🇬🇧BRIT Reacts To MOMENTS YOU WOULD NOT BELIEVE IF NOT FILMED!

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  • Опубликовано: 29 янв 2025

Комментарии • 125

  • @melissastapleton5384
    @melissastapleton5384 Год назад +78

    When a tornado comes you get to the lowest point possible, so if you’re outside near a ditch, jump in it. Clearly you’re better off in a storm cellar or basement…but if you’re outside that’s your best bet. Coming from an Arkansas lady who has experienced many a tornado.

    • @michaelschemlab
      @michaelschemlab Год назад +18

      And away from all windows

    • @kabirconsiders
      @kabirconsiders  Год назад +14

      Noted, thanks Melissa. As scary as they can look on video I would love to see a smaller one in real life

    • @melissastapleton5384
      @melissastapleton5384 Год назад +10

      @@kabirconsiders they are fascinating to see. If you have a chance to see the damage after, have a look. When my aunts house was hit, a small bottle of lotion was stuck in the wall, perfectly shaped hole, like someone had carved it out just for that. I’ve seen splinters stuck in trees 6 inches deep. I’ve seen the whole bottom of a mobile home stuck in trees, each room outlined by carpet and tile and the hallway. And it’s amazing how one house is destroyed and the next house still has flowers in their flower beds, nothing touched. So random, but the force is amazing.

    • @plasticbutcher
      @plasticbutcher Год назад +4

      During the Joplin tornado my uncle's pickup truck was found a few blocks away from his house, it was literally wrapped around a tree and the emergency flashers were on, the only room left of his house was a closet
      Rick B

    • @melissastapleton5384
      @melissastapleton5384 Год назад +2

      @@plasticbutcher wow! Did everyone make it out ok?

  • @George-ux6zz
    @George-ux6zz Год назад +19

    This year the Buffalo area had 7 feet of snow in one day. People were digging tunnels in the snow to get out of their houses.

  • @benrast1755
    @benrast1755 Год назад +19

    Hiding behind a tree is a bad idea when a tornado is coming. For one thing, those storms often bring lightning too, and it's a bad idea to be close to a tree if lightning hits hit. Second, tornadoes can rip trees out of the ground or blow them over. If it's impossible to get to a sturdy building for shelter, the best thing is to get down into a ditch or other depression to get out of the highest wind/debris blow.

  • @judithgreenwood6247
    @judithgreenwood6247 Год назад +2

    In Buffalo, with high winds what freezes when it hits something is spray and foam, I’ve seen it in Canada, lakeside ice often looks like dirty lace.

  • @Stepperg1
    @Stepperg1 Год назад +5

    Talk about snow, Big Bear, Southern California, received 45 inches of snow in 72 hours. That was just one of the storms. They kept coming, trapping people under an additional six feet of new snow for two weeks. People were trapped, completely trapped. They finally were dug out this past week.
    Lake Arrowhead received a total for all the storms of 110 inches. The weight crushed some cars and collapsed roofs all over the mountain.

  • @maryannanderson2213
    @maryannanderson2213 Год назад +8

    That restaurant covered in ice looked like a scene from the old movie, Dr. Zhivago. There was a house in that movie that very much resembled this restaurant and remarkably, people were continuing to live in it, though it was totally encased in ice. It looked terribly cold but it also was incredibly beautiful! That ice castle and the haunting musical score are two things about Dr. Zhivago that are the most memorable.

    • @kitskivich
      @kitskivich Год назад +1

      I thought the same, @Maryann.

  • @the-superbike-squad
    @the-superbike-squad Год назад +15

    I was outside worling a while back and it suddenly started raiining. Before I could get my tools up it was totally flooding. Then these big drops of rain started being sucked back up. Thought I was losing my mind. Looking up there was a huge funnel cloud right over my head. My cajones shrunk to the size of peanuts. The tornado touched down about half a mile away. Dodged one that day.

    • @bjcee1108
      @bjcee1108 Год назад +1

      As a Washingtonian, who lives on the west side of the state, I can tell you this is not uncommon. 😂 The salmon are spawning. They will cross even roads. My sister-in-law worked for a hatchery, and every year when they would show this on TV, she would say, "There goes our salmon". Lol

  • @yalandafish
    @yalandafish Год назад +2

    I live about 30 minutes from Shelton Washington and what was crossing the road was salmon going up the rivers to lay eggs 🥚. I love the fact that where I live was number 1 on the list 😊❤❤

  • @lhcat68
    @lhcat68 Год назад +1

    Back in the late 80s there was a tornado that went through Raleigh, NC. A place I was working brought in the head of the fire department's paramedics to teach us first aid and CPR, and he told us a story that I had heard rumors of before. One apartment complex had the second-floor entirely ripped off of a few buildings but left the first floor completely intact and undamaged. When the First Responders arrived, they saw a brass four-post bed in the middle of the parking lot like it had been gently placed right in a parking space, and was still made up. Under the covers they could see two lumps, and he was thinking, "Oh f***, I really don't want to see this." He pulled back the covers to look, and a woman's eyes open sleepily and then she reached up and pulled the covers back over her head. Then he could see her nudge the shape next to her and she whispered, "Honey, honey, there's a man in our bedroom!" It turns out that both of them had slept right through the tornado, didn't have a scratch on them, and we're completely unaware that their bed was now in the middle of the parking lot with their apartment debris strewn for a mile around.

  • @hughsonj
    @hughsonj Год назад +1

    10:37 There is sand in the waves from the beach on Lake Erie. That gives the ice its darker color.

  • @isaacdrost15
    @isaacdrost15 Год назад +1

    I was on Lake Erie during that winter storm that hit Buffalo. I was on cargo ship and the winds we had on lake was reading wind gust up to 85 mph. We also had to use 2 bow anchors but that wasn’t enough.

  • @beesnort3163
    @beesnort3163 Год назад +2

    Yes many places near the Great Lakes look like this in winter. That was a bad storm for sure. The lighthouses will get iced over like that.

  • @galelixstar7502
    @galelixstar7502 Год назад +4

    Just yesterday the roof of the Miller Hill Mall in Duluth Minnesota fell in. I spent many hours there as a kid. Lived not to far away. Duluth has had 110 inches of snow and is expecting another 12 inches.

    • @itsahellofaname
      @itsahellofaname Год назад

      I was born and raised in Duluth. Winters were no joke when I was a kid.

  • @NerdyNanaSimulations
    @NerdyNanaSimulations Год назад +1

    That was a sheet metal roof, we have one on our house. They are tough as nails as long as you can keep the wind from getting up under it. We had a massive ice storm here and trees went through the roofs of numerous houses, but while ours had a couple small leaks it never gave in in spite of a whole night of limbs and trees hitting it hard enough to make the house shake. Wind is the only real enemy of a sheet metal roof. Ours has no overlap, nothing hanging to give the wind a chance to get under it.

  • @yugioht42
    @yugioht42 Год назад +8

    Buildings in Japan are built on a unique system called a earthquake prevention system. It basically dulls the impact of earthquakes by changing the movement from up and down to side to side. It’s a sort of floating system that barely makes a building move. High rises and temples use a different approach as a central beam (wood or steel) absorbs everything that an earthquake does leaving the building stable and combined with the sliding system building are not even phased by earthquakes. It’s actually part of building code to have these in place. Liquid ground does happen and often insurance companies will test the ground in advance to be sure if it could happen and not to build on top just in case.

    • @kabirconsiders
      @kabirconsiders  Год назад +3

      Very clever innovation from the Japanese. Must increase the cost of construction, I would imagine

    • @mildredpierce4506
      @mildredpierce4506 Год назад +2

      @@kabirconsiders earthquake prone places like California also have building codes that require that a building needs to be built a certain way to minimize the damage of an earthquake.
      I was on the 12th floor of a building in Los Angeles during an earthquake. It was barely noticeable (you kind of feel queasy). The building was built on rollers so instead of collapsing the building moves with the earthquake this preventing damage. Of course if the earthquake had been severe, no amount of building codes would have prevented the collapse of a high-rise building.
      Even during the 1994 Northridge earthquake, no high-rises collapsed. There were severely damaged buildings and freeways but the high rises remained intact.

    • @HyperWolf
      @HyperWolf Год назад

      @@mildredpierce4506 yeah. I think even large houses and apartment buildings, not just high rises, that are being built now in California sometimes incorporate some of these things as well. It’s expensive but worth it if you can afford it.

  • @theresamariegoesplaces9688
    @theresamariegoesplaces9688 Год назад +4

    Kabir, you need to look into Centralia, Pennsylvania. The town has been burning for over 40 years with no sign of stopping

    • @johnwray393
      @johnwray393 Год назад

      What's burning to keep it going?

    • @loqtusofborg
      @loqtusofborg Год назад +2

      @@johnwray393 "Why is Centralia still burning?
      The town of Centralia happens to sit on top of one of the largest deposits of anthracite coal in America, the Mammoth Vein. Experts have said there is enough coal there to keep the fire burning for 500 years, or even longer.24 Mar 2022"

    • @johnwray393
      @johnwray393 Год назад +1

      @@loqtusofborg With all we know about these type of fires and how chemicals interact, there's surely some solution. No? I'll do some Googling myself but I would be curious to see how large a area is on fire. I assume they've cleared all of the surrounding brush around the entire perimeter? And done who knows what else. Crazy.

    • @katerynaberidukhova2923
      @katerynaberidukhova2923 Год назад

      @@johnwray393 ​ The problem is, there's not just coal underground, but also coal gas. The mines are so old and branched out that it's practically impossible to clear them all; there have been attempts, but some other spot inevitably begins smouldering, and the ground caves in constantly. Scary stuff - and all of it because someone decided to illegally burn trash inside a mine!

  • @perfumedelight66
    @perfumedelight66 Год назад +8

    The earthquake with water seeping up was kind of freaky.

  • @amandapawlowski7739
    @amandapawlowski7739 Год назад +1

    I live in buffalo ny and the storm was so bad at one point emergency crews were told not to go out. A firetruck got stuck on. A road and the firefighters had to walk miles it was so bad. There were also people who froze to death in their cars. The national guard was called in to evacuate people and their were still deaths.

  • @SparkimusPrime
    @SparkimusPrime Год назад +1

    I went through that Kansas Tornado. It started right at the edge of my town before it made its way to Bonner Springs and beyond. It was so rain wrapped that you couldn’t even see the actual tornado. It was so destructive. You should check out the drone footage of the aftermath. It was crafty.

  • @TwinMama-jv3zb
    @TwinMama-jv3zb Год назад +2

    You should watch the videos that show how they design buildings to withstand earthquakes. It's amazing.

  • @astolphe1
    @astolphe1 Год назад +5

    I live in Edwardsville, KS, literally right next to Bonner Springs. Yes, it is freakish how quickly the weather gets bad and how fast tornados form. I've seen it. It's scary as hell.
    ETA: I remember this storm.

    • @newgrl
      @newgrl Год назад +2

      With the tornados spawning out of the leading edge of the front, it almost always goes from either sunny or lightly cloudy to "F**k me" in like 3 minutes. The sky turns that ugly indescribable color, the air pressure drops, your ears pop, and suddenly every instinct in your body yells "Run" at you.

  • @annajosullivan
    @annajosullivan Год назад +1

    If you’re running in the park and then a tornado starts, you try and find a ditch and then lie down face down with your hands over your head. I live in Texas and in school we had all sorts of different types tornado drills. Even while out driving during driver’s ed.

  • @ramonalfaro3252
    @ramonalfaro3252 Год назад

    I'm pretty damn impressed by that GoPro! The fact that the video was recaptured says it all!

  • @Lisa-dn2gx
    @Lisa-dn2gx Год назад +1

    Several people froze to death in their cars & homes in that storm & not only in Buffalo. It's a salmon run, do you not have salmon running up streams there?? I've seen salmon runs so thick that you could walk across, THOUSANDS, it's truly a sight to see!!

  • @annajosullivan
    @annajosullivan Год назад +1

    The castle of ice was colored like that because of the sand on the beach.

  • @paulbattson834
    @paulbattson834 Год назад

    Hoaks restaurant south of Buffalo is right on the Lake Erie shore. This is a frequent occurrence in the winter. I live 15 miles noth in Niagara Falls. Last Christmas the Buffalo airport received 100 inches of snow. We had 13 inches. Their storm is not normal.

  • @martha3445
    @martha3445 Год назад +1

    I'm guessing that the ice on the building in Buffalo is beige because of sand that got churned up and mixed with the water.

  • @a00141799
    @a00141799 Год назад +3

    I certainly can relate to is video Kabir. The city of Shelton Washington is pretty rural but they a KFC so I stop there when traveling out to the ocean. lol... There are hundreds of rivers and large streams where the salmon run from the ocean the rivers to spawn. I've seen thousands of dead salmon in the Green and Cedar Rivers after the spawn. Pretty insane to see a river full of dead fish. ♣

  • @webbtrekker534
    @webbtrekker534 Год назад +1

    The last one taken in Shelton, Washington is about an hour south of where I live. You see news shows that have events like this several times year on average.

  • @xenotbbbeats7209
    @xenotbbbeats7209 Год назад +4

    You ought to react to a national news story that is legendary near where I live in Western Washington. There's a video about the Tacoma BBQ shootout between the notorious Crips gang and a group of military Rangers. I've seen a couple of reaction videos and one where some douchebag basically ripped it and obviously knew nothing about the story or this area. A member of my one of my Grunge bands was the little brother of one of those Rangers. It was so insane, like an old western legend, the story quickly garnered national attention. What they don't tell you is that not long before the shootout, a bunch of Crips were hassling a group of Rangers at the Tacoma Mall thinking they were Skinheads because of their mohawk like haircuts. Nobody was armed that day and a Crip took a swing, but the Rangers beat the crap out of the Crips who had no idea they were trained military special forces. But the BBQ incident made that story seem like child's play. Very fun to watch!!

  • @bjcee1108
    @bjcee1108 Год назад +5

    From one who lives near volcanoes, and watched St. Helens blow from our house. . . I wouldn't recommend it. 😮😂

    • @webbtrekker534
      @webbtrekker534 Год назад

      I was walking on a dock at Shilshole Marina in Seattle when St Helens went off. I thought it was noise coming from the railroad humping yard on the other side of the Ship Canal Locks about a mile away.

  • @ginao8935
    @ginao8935 Год назад +2

    Congratulations on 75K Kabir!!!

  • @haileybabcock4492
    @haileybabcock4492 Год назад

    When the sky has this green/yellow tinge to it you know it’s gonna be a bad storm

  • @lhcat68
    @lhcat68 Год назад

    That's happened to Hoak's Restaurant on more than one occasion during a big winter storm. They've learned just don't touch the ice and everything will thaw out and be just fine. There's been more than one occasion where a car in their parking lot meets the same fate. This stretch of road is notorious for this happening to homes and vehicles, and during this particular storm they actually issued an evacuation order to the residents nearby because they expected that this would happen.

  • @Laura-mi3nv
    @Laura-mi3nv Год назад +1

    I believe that restaurant in Buffalo experiences that same issue every year. They are right on the lake and its such a cold place every winter. I think most places near the Great Lakes experience this lake effect snow (an ice in this case). They are probably a seasonal business, so it didn't cost them much in revenue.

  • @namparaohara9060
    @namparaohara9060 Год назад +1

    Foam is frozen. That's why it looks that color.

  • @Cashcrop54
    @Cashcrop54 3 дня назад

    Thankfully one of the "Oleg's" was an insurance agent. 😊

  • @elenapatrick8116
    @elenapatrick8116 Год назад +1

    I’ve never been in a hot air ballon. This may seem stupid but Every time I’ve seen one people are just standing around in it. I don’t see them doing anything. How do you steer it? How do you control where it’s going? How do you land it? I don’t see at least in the ones I’ve seen on TV any controls or anything.

  • @1buggiej
    @1buggiej Год назад

    I live about 30 minutes away from Shelton, Wa. It really does happen on a regular basis. Lol.

  • @SKEC212
    @SKEC212 Год назад

    Did you know that the crack sound from lightning comes from the electricity breaking the sound barrier. Same thing happens when you crack a whip or a pop a towel like a whip.

  • @hollykinslow5193
    @hollykinslow5193 Год назад +1

    I lived in Arkansas for 5 years. The rice crops there, in water, gained MORE water as they moved through the plains. One gets in the lowest position possible. If you are in your car, you can get into an overpass, but the best scenario is a ditch. Get out of the car, lower your head and body into the lowest place. A ditch or low lying area is best.

  • @oliviaellis7834
    @oliviaellis7834 Год назад

    The ice castle was less than 10 minutes from my house, some of the craziest shit I have ever seen! ❄️

  • @xenotbbbeats7209
    @xenotbbbeats7209 Год назад +1

    Ha. That was crazy to see a local video because we, in Western Washington, have some of the mildest weather in the U.S., but yeah, I forgot about our salmon. You may think they should jump out of the car and grab some of that tastes fish; however, by the time they are spawning, the fish are dying, so the meat isn't good. It's really fun to watch them jump upstream when they need to climb up a small waterfall or step in a stream or river. Bears go nuts! Can you imagine your dinner jumping towards you?

  • @sallyintucson
    @sallyintucson Год назад

    That restaurant that was turned into a ice castle happen in Buffalo New York on X-Mas 2022. There’s plenty to pick from if you want to see more about it.

  • @GenXfrom75
    @GenXfrom75 Год назад

    When my husband graduated from Basic and AIT (US Army) at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, it was January 2006. My sister in law and I rented a car in South Carolina and drove out. On the morning we started back home, there was a little snow and ice at our hotel in OK but as we drove east, it got heavier and worse visibility. When we got to Atlanta, the interstate was at a dead stop from multiple accidents. As we got moving again, we had to stop every few miles to scrape ice off the wiper blades until it slacked off at the state line. When we finally arrived back in Charleston, people were staring hard at us. Had no idea why until we got to my mom's house and tried to get out. The doors wouldn't open! We had to kick pretty hard and heard a crunch. They'd been iced shut! And the car was *covered in ice that froze into a scale like pattern!* We were driving an ice dinosaur 😂😅

  • @MagiaErebea028
    @MagiaErebea028 Год назад +1

    When I was a baby during hurricane Andrew my mom was watching over me in my crib and the wind ripped the roof off my moms trailer she was living in she said it peeled off just like that

  • @georgegonzalez2476
    @georgegonzalez2476 Год назад

    Ground liquefaction is not when water comes out of the ground.
    Rivers run from inland to the sea, not the other way around.

  • @Allsizes
    @Allsizes Год назад

    Concrete doesnt fully dry. Thats the first i thought of in the 1st vid in japan

  • @mildredpierce4506
    @mildredpierce4506 Год назад +2

    Oh so let’s build a park on top of Tokyo Bay. What could go wrong?

  • @robertschwartz4810
    @robertschwartz4810 Год назад

    I was walking my dog during a light rain when a bolt of lightning hit the middle of the street. It was like a bomb went off. None of the parked cars, nor any of the apartment buildings were hit.

  • @RuanAntunes7
    @RuanAntunes7 Год назад

    Nice to see your channel growing. 100k soon 👍

  • @americansmark
    @americansmark Год назад

    Buffalo was pretty rough. We got some of it down in Southern Ohio that week.
    You should watch HeavyDSparks video of them rescuing the California residents from the massive snowstorm that just happened out there.

  • @frankisfunny2007
    @frankisfunny2007 Год назад

    Anywhere near the Great Lakes region of North America, you'll see these ice palaces in the winter. I'll promise you of that!

  • @newgrl
    @newgrl Год назад

    "Imagine you're just on a jog, like just running in the park and this happens. What do you do?" - Well... not get behind a tree that's about to be ripped out by its roots and go for a ride. What you really do is find the lowest ditch around you and climb in, even if it's full of water. If there's anything at all around you that you can cover yourself with, do so. This is the safest practice if you're caught unaware and unable to get away from a tornado. It's not the wind that's dangerous, it's the stuff blowing in the wind that is. A ditch offers you some protection on your sides from the crap blowing around that will kill you and gets you as far away as possible from the sucking vortex coming at you. Good luck! You're going to need it.
    -signed
    Kansas (about 100 miles away from Bonner Springs)

  • @leahlouise5806
    @leahlouise5806 Год назад +1

    Hahahahaha! Kabir, you're reactions were so funny to watch in this one! Love your channel :)

  • @loveit7484
    @loveit7484 Год назад

    Wow!

  • @jackiebinns6205
    @jackiebinns6205 Год назад +1

    Thats the GROUND NOT THE FLOOR lol

  • @ramonalfaro3252
    @ramonalfaro3252 Год назад

    14:16 One of the Olegs 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @peterlynch7445
    @peterlynch7445 Год назад

    Check out the ice storm of 78 in Quebec.

  • @SparkimusPrime
    @SparkimusPrime Год назад +2

    Liquefaction is insane and scary af. That’s part of the reason of the level of destruction in Turkey. Obviously along with many other factors.

    • @kabirconsiders
      @kabirconsiders  Год назад +2

      It looked so strange in this video, would look even stranger in real life

    • @SparkimusPrime
      @SparkimusPrime Год назад

      @@kabirconsiders I wish I could remember what video it was, I think it was one of the Disaster Compilation channel videos, but it shows an incredible stable view of the Turkey earthquake and you can literally see the wave under the earth from left to right. It was one of the most insane earthquake videos I’ve ever seen when it comes to the physical movement. I’ll see if I can find it.

  • @theclarksvillepiper9202
    @theclarksvillepiper9202 Год назад

    The last one is actually pretty common

  • @btnhstillfire
    @btnhstillfire Год назад

    To correct the narrator, Eastern Kansas is not outside tornado alley. Tornado alley has shifted east over the years. It now includes, missouri, Illinois, arkansas, kentucky and tennessee.

    • @btnhstillfire
      @btnhstillfire Год назад

      As well as oklahoma, nebraska, texas and kansas.

  • @katherineschmidt2075
    @katherineschmidt2075 Год назад

    My god, the cracks in the Japanese park. I'd be running the hell away from there. I wouldn't set foot in that area again.

  • @appo9357
    @appo9357 Год назад

    2:47 That’s how we are in the South when tornado sirens go off. 😎

  • @ESUSAMEX
    @ESUSAMEX Год назад

    Nothing is going to hold a roof on a home or building once a strong wind gets under the underneath the roof or loosens the joists. Continuous wind reaps havoc on roves.

  • @joechain1968
    @joechain1968 Год назад

    I'm from Buffalo NY you bunker down, and wait for the thaw.

  • @barbarae-b507
    @barbarae-b507 Год назад

    The ice is not uncommon. If you go to Niagara Falls in the winter you will see that ice everywhere. I have taken visitors to Niagara Falls in the winter. It looks like a very cool fairyland.

  • @petermoua4583
    @petermoua4583 Год назад

    @Kabir i wanna see you react to some of Matt Stonie destroy food, he’s one of the best food comp eater in the world, he holds many records.

  • @yugioht42
    @yugioht42 Год назад

    Unusually the ice palace has happened before in Chicago but for totally different reason. A building caught fire and well it was bitterly cold that day. The firefighters sprayed water as per standard but when it hit the building the water froze without putting out the fire so the water kept coming until the building froze completely yet the fire still burned inside. The firefighters were completely at a loss at what to do as they were forced to wait it out and basically fire won burning the building to ground yet the ice shell was still intact and yeah it stood for a week before it finally melted. this was in the 1900s I think before modern tech so they were seriously stuck.

  • @jokerz7936
    @jokerz7936 Год назад

    I'm the guy who would yell "Screw This" and jumps on the roof.

  • @justchillin6793
    @justchillin6793 Год назад

    The lightning hit a transformer to get that many sparks

  • @hardtackbeans9790
    @hardtackbeans9790 Год назад

    You don't have to live in Buffalo to experience an ice storm. Even a few millimeters of ice will ruin your whole day. You may not be able to get into your car. A little bit more that that & you maybe stuck out of the house. I'm sure you are mistaken, Kabir. Oleg would never build a shoddy roof. They just used Cyrillic fasteners. LOL!! They work completely differently.

  • @ashleyd6393
    @ashleyd6393 Год назад

    Can you please react to the movie "four brothers" it's one of my favorite movies, Mark whalberg and Tyrese are in it. You'll love it!❤

  • @proudlycanadian3641
    @proudlycanadian3641 Год назад

    You should react to the 1998 Montreal ice storm

  • @marizensoul8410
    @marizensoul8410 Год назад

    if you really think its a good idea to hide behind a tree during any kind of storm in America, I suggest you look up every kind of storm and figure out what to do or your not making it back to the main land 😁😂🙄

  • @limitededition3278
    @limitededition3278 Год назад

    Trees do not offer protection during a Tornado

  • @chetstevensq
    @chetstevensq Год назад +1

    Queen's English: they're going to do something over there by their shed.

  • @edithdavis2848
    @edithdavis2848 Год назад

    Yes those were fish.

  • @lianabaddley8217
    @lianabaddley8217 Год назад

    For tornadoes haven't you seen Twister?

  • @tinagarcia3571
    @tinagarcia3571 Год назад +1

    California and Nevada got hundreds of inches of snow this past month, covering homes and business . Rescues have been on going. Fish go across the road here in Oregon too.

  • @nq6508
    @nq6508 Год назад

    Most if those poor people crushed by the boat are Bajau and filipino migrants.

  • @bobbykaralfa
    @bobbykaralfa Год назад

    that buffalo "storm" wasnt a buffalo thing alot of the north east got that same thing. the lightning storm thats what it looks like if a transformer gets hit

  • @SuperDrLisa
    @SuperDrLisa Год назад

    Now I want salmon.....

  • @beachem1
    @beachem1 Год назад

    They’re always their own worst cameramen when they’re there.

  • @jimmybobsap8729
    @jimmybobsap8729 Год назад

    @2:41 fuck recording id be moving away lol a sink hole could come anywhere there

  • @btnhstillfire
    @btnhstillfire Год назад

    Ppl died in their cars in Buffalo.

  • @peterlynch7445
    @peterlynch7445 Год назад

    1998 woops

  • @dshaw139
    @dshaw139 Год назад +1

    Try the last of us TV show

  • @donaldkersey9416
    @donaldkersey9416 Год назад

    Water mains breaking sprinkler lines also could be a problem in a park.