January 9th to the early morning of January 10th. That one spot just so happened to be about 10 minutes away from where I worked that day. The world is a small place. Weather is so fascinating. Anyway, I’m glad to see how it happened on the radar because it’s something I hadn’t been able to find on my own. I definitely didn’t search for this but I’m glad I’m found it. Thanks for sharing it!
Strange definitely and rare, well I was in WPB 8 months last year, when it rains it really rains down there, and the flooding happens in a flash, lots of that
If you really think about it, so many people born, lived, and or died in these 10 years yet the weather and the world will keep on going. I was just turning 10 at the start of this radar and in these 10 years my life changed so much. Awesome video thank you.
I was just thinking this. I’m 30 now almost 31. At the start of this radar I was 20 going on 21 and in Afghanistan. I’m going to tell you something right now. 20 years old to 30 years old feels like it’s less than half the time it took to get from 10-20. It’s nuts. You’ll notice it in like 2 years how that year will start going by a little faster.
@@75egcg Thank you for your service. I believe you sir. I was told that going into high school "every year will feel half as long as the last". Now time just keeps going faster. I may have only lived a quarter of my life in years but I lived over half my life in perception. Life is short and that's why I'm taking steps to live happy so I don't get stuck unhappy forever.
This is the beauty of imagery able to capture moments or time beyond our day to day lives. Imagine what was going on at mars or Jupiter while these storms were going on? What about the sun while the shit is going down on mars? What about elsewhere in the universe while shit is going down on the sun?
@@TheShadowBannedBandit even as today what little we will remember of it is great. one day our memories will dwindle away. we are lucky to remember what goes on in our simple lives and sometimes we have to stand back to see the full painting.
Santa Barbara, California (tsunami 1812 earthquakes and mudslides all of December 1812. Nothing much since then...except for a few gnarly fires) Albuquerque NM seems to miss the weather that hits texas and Oklahoma. A little bit of snow in winter, mostly just cold. Lightening storms end of august.
Midwest by Chicago rarely has any kind of a major natural disasters. All the tornados hit the rural areas. Only have to worry about occasional blizzards
I remember August 19, 2011, September 4, 2014, June 11, 2017, June 14, 2017, July 1, 2018, July 19, 2019, among many others. The many others i remember, just don't remember their dates. I'm in northeast wi btw.
Irma... the hurricane I experienced in my mother's garage. She forgot to leave the house unlocked for me to house sit and my keys were locked in the house. Fun times... fun times... whole handle of vodka gone during her.
@@NorwayTracking Well if you look in May 2013 you'll find the outbreak sequence that produced the Moore and El Reno tornadoes in Oklahoma, the latter of which still holds the title for the widest tornado ever recorded.
At 16 minutes and 2 seconds into this video a lot of meteorologist in every little town and metro city from the Great Lakes south to the Gulf of Mexico and all points in-between was hoping for the best but preparing for the worst. They saved countless lives believe me when I say but such a tragic and historic day would unfortunately unfold. I will never forget that day and I know that millions others feel exactly like that as well.
Yep, and I was watching Kentucky which is where I live. I was watching for the date March 2nd 2012 and that is when a huge mess of tornadoes came through a ripped my state apart
Most people see green blobs, but I see memories: 48:07 - Drove from Buffalo to Albany in this snowstorm freshman year of college. Stopped at every rest area on I90. 59:23 - First time experiencing thundersnow in Buffalo 1:18:46 - Experienced strobe light cloud to cloud lightning at night in Buffalo 1:50:35 - First whiteout I experienced with zero visibility in Buffalo Thanks for posting this!
@9:25 my Grandfather passed, 10/10/10-that’s the day my heart broke and Ive never gotten over the loss. I miss you CLR. “Papa”. A WWII vet, a Godly man. A man’s man. A son of a sharecropper in Alabama. He was one of the greatest generation. How I miss your smile. Love JennyLou
@Sammy Slaughter Truly a scary time especially for someone like me who's greatest fear is a thunderstorm that looks like it can produce some bad juju stuff. Thank you for your story and I hope that event just made the bond between you two ever more unbreakable.
Hurricane sandy passed only 2 months after I moved down to Florida from New Jersey. I heard that it had knocked down some trees In my grandparents backyard and wrecked the shore. It was one hell of a coincidence when we moved down because there has not really been any ‘big’ weather events besides this one earthquake for as long as I lived in New Jersey.
Chris Serfass watching the joplin tornado hit missouri again was kinda heart breaking. one thing i can say without a doubt is that we in missouri will never forget that day. my god it was awful.
Me too. Main ones for me being the November 2014 lake effect blizzard "snowvember" storm (gotta love 7 ft of snow in a couple days, lol, and flooding the week after), tornadoes of 2017, a couple in 2018, a risk in 2019, and a tornado and multiple tornadic storms in 2020, along with multiple other severe weather days (at this rate I wouldn't be surprised if we get a snowvember 2.0 storm because 2020 is cursed...lol). I wish I can describe everything but I'd type essay after essay, lol. All I know is that the Western NY area can get some violent weather too, and a lot of it, if the weather patterns are just right.
At 1:55:57 (if you want to watch the storm I recommend putting the video to 0.25x speed) is a storm I will always remember. It was July 10th, 2019. I live in the Kansas City area, and I didn’t know of any storms that would hit that day. I had just started getting obsessed with weather, despite only being 10 years old. A large tornado hit the city just a month and a half earlier, which is what sparked my interest in severe storms. When I woke up that summer day, I saw on the radar that there was a large storm closing in on the city. At that moment, I realized it wasn’t going to be a fun morning. I got ready for summer camp, and I saw towering Cumulonimbus clouds out my window. My grandma drove me to summer camp (it was just a few minutes away), and I was surprised we only had a Severe Thunderstorm Warning, instead of a Tornado Watch/Warning. Soon after she dropped me off, I looked East at the sunny sky, which was quickly getting overtaken by clouds. Then, I looked west. I saw something I had never seen before nor will I likely ever see again for a long time. The entire horizon was PITCH BLACK, apart from the small texture of dark Mammatus clouds. The camp counselors and the other kids, well, I don’t quite remember how they felt about the whole thing, but I was TERRIFIED. We went in soon after, once everyone was dropped off. That morning, I would hear hail banging on the roof, the wind howling, almost drowning out any conversation I tried to have, and when I would get a glimpse outside, it was so dark, it looked like the sun wasn’t even up. The rain was POURING, and I heard of many floods nearby later that day. By around 11:30AM, just 3 hours after all this had started, we went outside, just for some normal part of our schedule. It was a normal cloudy day, and it wasn’t even raining anymore. There were some twigs on the ground, and the ground was sopping wet, but it didn’t look that bad. When I got home, I looked at my iPad, and we hadn’t gotten any tornado watch notifications or anything, which I was super surprised about. I guess it wasn’t as bad as it looked. By the way, thanks for reading my comment.
Oh ho ho I remember that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one. And that one too.
Thanks for this Timelapse The 2010s were crazy. •Hottest Decade ever. •7 of the 10 costliest hurricanes were this decade •Record Snow storms •Record Floods •Record Drought •Record Decade Just to show how much weather damage this decade brought: 2010: 15.6 Billion in weather disasters, 6 different Billion dollar events. 30th Warmest year for US, 32nd Wettest ever. 2011: 79.2 Billion in Weather disasters, 16 different billion dollar events. 24th warmest year for US, 58th driest year. 2012: 130.9 Billion in Weather disasters, 11 different billion dollar events. Hottest year for US, 19th driest. 2013: 25.6 Billion in Weather disasters, 9 different billion dollar events, 42nd Warmest year for US, 41st driest year. 2014: 19.1 Billion in weather disasters, 8 different billion dollar events, 40th warmest year for US, 45th wettest year. 2015: 24.5 Billion in weather disasters, 10 different billion dollar events, 4th Hottest year for US, 5th wettest year. 2016: 50.5 Billion in weather disasters, 15 different billion dollar events, 2nd Hottest year for US, 29th wettest year. 2017: 318.9 Billion in weather disasters, 16 different billion dollar events, 3rd Warmest year for US, 21st wettest year. 2018: 92.8 Billion in weather disasters, 14 different billion dollar events, 14 warmest year for US, 4th wettest on record. 2019: 45 Billion in weather, 14 different billion dollar events, 34th warmest year, 2nd wettest on record. Earth’s Hottest Years 1. 2016 +0.99°C +1.78°F 2. 2019 +0.95°C +1.71°F 3. 2015 +0.93°C +1.67°F 4. 2017 +0.91°C +1.64°F 5. 2018 +0.83°C +1.49°F America’s Hottest Years Average H 64.0° M 52.0° L 40.0° 1. 2012 67.7° 55.3° 42.9° +3.3° 2. 2016 66.7° 54.9° 43.2° +2.9° 3. 2017 66.4° 54.6° 42.7° +2.6° 4. 2015 66.1° 54.4° 42.7° +2.4° 5. 2006 66.4° 54.3° 42.1° +2.3° America’s Wettest Years 1. 1973 34.96” +5.02” 2. 2019 34.82” +4.88” 3. 1983 34.76” +4.82” 4. 2018 34.65” +4.71” 5. 1998 33.89” +3.95” And these are average temperatures and precipitation for each month 2010-2020. If your interested in climatological statistics. Average U.S. Temperatures Per Month: www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/national/time-series/110/tavg/all/12/2010-2019?base_prd=true&begbaseyear=1901&endbaseyear=2000&trend=true&trend_base=10&begtrendyear=1970&endtrendyear=2020&filter=true&filterType=loess Average Precipitation in the U.S. Per Month: www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/national/time-series/110/pcp/all/12/2010-2019?base_prd=true&begbaseyear=1901&endbaseyear=2000&trend=true&trend_base=10&begtrendyear=1970&endtrendyear=2020&filter=true&filterType=loess 2010s have been crazy thanks for this video. Hopefully 2020s are better :) Here are some other important events this decade. 15:58 2011 Tornado Outbreak 20:05 Hurricane Irene 30:20 2012 Derecho 34:21 Superstorm Sandy 34:43 Winter Storm Athena 37:48 Winter Storm Nemo 1:01:42 Winter Storm Juno 1:09:55 Joaquin Flooding 2015 1:13:45 Winter Storm Jonas 1:20:34 LA Flooding 2016 1:21:11 Hurricane Hermine 1:22:22 Hurricane Matthew 1:25:26 Winter Storm Helena 1:26:34 Winter Storm Niko 1:27:38 Winter Storm Stella 1:33:05 Hurricane Harvey 1:33:40 Hurricane Irma 1:33:53 Hurricane Jose 1:33:57 Hurricane Maria 1:34:34 Hurricane Nate 1:36:39 Winter Storm Benji 1:37:29 Winter Storm Grayson 1:39:29 Winter Storm Riley 1:40:03 Winter Storm Toby 1:45:58 Hurricane Florence 1:46:50 Hurricane Micheal 1:48:03 Winter Storm Avery 1:51:41 Winter Storm Scott 1:57:45 Hurricane Dorian 1:58:15 Tropical Storm Imelda
This is a good way to see the "big picture" of how dynamic our atmosphere it. I watch our regional radars every day; I'm a retired pilot having spent my career flying all over the US so I have a keen interest in weather. Thanks for producing this.
@@ehinton4006 No it's not what I mean. Back then, everyone seemed more relaxed and good-humored. Now everyone is like on high valtage and always annoyed because of things that really shouldn't matter that much.
I think it was about 2008 that things started going south. The recession shook everyone's faith in the stability of the system, and the rise of social media amplified those anxieties. By 2015, those anxieties had circulated so much they created opinion echo chambers which naturally polarized themselves in an us vs. them game, and thus we saw the rise of Donald Trump in the US, Brexit and Alt Right nationalism in Europe, and the ultra-nationalist Hanfu movement in China-- all unexpected yet surprisingly consistent in our global society. Essentially, all of this happened because of corrupt business practices in the US housing market. Conclusion: Eat the rich.
kind of reminds me of an acid trip I took back in the '70s. Crazy colors swirling around, like the wind in my mind. thanks for the flashback, it was a cool trip.
I love how ever summer around July-August you see the monsoon season pop up in the southwest. Every afternoon a million little showers pop up across the whole region
0:00 New Year Day 2010 12:11 New Year Day 2011 24:20 New Year Day 2012 36:32 New Year Day 2013 48:42 New Year Day 2014 1:00:53 New Year Day 2015 1:13:04 New Year Day 2016 1:25:15 New Year Day 2017 1:37:26 New Year Day 2018 1:49:37 New Year Day 2019 2:01:46 New Year Day 2020
That sneaky little bomb cyclone Nebraska had on March 13 2019 looks so innocent on radar. Starts at 1:52:00. The state is still trying to recover from the flooding caused by rain on frozen ground and frozen rivers. All hell broke loose when the ice on the rivers broke up.
South Dakotan here, I live within 30 miles of Mitchell and the James River is flooded so bad that it is still connected to the Firesteel Creek (over 400 hundred feet). There is this Amish community that would need a small boat to reach. The damage is
Ay living in Nebraska right next to the Platte I have to say has never been a scarier time in my life then seeing it rise and having a helicopter save people
@@its-remiiii I hear ya! We're right on the Middle Loup by St Paul, and I'll never feel the same way about our river. Its still eating away at the 281 bridge supports and trying its darndest to get closer to town.
Hurricane Sandy at 34:18 I can still remember the wind and the couple loud ass trees that fell in my yard. It took a while for the Jersey Shore to really recover from that and to some extent we probably never did.
I had my work light on in my house when the power went out and winds were sustained. My ceiling fan on the first floor was swaying back and forth and bobbing up and down. Little did I realize my street was flooding 3 blocks down from us. My wife was also 7 and a half months pregnant. SCARIEST STORM I EVER EXPERIENCED.
@@joshmadaris1721 The 2011 Joplin tornado was also the deadliest tornado to hit the State of Missouri since 1896. 158 people were killed in the May 22, 2011 Joplin tornado and 255 people were killed in the May 27, 1896 St. Louis tornado.
@@alexlautzenheiser5024 I currently live in Joplin, and the coroner that tallied the deaths came to 161. Not much of a difference, I know, but just interesting that there's the discrepancy. nation.time.com/2013/05/21/the-challenging-math-of-a-disasters-death-toll/
I live in the UK, so I have no memories of encountering these storms. But I get such a nostalgic feel when I watch this, even though I have nothing associated with these storms. Also, correct me if I'm wrong, but 41:32 was the storm that had the biggest tornado ever near El Reno.
1:15:15 live in Monroe la and it rained 30 inches in 12 hours that day. 3 ft of water flooded my car that day. Never been so happy to live in a trailer house. Good times.
I didn't think there was another person out there who does what I do, let alone uploads a video of it. I was blown away at your hard work and dedication to do this. I can appreciate the time and effort that went into this project for others to enjoy. You have a new subscriber and I will be binge watching!
@@BabySonicGT Just....looking at the dates...2010s were done of the best and worst years of our lives, we grew, we learned, had fun, etc. And with this hell sometimes you may even remember the weather of the day in question. Especially on the news maybe. It's a real journey and a look back, missing the old days :(
This is the coolest video because it doesn't make you see a point or get you to believe in something, it is already there...to go back in time by weather, what a genius idea. Thank you.
Thanks for this video. Don’t ever take this down.... as a meteorologist by college degree, as well as general weather enthusiast, this may be the best video to ever appreciate. I can remember specific storms in the nation on many of these days.
I was in my house during the October 20 Dallas Tornadoes. Scary day. Multiple tornadoes touched down in Dallas and destroyed many houses and businesses. My home was luckily spared by one of the tornadoes as it missed my house by less than a quarter mile. Lots of things here have changed since then.
Can we all stop to appreciate how big of an effect the contents of this video have had on all of our lives? Remember that really stormy day where you had to stay in 3 summers ago? It’s in this video.
I was watching Kentucky which is where I live. I was watching for the date March 2nd 2012 and that is when a huge mess of tornadoes came through a ripped my state apart at the 26:23 minute mark
30:20 the historic June 29th, 2012 Derecho. Makes it look small and harmless here. But i had no power for 16 days after the storm, and it was very hot. The cleanup took months.
2:00:35 - I remember when strong winds were in my hometown. A day later, there was a blackout. I was chatting on Discord right when the power turned out.
This is for North States like South dakota Thar was a Severe Blizzards with have Snow on January 4-8,2010 0:07 Blizzards on January 18-20,2010 a light heavy Snow 0:34 January 22-25,2010, bringing overdress heavy snow 0:42 Light chance of snow On January 26,2010 / 0:51 A small blizzard on January 30,2010, February 2,2010 1:00 A Blizzards on February 3-6,2010 1:07 bring over drifts on February 7-10,2010 1:14 On February 12-16,2010 1:25 February 17-19,2010 1:35 scattered snow showers on February 20-23,2010 1:41 February 27,2010, March 2,2010 1:56 March 4-8,2010 light chance of snow showers sleet rain 2:05 March 7-12,2010, bringing heavy over drift snow 2:11
1:15:16 3 day long storm drops between 25-30 inches of rain in North Louisiana. 1:20:27 3 day storm drops nearly 30 inches of rain in Southeast Louisiana 1:33:06 Hurricane Harvey drops 50+ inches of rain in 4 days in Southeast Texas
1:13:17 one of the first Texas thunderstorms I saw after we moved. can't believe I've been here so long. watching all the weather here and back home is the reason i'm crying in the club tonight 😭
Also what's bewildering me is how in the moment, storms feel like they last forever, but in the grand scheme of things, they're just the breaths of the Earth. It's amazing how much they can impact our lives in such a short span of time.
me- im bored... i guess i will watch youtube vids... youtube recommended videos- hey you wanna watch ten years of radar me- damn that sounds interesting
Explosions of energy, atmospheric ionization of opposing polarities for warm vs cold seasons, pulling respective air masses into an area. Crazy world we live in.
@@kathyashby6019 yes!yes!yes! Thank you for sharing this observation because I have to, ever since that bitch lost a rigged in her favor election they've been off the chain
See you in 6 years when this is in everyone’s recommended
how funny unique original joke
Ok
Happend to me
Jackson Romine or in 10 years for the 2020-2030 radar time lapse.
it was in my recommended
Who else is looking at their states like "Oh yeah, I remember that time!"
@FrostProZone 21 Same.
Yeah, I remember May 4th 2019 was our schools King’s Island trip, it rained a lot that day.
March-june 2019 was hellllllaaa rainy for new england and I thought I was over exaggerating until I saw this. We legit got hit with weather every other day and had record rainfall for the nation it sucked
@FrostProZone 21 June 29th, 2012. When the Derecho hit hard in Indiana, Ohio and West Virginia. Never going to forget that storm. It looks small on here, but the damage it did wasn't small.
I remember the super outbreak in 2011, took the lives of my grandma and grandpa.
Thank you!!!
Hey pecos!!!
Hi
the god
The man the myth the legend PECOS HANK MY NUMBER ONE FAVORITE STORM CHASER
Pecos Hank hey!
2010
Hurricane Alex 6:01
tropical depression 2? 6:17
tropical storm Bonnie 6:46
Tropical depression five 7:26
Hurricane Earl 8:09
tropical storm Hermine 8:18
extra-tropical hurricane Karl 8:41
extra tropical tropical storm Nicole 9:02
Hurricane Paula near the bottom of Florida 9:28
2011
Pre tropical storm Bret near Georgia/ South Carolina 18:42
Tropical storm Don 19:09
tropical storm Emily 19:25
Hurricane Irene 20:19
outer bands of hurricane Katia near Massachusetts 20:31
Tropical storm Lee 20:19
extra-tropical hurricane Rina 22:09
2012
Tropical storm Alberto 28:58
tropical storm Beryl 29:14
Tropical Storm Debby 30:09
Hurricane Isaac 32:20
Hurricane Sandy 34:17-34:24
2013
Tropical storm Andrea 41:43
Tropical storm Dorian 43:38
Hurricane Ingrid near the bottom of Texas 45:07
2014 oof
Hurricane Arthur 54:47
tropical storm dolly near the bottom of Texas 56:52
2015
Tropical storm Ana 1:05:09
Tropical storm bill 1:06:25
pre tropical storm claudette 1:07:15
2016
Tropical storm Bonnie 1:17:58
tropical storm Colin 1:18:16
Tropical depression 8 1:21:05
hurricane Hermine 1:21:11
Tropical storm Julia 1:21:35
Hurricane Matthew 1:22:21
2017
Tropical storm Cindy 1:30:56
Tropical storm Emily. 1:32:16
hurricane Harvey 1:33:07
Hurricane Irma 1:33:38
Hurricane Jose 1:33:57
It's brief but hurricane Katia near the bottom of Texas 1:33:36
Outer bands of hurricane Maria near Maryland and New Jersey 1:34:14
Hurricane Nate 1:34:34
Extra-tropical tropical storm Philippe 1:35:16
2018
tropical storm Alberto 1:42:19
Hurricane Chris 1:43:44
Hurricane Florence 1:45:56
Tropical storm Gordon 1:45:36
Hurricane Michael 1:46:50
2019
Hurricane Barry 1:56:02
Tropical depression 3 1:56:21
Hurricane Dorian 1:57:44
Outer bands of tropical storm Erin 1:57:35
Tropical storm Fernand 1:57:47
very briefly hurricane Humberto on top of the Bahamas 1:58:09
Tropical storm Imelda 1:58:15
Tropical storm Melissa near Massachusetts 1:59:01
Tropical storm Nestor 1:59:18
Tropical storm Olga 1:59:30
2011 hurricane irene is 20:05
20:19 was Tropical Storm Lee.
Correction
Irene: 20:04
False hurricane Irene 20:05
At roughly 48:58 (the night of January 9th) in this video, there’s a small blob of rain that works its way from just off the Treasure Coast of Florida to a little below the halfway point of Palm Beach County and stays pretty much stationary for about 6 hours or so. I remember this night well because I was working in retail at the time. I got off late in the evening, maybe around 7 or 8pm. As I walked to my car, it was absolutely pouring down rain; absolute buckets the likes I don’t think I’d quite seen in the 24 years or so I had been living there. As I left the parking lot of the store I worked at in Lantana, Florida, I noticed the streets I normally took home were absolutely flooded. These weren’t just typical Florida showers from a weak cool front. It was a biblical-type of rainfall. I made it home just fine that night.
I thought about that night a lot years later. I looked it up not too long ago and apparently it was a weird weather phenomenon that included about three or four different perfect things colliding together to produce upwards of 22 inches in one spot within a span of about 6-8 hours from the late evening of January 9th to the early morning of January 10th. That one spot just so happened to be about 10 minutes away from where I worked that day.
The world is a small place. Weather is so fascinating.
Anyway, I’m glad to see how it happened on the radar because it’s something I hadn’t been able to find on my own. I definitely didn’t search for this but I’m glad I’m found it. Thanks for sharing it!
Strange definitely and rare, well I was in WPB 8 months last year, when it rains it really rains down there, and the flooding happens in a flash, lots of that
Must mean jeebzus was sending you a message
If you really think about it, so many people born, lived, and or died in these 10 years yet the weather and the world will keep on going. I was just turning 10 at the start of this radar and in these 10 years my life changed so much. Awesome video thank you.
I was just thinking this. I’m 30 now almost 31. At the start of this radar I was 20 going on 21 and in Afghanistan.
I’m going to tell you something right now. 20 years old to 30 years old feels like it’s less than half the time it took to get from 10-20. It’s nuts. You’ll notice it in like 2 years how that year will start going by a little faster.
Same here born in 2000 crazy to think it’s 2020
Yet in Ms. Gebharts honors geometry class it feels like it’s 12 years in one period. Like I hit puberty in the middle of her class
@@75egcg Thank you for your service.
I believe you sir. I was told that going into high school "every year will feel half as long as the last". Now time just keeps going faster. I may have only lived a quarter of my life in years but I lived over half my life in perception. Life is short and that's why I'm taking steps to live happy so I don't get stuck unhappy forever.
I was 12 at the start of this radar. Turning 22 this year lol
this makes me wonder what i was doing during those times.
People who came and went in our life as well.
@@surfthestreets86 Right? Seeing these storms is ominous... how many people died as a result of them?
This is the beauty of imagery able to capture moments or time beyond our day to day lives. Imagine what was going on at mars or Jupiter while these storms were going on? What about the sun while the shit is going down on mars? What about elsewhere in the universe while shit is going down on the sun?
@@TheShadowBannedBandit even as today what little we will remember of it is great. one day our memories will dwindle away. we are lucky to remember what goes on in our simple lives and sometimes we have to stand back to see the full painting.
We ALL wonder that . . . . what the hell WERE you doing?
Now layer them all so we can figure out where is safe to live.
Santa Barbara, California (tsunami 1812 earthquakes and mudslides all of December 1812. Nothing much since then...except for a few gnarly fires)
Albuquerque NM seems to miss the weather that hits texas and Oklahoma. A little bit of snow in winter, mostly just cold. Lightening storms end of august.
Midwest by Chicago rarely has any kind of a major natural disasters. All the tornados hit the rural areas. Only have to worry about occasional blizzards
I. M. as a resident of ABQ, yeah.
@Uncle Sam's woosh
Frozen hell holes look safe
I feel like I'm watching my whole life during 2010-2020 go by in 2 hours and all the weather that i have been through
Well I was born in 2010 so I actually am
@@christianborkey5459 same
@@christianborkey5459 hello 11 year old, I am 14 and in 8th grade
When you watch your state and think “you know, I’ve seen all of these. All of them. But I don’t remember a single one”
90ic3 i remember September 11th of last year
I was 2 going on 3 at the start of this so I don’t remember much from the first few yrs
I live in Pennsylvania and I remember on june 13 2017 i got hit by a microburst lol
In live in Ohio June 13 2017 😂 😆 lol
I remember August 19, 2011, September 4, 2014, June 11, 2017, June 14, 2017, July 1, 2018, July 19, 2019, among many others. The many others i remember, just don't remember their dates. I'm in northeast wi btw.
Wtf, I accidentally put my RUclips on autoplay while sleeping and I woke up with this...
We’re you listening to binaural beats? This has them in it.
Better than waking up to a 2hr and 13 min video of the House bashing on TRUMP and there is only 5 min left on the the video.....
Mike judge dude LMFAOO
How far did you get? 😂
Check your watch history
1:33:36 I feel like Hurricane Irma was just a few months ago. Time flies
yeah....3 years wow
Yep I remember it like it was yesterday, it's crazy isn't it.
Yea... actually brings back some memories tbh
Irma... the hurricane I experienced in my mother's garage. She forgot to leave the house unlocked for me to house sit and my keys were locked in the house. Fun times... fun times... whole handle of vodka gone during her.
IMO it wasn’t as bad as the news made it out to be lol.
*STORM MENU*
*SEVERE WEATHER*
2010
3:43 22 Apr - 25 Apr (88 tornadoes)
3:59 30 Apr - 02 May (60 tornadoes)
4:19 10 May - 13 May (91 tornadoes)
4:43 22 May - 26 May (78 tornadoes)
5:10 05 Jun - 06 Jun (52 tornadoes)
5:34 16 Jun - 17 Jun (82 tornadoes)
9:51 24 Oct - 27 Oct (87 tornadoes)
2011
15:26 09 Apr - 11 Apr (51 tornadoes)
15:37 14 Apr - 16 Apr (178 tornadoes)
15:47 19 Apr - 24 Apr “St Louis” (132 tornadoes)
15:55 25 Apr - 28 Apr “Super Outbreak” (360 tornadoes)
16:51 21 May - 26 May “Joplin” (241 tornadoes)
17:46 18 Jun - 22 Jun (78 tornadoes)
2012
26:22 02 Mar - 03 Mar (70 tornadoes)
26:55 18 Mar - 24 Mar (63 tornadoes)
27:47 13 Apr - 16 Apr (113 tornadoes)
2013
37:28 29 Jan - 30 Jan (65 tornadoes)
41:06 18 May - 21 May “Moore” (56 tornadoes)
41:20 26 May - 31 May “El Reno” (93 tornadoes)
47:12 17 Nov - 17 Nov (73 tornadoes)
2014
52:35 27 Apr - 30 Apr (84 tornadoes)
54:15 16 Jun - 18 Jun (76 tornadoes)
2015
1:04:58 05 May - 10 May (127 tornadoes)
1:05:22 16 May - 17 May (70 tornadoes)
1:05:37 23 May - 25 May (75 tornadoes)
1:11:32 16 Nov - 18 Nov (61 tornadoes)
2016
1:14:47 23 Feb - 24 Feb (61 tornadoes)
1:16:55 26 Apr - 27 Apr (57 tornadoes)
1:17:18 07 May - 10 May (57 tornadoes)
1:17:48 22 May - 26 May (98 tornadoes)
2017
1:25:51 21 Jan - 23 Jan (81 tornadoes)
1:27:11 28 Feb - 01 Mar (72 tornadoes)
1:27:23 06 Mar - 07 Mar (63 tornadoes)
1:28:17 02 Apr - 03 Apr (59 tornadoes)
1:29:10 28 Apr - 01 May (75 tornadoes)
1:29:44 15 May - 20 May (134 tornadoes)
1:33:06 25 Aug - 31 Aug “Hurricane Harvey” (53 tornadoes)
2018
1:40:50 13 Apr - 15 Apr (73 tornadoes)
1:41:27 01 May - 03 May (51 tornadoes)
1:47:32 31 Oct - 02 Nov (56 tornadoes)
2019
1:53:00 13 Apr - 15 Apr (71 tornadoes)
1:53:10 17 Apr - 19 Apr (94 tornadoes)
1:54:09 17 May - 30 May (301 tornadoes)
*TROPICAL STORMS*
2010
6:01 Hurricane Alex
6:17 Tropical Depression 02L
6:47 Tropical Storm Bonnie
7:25 Tropical Depression 05L
8:09 Hurricane Earl
8:17 Tropical Storm Hermine
8:39 Hurricane Karl
9:03 Tropical Storm Nicole
9:33 Hurricane Paula
2011
18:10 Tropical Storm Arlene
18:45 Tropical Storm Bret
19:08 Tropical Storm Don
19:25 Tropical Storm Emily
20:03 Hurricane Irene
20:17 Tropical Storm Lee
20:32 Hurricane Katia
2012
28:58 Tropical Storm Alberto
29:12 Tropical Storm Beryl
30:08 Tropical Storm Debby
32:13 Hurricane Isaac
34:15 Hurricane Sandy
2013
41:36 Tropical Storm Andrea
43:37 Tropical Storm Dorian
44:47 Tropical Depression 08L
45:04 Hurricane Ingrid
45:45 Tropical Storm Karen
2014
54:45 Hurricane Arthur
56:53 Tropical Storm Dolly
2015
1:05:03 Tropical Storm Ana
1:06:24 Tropical Storm Bill
2016
1:17:59 Tropical Storm Bonnie
1:18:17 Tropical Storm Colin
1:18:43 Tropical Storm Danielle
1:21:05 Tropical Depression 08L
1:21:05 Hurricane Hermine
1:21:35 Tropical Storm Julia
1:22:19 Hurricane Matthew
2017
1:30:52 Tropical Storm Cindy
1:32:17 Tropical Storm Emily
1:32:56 Hurricane Franklin
1:32:58 Potential Tropical Cyclone 10L
1:33:06 Hurricane Harvey
1:33:29 Hurricane Katia
1:33:36 Hurricane Irma
1:33:55 Hurricane José
1:34:13 Hurricane Maria
1:34:33 Hurricane Nate
1:35:15 Tropical Storm Philippe
2018
1:42:15 Tropical Storm Alberto
1:43:41 Hurricane Chris
1:45:36 Tropical Storm Gordon
1:45:55 Hurricane Florence
1:46:46 Hurricane Michael
2019
1:55:57 Hurricane Barry
1:56:21 Tropical Depression 03L
1:57:42 Hurricane Dorian
1:57:46 Tropical Storm Fernand
1:58:09 Hurricane Humberto
1:58:13 Tropical Storm Imelda
1:59:02 Tropical Storm Melissa
1:59:14 Tropical Storm Nestor
1:59:29 Tropical Storm Olga
Norway Tracking awesome, thanks for putting this together!
You’re very welcome!
Maybe I’ll add tornado outbreaks soon, I’ll see lol
@@NorwayTracking Well if you look in May 2013 you'll find the outbreak sequence that produced the Moore and El Reno tornadoes in Oklahoma, the latter of which still holds the title for the widest tornado ever recorded.
@@NorwayTracking yeah thanks!
Thank You!
Rest in Peace to all those who lost their lives in the deadly storms 💔
At 16 minutes and 2 seconds into this video a lot of meteorologist in every little town and metro city from the Great Lakes south to the Gulf of Mexico and all points in-between was hoping for the best but preparing for the worst. They saved countless lives believe me when I say but such a tragic and historic day would unfortunately unfold. I will never forget that day and I know that millions others feel exactly like that as well.
1:36:37 snows for the first time in 14 years in South Texas.
Charging Active hell yah
A great time in louisiana , wish it would again
come back here and like this comment when it snows at the end of 2020
I remember that @charging active
I remember that day. sucks that I had school, and the snow was gone by the end of the day.
Anybody else just staying completely focused on where you live and whenever some green comes over you being like "oh crap, it rained"
Me lol~
Yep, and I was watching Kentucky which is where I live. I was watching for the date March 2nd 2012 and that is when a huge mess of tornadoes came through a ripped my state apart
Arizona
1:33:08 there goes hurricane harvey
Notable Tropical Cyclones:
2010:
6:45 Bonnie
8:16 Hermine
2011:
19:08 Don
20:02 Irene
20:18 Lee
2012:
29:13 Beryl
30:08 Debby
32:13 Isaac
34:15 Sandy
2013:
41:41 Andrea
2014:
54:40 Arthur
2015:
1:05:06 Ana
1:06:02 Bill
2016:
1:17:59-Bonnie (again)
1:18:16-Colin
1:21:08-Hermine (again)
1:21:32-Julia
1:22:18-Matthew
2017:
1:30:52-Cindy
1:32:15-Emily
1:33:03-Harvey
1:33:35-Irma
1:34:33-Nate
2018:
1:42:18-Alberto
1:45:34-Gordon
1:45:54-Florence
1:46:46-Michael
2019:
1:55:56-Barry
1:57:41-Dorian
1:58:12-Imelda
1:59:14-Nestor
30:20 this makes the derecho of 2012 look so small and insignificant
Yeah I was surprised to see it look so small. The damage it did definitely wasn't tho, I still remember it like it was yesterday.
I kept looking for it because I thought "it had to have been a lot bigger than that"
Only because it moved so fast. It was like blink and you miss it.
This is officially the coolest video on RUclips.
nah it’s the hottest video on RUclips
@@agentpaint well said
This video _blew me away_
Ikr
No this is just the us, the us isn't the only place on earth
0:00 - 2010
12:11 - 2011
24:20 - 2012
36:32 - 2013
48:42 - 2014
1:00:53 - 2015
1:13:03 - 2016
1:25:15 - 2017
1:37:26 - 2018
1:49:36 - 2019
It's wild seeing the beginning of 2014 and remembering how much goddamn snow we got that winter here in Michigan
@@Karmy. I'm from Michigan too. Flint area. We got quite a few feet. Was insane
@@plaguex1 94.9 inches was the total here in Metro Detroit
Most people see green blobs, but I see memories:
48:07 - Drove from Buffalo to Albany in this snowstorm freshman year of college. Stopped at every rest area on I90.
59:23 - First time experiencing thundersnow in Buffalo
1:18:46 - Experienced strobe light cloud to cloud lightning at night in Buffalo
1:50:35 - First whiteout I experienced with zero visibility in Buffalo
Thanks for posting this!
soymilk jacko in Washington, the weather changes every 2 hours
i was looking for that blizzard!
I live in Buffalo so that's cool
Let me guess, you live in buffalo
@@cooperbennett3043 Yes
@9:25 my Grandfather passed, 10/10/10-that’s the day my heart broke and Ive never gotten over the loss. I miss you CLR. “Papa”. A WWII vet, a Godly man. A man’s man. A son of a sharecropper in Alabama. He was one of the greatest generation. How I miss your smile. Love JennyLou
Doesn’t include Alaska
Alaska: “am I a joke to you?”
Forgets about hawaii
Hawaii: “ why do you guys always act like your better than me "
American Samoa and Puerto Rico: my disappointment is immeasurable and my day is ruined
@@keviguess3552 U.s. virgin islands and guam: am.. am i still relevant?
Other than Alaska and Hawaii the others mentioned in the reply are "U.S Territory's"
nor hawaii
16:50 is Joplin
Considering how fast this video moves, more like 16:53 happened on May 22
@Sammy Slaughter Truly a scary time especially for someone like me who's greatest fear is a thunderstorm that looks like it can produce some bad juju stuff. Thank you for your story and I hope that event just made the bond between you two ever more unbreakable.
yeah that happened on my birthday, one hit where i live too on the same day last year at 1:54:18
34:22 new jersey: SANDY I NEED WATER
Sandy: sure thing whole entire east coast
Hurricane sandy passed only 2 months after I moved down to Florida from New Jersey.
I heard that it had knocked down some trees In my grandparents backyard and wrecked the shore. It was one hell of a coincidence when we moved down because there has not really been any ‘big’ weather events besides this one earthquake for as long as I lived in New Jersey.
Isabella Genova my state in MA got lucky
LOL
hi Doge
@nozyed hi
Feels weird seeing the storms I lived through 10 years ago on this.
which state is yours?
Missouri
Bro, same. I would’ve been 5 when the video started. So I’m looking at storms 5yo me would’ve seen. It’s really crazy to think about.
Chris Serfass watching the joplin tornado hit missouri again was kinda heart breaking. one thing i can say without a doubt is that we in missouri will never forget that day. my god it was awful.
Me too. Main ones for me being the November 2014 lake effect blizzard "snowvember" storm (gotta love 7 ft of snow in a couple days, lol, and flooding the week after), tornadoes of 2017, a couple in 2018, a risk in 2019, and a tornado and multiple tornadic storms in 2020, along with multiple other severe weather days (at this rate I wouldn't be surprised if we get a snowvember 2.0 storm because 2020 is cursed...lol). I wish I can describe everything but I'd type essay after essay, lol. All I know is that the Western NY area can get some violent weather too, and a lot of it, if the weather patterns are just right.
At 1:55:57 (if you want to watch the storm I recommend putting the video to 0.25x speed) is a storm I will always remember.
It was July 10th, 2019. I live in the Kansas City area, and I didn’t know of any storms that would hit that day. I had just started getting obsessed with weather, despite only being 10 years old. A large tornado hit the city just a month and a half earlier, which is what sparked my interest in severe storms.
When I woke up that summer day, I saw on the radar that there was a large storm closing in on the city. At that moment, I realized it wasn’t going to be a fun morning. I got ready for summer camp, and I saw towering Cumulonimbus clouds out my window.
My grandma drove me to summer camp (it was just a few minutes away), and I was surprised we only had a Severe Thunderstorm Warning, instead of a Tornado Watch/Warning. Soon after she dropped me off, I looked East at the sunny sky, which was quickly getting overtaken by clouds.
Then, I looked west. I saw something I had never seen before nor will I likely ever see again for a long time.
The entire horizon was PITCH BLACK, apart from the small texture of dark Mammatus clouds. The camp counselors and the other kids, well, I don’t quite remember how they felt about the whole thing, but I was TERRIFIED. We went in soon after, once everyone was dropped off.
That morning, I would hear hail banging on the roof, the wind howling, almost drowning out any conversation I tried to have, and when I would get a glimpse outside, it was so dark, it looked like the sun wasn’t even up. The rain was POURING, and I heard of many floods nearby later that day.
By around 11:30AM, just 3 hours after all this had started, we went outside, just for some normal part of our schedule. It was a normal cloudy day, and it wasn’t even raining anymore. There were some twigs on the ground, and the ground was sopping wet, but it didn’t look that bad.
When I got home, I looked at my iPad, and we hadn’t gotten any tornado watch notifications or anything, which I was super surprised about. I guess it wasn’t as bad as it looked.
By the way, thanks for reading my comment.
You’re welcome
Strongest synoptic storm ever in U.S. history at 9:56
Oh ho ho I remember that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and that one.
And that one too.
Easy there dude. You're gonna break your ctrl+v keys
Gulf coast huh
@@JCMiniPainting XD
Thanks for this Timelapse
The 2010s were crazy.
•Hottest Decade ever.
•7 of the 10 costliest hurricanes were this decade
•Record Snow storms
•Record Floods
•Record Drought
•Record Decade
Just to show how much weather damage this decade brought:
2010: 15.6 Billion in weather disasters, 6 different Billion dollar events. 30th Warmest year for US, 32nd Wettest ever.
2011: 79.2 Billion in Weather disasters, 16 different billion dollar events. 24th warmest year for US, 58th driest year.
2012: 130.9 Billion in Weather disasters, 11 different billion dollar events. Hottest year for US, 19th driest.
2013: 25.6 Billion in Weather disasters, 9 different billion dollar events, 42nd Warmest year for US, 41st driest year.
2014: 19.1 Billion in weather disasters, 8 different billion dollar events, 40th warmest year for US, 45th wettest year.
2015: 24.5 Billion in weather disasters, 10 different billion dollar events, 4th Hottest year for US, 5th wettest year.
2016: 50.5 Billion in weather disasters, 15 different billion dollar events, 2nd Hottest year for US, 29th wettest year.
2017: 318.9 Billion in weather disasters, 16 different billion dollar events, 3rd Warmest year for US, 21st wettest year.
2018: 92.8 Billion in weather disasters, 14 different billion dollar events, 14 warmest year for US, 4th wettest on record.
2019: 45 Billion in weather, 14 different billion dollar events, 34th warmest year, 2nd wettest on record.
Earth’s Hottest Years
1. 2016 +0.99°C +1.78°F
2. 2019 +0.95°C +1.71°F
3. 2015 +0.93°C +1.67°F
4. 2017 +0.91°C +1.64°F
5. 2018 +0.83°C +1.49°F
America’s Hottest Years
Average H 64.0° M 52.0° L 40.0°
1. 2012 67.7° 55.3° 42.9° +3.3°
2. 2016 66.7° 54.9° 43.2° +2.9°
3. 2017 66.4° 54.6° 42.7° +2.6°
4. 2015 66.1° 54.4° 42.7° +2.4°
5. 2006 66.4° 54.3° 42.1° +2.3°
America’s Wettest Years
1. 1973 34.96” +5.02”
2. 2019 34.82” +4.88”
3. 1983 34.76” +4.82”
4. 2018 34.65” +4.71”
5. 1998 33.89” +3.95”
And these are average temperatures and precipitation for each month 2010-2020.
If your interested in climatological statistics.
Average U.S. Temperatures Per Month:
www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/national/time-series/110/tavg/all/12/2010-2019?base_prd=true&begbaseyear=1901&endbaseyear=2000&trend=true&trend_base=10&begtrendyear=1970&endtrendyear=2020&filter=true&filterType=loess
Average Precipitation in the U.S. Per Month:
www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/national/time-series/110/pcp/all/12/2010-2019?base_prd=true&begbaseyear=1901&endbaseyear=2000&trend=true&trend_base=10&begtrendyear=1970&endtrendyear=2020&filter=true&filterType=loess
2010s have been crazy thanks for this video. Hopefully 2020s are better :)
Here are some other important events this decade.
15:58 2011 Tornado Outbreak
20:05 Hurricane Irene
30:20 2012 Derecho
34:21 Superstorm Sandy
34:43 Winter Storm Athena
37:48 Winter Storm Nemo
1:01:42 Winter Storm Juno
1:09:55 Joaquin Flooding 2015
1:13:45 Winter Storm Jonas
1:20:34 LA Flooding 2016
1:21:11 Hurricane Hermine
1:22:22 Hurricane Matthew
1:25:26 Winter Storm Helena
1:26:34 Winter Storm Niko
1:27:38 Winter Storm Stella
1:33:05 Hurricane Harvey
1:33:40 Hurricane Irma
1:33:53 Hurricane Jose
1:33:57 Hurricane Maria
1:34:34 Hurricane Nate
1:36:39 Winter Storm Benji
1:37:29 Winter Storm Grayson
1:39:29 Winter Storm Riley
1:40:03 Winter Storm Toby
1:45:58 Hurricane Florence
1:46:50 Hurricane Micheal
1:48:03 Winter Storm Avery
1:51:41 Winter Storm Scott
1:57:45 Hurricane Dorian
1:58:15 Tropical Storm Imelda
Amazing comment! Needs more likes
Okey dokey palsy dokey quwala wala wala dokey dokey
Thanks for taking the time to make this comment, it helps in making sense of such a large data set!
Top Comment
Also had record low temperatures in Minnesota in 2013-14 and 2019.
This is a good way to see the "big picture" of how dynamic our atmosphere it. I watch our regional radars every day; I'm a retired pilot having spent my career flying all over the US so I have a keen interest in weather. Thanks for producing this.
as a retired pilot are you aware of weather geoengineering? just curious...
Yeah, for real give any insight to observations
Have you seen any strange lights in the sky?
Paul Searls h
Wow, the entire eastern U.S. seems to be the rain capital of the universe! Especially in 2015. It was nonstop coming from all different directions.
This literally encompasses 3/4 of my lifetime
Same
@@jasontremane4098 same
2010, the awesome years before everyone and their mothers completely lost their minds.
I miss that ime.
People were crazy then, too, you just didn’t see it posted on social media all the time
@@ehinton4006 No it's not what I mean. Back then, everyone seemed more relaxed and good-humored. Now everyone is like on high valtage and always annoyed because of things that really shouldn't matter that much.
Give it another 10 years, 2020 will be looked upon with with similar nostalgia.
@@bungwohlio No way dude. There were still school shootings, the wars, swine flu, all kinds of hate. It wasn't like you think.
I think it was about 2008 that things started going south. The recession shook everyone's faith in the stability of the system, and the rise of social media amplified those anxieties. By 2015, those anxieties had circulated so much they created opinion echo chambers which naturally polarized themselves in an us vs. them game, and thus we saw the rise of Donald Trump in the US, Brexit and Alt Right nationalism in Europe, and the ultra-nationalist Hanfu movement in China-- all unexpected yet surprisingly consistent in our global society.
Essentially, all of this happened because of corrupt business practices in the US housing market.
Conclusion: Eat the rich.
36:18 Christmas 2012 Tornado Outbreak
Other people: Have hobbies and do things
Me: Watches 10 years worth of weather data
:) making people laugh could also be considered doing something :):)
👍😄
Lol
I'm right here with ya. You aren't alone
I’m only watching because I’m interested in Weather and the rare storms in Oregon (my home state, see pfp)
It's incredible how the great lakes just eat these weather systems up
And I’m moving to that area. Damn!! LOL 😂
Thanks Michigan, very cool
Goes good with some Point Beer
kind of reminds me of an acid trip I took back in the '70s. Crazy colors swirling around, like the wind in my mind. thanks for the flashback, it was a cool trip.
I love how ever summer around July-August you see the monsoon season pop up in the southwest. Every afternoon a million little showers pop up across the whole region
Not this year lol
34:15 Superstorm sandy appears.
Ah man that storm changed my life
That was the best/worst birthday I’ve ever had
Wow sandy was 8 years ago! Time really flies and i’m not even from the east coast
Zing hurricane Dorian hit the Bahamas on my birthday, was a sad day to see islands getting demolished
2 hours of weather spanning ten years has never been so exciting before
6:01 Alex
6:48 Bonnie
7:30 i think Five
8:12 Earl
8:19 Hermine
2010
18:46 I think Bret
Not sure about Don
20:05 Irene
20:21 Lee
2011
29:02 Alberto
29:15 Beryl
30:11 Debby
32:23 Isaac
34:17 Sandy
2012
41:44 Andrea
45:00 to 45:10 Outer bands of Ingrid
45:45 part of Karen
2013
54:45 Arthur
2014
1:05:07 Ana
1:06:25 Bill
1:07:21 Claudette
2015
1:18:01 Bonnie
1:18:18 Colin
1:21:10 Hermine
1:21:36 Julia
1:22:22 Matthew
2016
1:30:56 Cindy
1:32:18 Emily
1:33:08 Harvey
1:33:15 PTC 10
1:33:38 Irma
1:33:57 Jose
1:34:11 Maria
1:34:35 Nate
1:35:17 Phillipe
2017
Finish when I have time.
Nice
0:00 New Year Day 2010
12:11 New Year Day 2011
24:20 New Year Day 2012
36:32 New Year Day 2013
48:42 New Year Day 2014
1:00:53 New Year Day 2015
1:13:04 New Year Day 2016
1:25:15 New Year Day 2017
1:37:26 New Year Day 2018
1:49:37 New Year Day 2019
2:01:46 New Year Day 2020
Wow, so many things happened during that time it's crazy right
That sneaky little bomb cyclone Nebraska had on March 13 2019 looks so innocent on radar. Starts at 1:52:00. The state is still trying to recover from the flooding caused by rain on frozen ground and frozen rivers. All hell broke loose when the ice on the rivers broke up.
GGG Wow so cool and edgy
@@CriminalCamHub How many chromosomes do you have?
South Dakotan here, I live within 30 miles of Mitchell and the James River is flooded so bad that it is still connected to the Firesteel Creek (over 400 hundred feet). There is this Amish community that would need a small boat to reach. The damage is
Ay living in Nebraska right next to the Platte I have to say has never been a scarier time in my life then seeing it rise and having a helicopter save people
@@its-remiiii I hear ya! We're right on the Middle Loup by St Paul, and I'll never feel the same way about our river. Its still eating away at the 281 bridge supports and trying its darndest to get closer to town.
The shapes, motions and patterns are beautiful... Poetry in motion... Mesmerizing....
Gay asf
@@sirsmitty3910
Yes you are... And small minded too...
True, the way the hurricanes look like buzz saws and The storms sweep across the us is actually pretty satisfying in a way...
@@sirsmitty3910 poor dude can't get a woman so he just calls everyone gay cause he's alone I guess XD...
I'm perfectly fine with the fact that I just watched this.
me watching my home state being hit with all kinds of weather:
also me: hey I remember that storm
Samee
1:11 that night snowmageddon hit the east coast and dumped 2 feet of snow on Pittsburgh... best storm of my life
Hurricane Sandy at 34:18 I can still remember the wind and the couple loud ass trees that fell in my yard. It took a while for the Jersey Shore to really recover from that and to some extent we probably never did.
I had my work light on in my house when the power went out and winds were sustained. My ceiling fan on the first floor was swaying back and forth and bobbing up and down. Little did I realize my street was flooding 3 blocks down from us. My wife was also 7 and a half months pregnant. SCARIEST STORM I EVER EXPERIENCED.
16:53 - Joplin, Missouri F5 tornado. One of the worst in history.
Joplin Tornado was May 22nd 2011
@@joshmadaris1721 Sorry, meant to put 16:53. Fixed now.
The Moore tornado is on there two, some people say it could have been an f6.
@@joshmadaris1721 The 2011 Joplin tornado was also the deadliest tornado to hit the State of Missouri since 1896. 158 people were killed in the May 22, 2011 Joplin tornado and 255 people were killed in the May 27, 1896 St. Louis tornado.
@@alexlautzenheiser5024 I currently live in Joplin, and the coroner that tallied the deaths came to 161. Not much of a difference, I know, but just interesting that there's the discrepancy.
nation.time.com/2013/05/21/the-challenging-math-of-a-disasters-death-toll/
1:17:43 hit me right in the feels
Erik Van der Zee Summer 2016?
@@theman3409 lol I forget I think I just wrote a random time because of the absurdity of quoting specific times in a long weather video :DD
Just seeing the severe storms hitting my area over the years is stunning.
I live in the UK, so I have no memories of encountering these storms. But I get such a nostalgic feel when I watch this, even though I have nothing associated with these storms.
Also, correct me if I'm wrong, but 41:32 was the storm that had the biggest tornado ever near El Reno.
1:20:28 I remember just playing my PS4 while all of my neighbors streets and houses flooded.
Good times...
Momma Oof minnesota area or louisiana area?
EvilEmoji louisiana
@@evilemoji420 Yes
Fact: NO ONE SEARCHED FOR THIS!
leroy jenkins False. I did.
A truly original comment.
Fact: no one cares
N L False. You do.
I did..
47:49
This little flash of snowfall in western Oregon gave Eugene it's second coldest temperature ever recorded at -10°F.
1:15:15 live in Monroe la and it rained 30 inches in 12 hours that day. 3 ft of water flooded my car that day. Never been so happy to live in a trailer house. Good times.
I didn't think there was another person out there who does what I do, let alone uploads a video of it. I was blown away at your hard work and dedication to do this. I can appreciate the time and effort that went into this project for others to enjoy. You have a new subscriber and I will be binge watching!
there’s something about viewing severe weather in this format that makes you feel a lot less significant and powerless
yeah like makes your awkwardness seem small, unsignificant
49:27 Yikes, I remember the Snowpocalypse 2014 in the South, good times...no im serious that was fun
Ikr i live in nc and that ice storm wa scrazy i pooped in a bucket
I was on the edge of my seat the entire 2 hours .. riveting
crazy to think that i’ve lived through every single one of these days and seen every weather that hit where i live. just crazy
Dang, you got a long battery life.
Did anyone else get emotional?
Same here.
😐
Why?
@@BabySonicGT Just....looking at the dates...2010s were done of the best and worst years of our lives, we grew, we learned, had fun, etc. And with this hell sometimes you may even remember the weather of the day in question. Especially on the news maybe.
It's a real journey and a look back, missing the old days :(
G.R.S Enterprise Venator Class Starcruiser 2010s was pretty much my entire childhood I’m only 14 years old and yea I do miss years like 2012 and 2013
0:16 a snowy day in tampa, FL!
Nice start to the decade in Tampa lol
Nice start to the decade in Tampa lol
It is not snow. On the top right of clearly states the blue means LIGHT RAI
RAIN
@@Jan-hw3bs maybe if you knew about how it snowed in florida in 2010 then maybe you would know its part rain :)
1:43:01 - Father’s Day Flood, Houghton, MI
So remember it. Down in Wayland, MI
This is the coolest video because it doesn't make you see a point or get you to believe in something, it is already there...to go back in time by weather, what a genius idea. Thank you.
Hurricanes that made landfall in the U.S.
2011 Category 1 Irene- 20:06
2012 Category 1 Issac- 32:21
2012 Category 1 Sandy- 34:25
2014 Category 2 Arthur- 54:50
2016 Category 1 Hermine- 1:21:13
2016 Category 1 Matthew- 1:22:26
2017 Category 4 Harvey- 1:33:09
2017 Category 4 Irma- 1:33:40
2017 Category 1 Nate- 1:34:34
2018 Category 1 Florence- 1:45:58
2018 Category 5 Michael- 1:46:51
2019 Category 1 Barry- 1:56:04
2019 Category 2 Dorian- 1:57:52
Very impressive! Great job with the compilation! Not an easy task. Watching our planet circulate water is amazing. Ain’t it?!
Thanks, WeatherFan2009!
Thanks for this video. Don’t ever take this down.... as a meteorologist by college degree, as well as general weather enthusiast, this may be the best video to ever appreciate. I can remember specific storms in the nation on many of these days.
1:59:21 was when a tornado hit my house and everything changed
Harrison Siegel you live in Oklahoma or Texas?
are you doing okay now? :O
I was in my house during the October 20 Dallas Tornadoes. Scary day. Multiple tornadoes touched down in Dallas and destroyed many houses and businesses. My home was luckily spared by one of the tornadoes as it missed my house by less than a quarter mile. Lots of things here have changed since then.
@@wwejheaton I'm from Dallas
@@minivanmaster Ya I'm alright now thanks
Can we all stop to appreciate how big of an effect the contents of this video have had on all of our lives? Remember that really stormy day where you had to stay in 3 summers ago? It’s in this video.
Notable Hurricanes:
20:00 Irene
34:10 Sandy
1:22:20 Matthew
1:33:05 Harvey
1:33:35 Irma
1:34:30 Nate
1:45:55 Florence
1:46:45 Michael
1:57:40 Dorian
Man.... I live in texas and boy it sure is "breathtaking" how I've lived through a lot of these storms. It's a beautiful thought.
20:17 .. ah look, it's when my house flooded 6 feet, and then another 6 feet 2 additional times after that by 2018
lemme guess Hurricane Irene?
In Alabama?
Where has this been my Whole life...this is AMAZING!!!...
I was watching Kentucky which is where I live. I was watching for the date March 2nd 2012 and that is when a huge mess of tornadoes came through a ripped my state apart at the 26:23 minute mark
30:20 the historic June 29th, 2012 Derecho. Makes it look small and harmless here. But i had no power for 16 days after the storm, and it was very hot. The cleanup took months.
Hello future kids, welcome to the wonders of the recommended page
I’ve saw these multiple times
First time
2:00:35 - I remember when strong winds were in my hometown. A day later, there was a blackout. I was chatting on Discord right when the power turned out.
GimmeAUsername You from michigan too?
discord user?
17:13 Ah yes, the June 1st tornado outbreak.
This is for North States like South dakota Thar was a Severe Blizzards with have Snow on January 4-8,2010 0:07 Blizzards on January 18-20,2010 a light heavy Snow
0:34 January 22-25,2010, bringing overdress heavy snow 0:42
Light chance of snow On January 26,2010 / 0:51
A small blizzard on January 30,2010, February 2,2010 1:00
A Blizzards on February 3-6,2010
1:07 bring over drifts on
February 7-10,2010 1:14
On February 12-16,2010 1:25
February 17-19,2010 1:35 scattered snow showers on February 20-23,2010 1:41
February 27,2010, March 2,2010 1:56
March 4-8,2010 light chance of snow showers sleet rain 2:05
March 7-12,2010, bringing heavy over drift snow 2:11
1:15:16 3 day long storm drops between 25-30 inches of rain in North Louisiana.
1:20:27 3 day storm drops nearly 30 inches of rain in Southeast Louisiana
1:33:06 Hurricane Harvey drops 50+ inches of rain in 4 days in Southeast Texas
59:22 Nov 17-19 2014.
The small lake effect band coming off Lake Erie dumped over 5 feet of snow in areas just south of Buffalo, NY.
1:13:17 one of the first Texas thunderstorms I saw after we moved. can't believe I've been here so long. watching all the weather here and back home is the reason i'm crying in the club tonight 😭
Also what's bewildering me is how in the moment, storms feel like they last forever, but in the grand scheme of things, they're just the breaths of the Earth. It's amazing how much they can impact our lives in such a short span of time.
I can relive my whole twenties in two hours! I was born in 1990.
me- im bored... i guess i will watch youtube vids...
youtube recommended videos- hey you wanna watch ten years of radar
me- damn that sounds interesting
41:30 Largest tornado in recorded history Hits El Reno Oklahoma.
I thought it was a bug on my screen lol
It didn't like most things.
thats the reason why i clicked on the video.
People out here saying
"Oof St Louis got oofed up that day."
And I'm like what I don't remember that
Fascinating to watch! I love to see the "commas" rush across the screen -- thank you!
1:56:12
July 19 2019 Wisconsin drecho
What a night that was
its crazy how you can see that the MS River can really make a storm die down or get even stronger with this video
27:26 - Dallas Tornadoes of 2012
Odd recommendation RUclips. However, I cannot stop watching.
I remember in January and February of 2015, I was in 6th grade and it snowed twice here in Atlanta. I get so nostalgic about snow days...
Love watching the weather try to push its way past the Sierras
This is awesome so far. Good mood music. Thanx for spending the time on it. :)
I can't help but notice, as time progresses, those NEXRAD towers get more and more active. Looking like explosions going off across the country.
Explosions of energy, atmospheric ionization of opposing polarities for warm vs cold seasons, pulling respective air masses into an area. Crazy world we live in.
Weather manipulation /control
Notice how crazy active the towers got in November 2016, and continue to this day.
Heartbreaking to see....
@@kathyashby6019 yes!yes!yes! Thank you for sharing this observation because I have to, ever since that bitch lost a rigged in her favor election they've been off the chain
It was no different in 2011, the segment in this video is cleaned. Here's the unedited version of that year ruclips.net/video/BgEIFVwD2Ss/видео.html