She is so sweet. Caring about people in places that she will most likely never be and people she will never know. The world is a better place for having her in it.
I'm sorry to hear about the flooding. I hope everyone is alright and that their families are safe. It is always wonderful to see Miss Sobia she has the best reactions. She understands that it's not just how bad the tornados are, but the people who are devastated from them, she has such a heart of gold.
Tornadoes are devastating, but a microburst does similar damage over a larger area. They are much harder to visualize because of the way they happen, but if you haven't seen the drone footage of Wichita falls tx after the microburst it is sight to behold. We lost my favorite little Caesars pizza, back of the box disc golf store, and one of the Pueblo boxing locations and a few spaces for rent all in the same plaza. Apartments down the road lost a side of the building and a large chunk of the roof, and that's just getting started.
I experienced a microburst 3 times in a row. I was working at a summer fair when around 3-4 pm, a microburst happens. And this happened at the same time of say for 3 days straight!
There was plenty left. What there was nothing left of, was Doublecreek Estates. It just slowed down over the neighborhood and ground up the homes. I won’t even speak of what it did to the people except to say that whole families died together while taking appropriate shelter. Horrible stuff. Imagine my delight when I moved to Texas and realized that Jarrell is only two hours away…
It's showing some that technically would be terned something else, the really small ones that dont reach size or wind speed we call Dust Devils . Over water are usually call Water Spouts. Tornados fange fome EF0 to EF5 being the worst. A 4-5 took out a large piece of Greenfield Iowa last spring. There are people called storm chasers that go out looking for and tracking storms to get footage of them
Holy moly, I've just been watching tornado videos and this comes up in my feed, my favorite reactors! I live in Nevada, though, which is western USA, and we don't get tornados here, thank goodness. We get little dust devils that are not the same thing (Nevada is desert). I don't know how people in Tornado Alley do it!!!
Hey there! I'm up in far NE Clark County by the lake. The wind's blowing a steady 20 mph, but there's also 30 mph gusts. Nice sunny day to stay indoors.
They fear earthquakes. Lol. I'm in California and we get earthquakes (major ones) about once every 10 years if that. Tornadoes every season and lots of them too.
@Only-me-baby-tf9km We get little tremors now and then. I think overall Nevada is pretty mild for natural disasters. I feel bad for everything California has been through the last few years with fires, flooding, landslides, etc ... yeah, no earthquakes lately, though (knock on wood).
Live in Michigan, got close to a few tornadoes but never personally had any damage from them. Was quite scared last year as my husband and I had to spent several hours in our basement as tornado warning after warning kept popping up. One went a mile north of us and a mile south. I have seen a waterspout before on the Gulf of Mexico and it was a beautiful 5 miles out to sea. They are beautiful but not to be underestimated.
Usually,you will see the sky turn a yellowish green, hail storm before the tornado. I was living in Tacoma , Washington when St. Helen erupted. The smoke ash was seen for hundreds of miles.
Yup. We Americans may have advantages geographically, but are very disadvantaged for extreme weather and geographical conditions depending on where you live.
Many people have storm basements to hide in. Hot wet air from southern waters mixes with very cold dry air from the arctic and we get lots of violent weather in the middle. Other continents have mountains that stretch from east to west which block such extreme air mixing.
Not sure where you are but I know no one with any shelter such as storm basement like you mentioned. We had a young man in a red truck out in the tornado, got flipped a couple or three times and he landed back up and drove off. That was in Elgin, TX in March 2022. The video is out there.
@sylviafarese8837 They're most common on farms, root cellars mostly, out in the countryside where most tornadoes hit. Cities, and, like, trailer parks, are different, but there are municipal shelters in most cities, if you have time. I grew up in Houston, which is too close to the coast to have many basements. But most houses have a large closet, bathroom, or interior room without exterior walls to seek shelter. They recommend pulling a mattress over yourself in a bathtub, if nothing else. A couple of houses at the end of the street got wiped out once, but that's as close as I got. My grandma and my aunt had farms in Oklahoma, though, with storm cellars that they used most years.
I've looked for a tornado my whole life, not too many where I live since I'm on the edge of Tornado Alley, but one hit my house in 2017. I looked out the window after I heard some rattling and saw yellow, and water. A few windows blew out and a tree fell onto a few cars in the driveway. Mine was spared.
I did see a tornado as a kid, but it was behind a tree line and must have been moving away from us or at least past us. Our house was untouched. We were very fortunate. Also, she is a very kind woman, so I would like to mention that after these disasters you usually find many communities coming together to help those who were struck to recover the best they can, and rebuild stronger homes and businesses that can resist future storms. Not every community recovers this way, but many times a disaster brings out the kindness in people. And I am just as saddened to hear of tornadoes in Bangladesh, which does get them. They’ve had some very bad ones from time to time and the death toll and damages are cruelly high, far more devastating than most of ours.
Well, I worked the 2013 Tornado in Moore Oklahoma at the Plaza Towers where the kids lost their life. Also was in the El Reno the same month. I'm a CERT Instructor because of what I saw. Ham Operator for Emergency Communication.
Ive been in one before 2004 lexington kentuck (i was just working there that summer im from owensboro. The house shook. The houses directly across the street were demolished. The house where i was staying was ok. No one died from the tornado. But 1 woman on oxygen died due to the power outage i believe? Owensboro kentucky has had some tornadoes but never the part of town i lived. I wouldn't be able to live in oklahoma or some other state in the tornado valley. It woupd suck to have tornadoes more frequently
Large tornados are NASTY MONSTERS that can level huge areas. The tiny ones they show first are "dust sprites" and they aren't as strong. Cars found in trees; homes and businesses EXPLODE. Livestock have been known to be caught up in the wind and thrown. They arre every single year in some areas. I'm too afraid to live there.
4:24 That one is fake, it's from a movie. I think the movie is called "2012" In real life, no pilot would fly that close to a tornado, they are trained better than that.
Operator, please make your captions smaller. They take up half of the screen..It also would be better if they commented after they watched it and gaver their opinion..I like watching them react but sometimes it's annoying with all of the talking because I think that they feel they need to talk. They don't have to fill the video with constant chatter....
She is so sweet. Caring about people in places that she will most likely never be and people she will never know. The world is a better place for having her in it.
I'm sorry to hear about the flooding. I hope everyone is alright and that their families are safe. It is always wonderful to see Miss Sobia she has the best reactions. She understands that it's not just how bad the tornados are, but the people who are devastated from them, she has such a heart of gold.
Tornadoes are devastating, but a microburst does similar damage over a larger area. They are much harder to visualize because of the way they happen, but if you haven't seen the drone footage of Wichita falls tx after the microburst it is sight to behold. We lost my favorite little Caesars pizza, back of the box disc golf store, and one of the Pueblo boxing locations and a few spaces for rent all in the same plaza. Apartments down the road lost a side of the building and a large chunk of the roof, and that's just getting started.
I experienced a microburst 3 times in a row. I was working at a summer fair when around 3-4 pm, a microburst happens. And this happened at the same time of say for 3 days straight!
The tornado that hit Jarrell, Texas some years ago had the wind speed of 318 miles per hour. There was nothing left to the town where it hit!
I remember that day very well.
Me too. That tornado was over a mile wide, took brick houses off there cement foundations.
There was plenty left. What there was nothing left of, was Doublecreek Estates. It just slowed down over the neighborhood and ground up the homes. I won’t even speak of what it did to the people except to say that whole families died together while taking appropriate shelter. Horrible stuff. Imagine my delight when I moved to Texas and realized that Jarrell is only two hours away…
I don't even know this woman, but I love her 💔❤.
Me too
Me three.
Same. What a beautiful heart.
Well, you know what you should be a Christian because Jesus say love everybody even your enemy
Thank you Sobia, and Naveed,, and bless you, for your compassionate hearts. 💜💔💙💔
It's showing some that technically would be terned something else, the really small ones that dont reach size or wind speed we call Dust Devils . Over water are usually call Water Spouts. Tornados fange fome EF0 to EF5 being the worst. A 4-5 took out a large piece of Greenfield Iowa last spring. There are people called storm chasers that go out looking for and tracking storms to get footage of them
We can't all be twisters...
Thank you...I'm in Pennsylvania USA...
Want to send hugs and much love to you all..
May God Bless you
Holy moly, I've just been watching tornado videos and this comes up in my feed, my favorite reactors! I live in Nevada, though, which is western USA, and we don't get tornados here, thank goodness. We get little dust devils that are not the same thing (Nevada is desert). I don't know how people in Tornado Alley do it!!!
Hey there! I'm up in far NE Clark County by the lake. The wind's blowing a steady 20 mph, but there's also 30 mph gusts. Nice sunny day to stay indoors.
@@user-dc6ut5uu3t Hi back! (waving from up north in Reno, in Washoe County) Cold and sunny here today. No tornados, lol
They fear earthquakes. Lol. I'm in California and we get earthquakes (major ones) about once every 10 years if that.
Tornadoes every season and lots of them too.
@Only-me-baby-tf9km We get little tremors now and then. I think overall Nevada is pretty mild for natural disasters. I feel bad for everything California has been through the last few years with fires, flooding, landslides, etc ... yeah, no earthquakes lately, though (knock on wood).
@gojiberry7201 yes but after fires come mudslides (because of rain) then there's earthquakes.
Live in Michigan, got close to a few tornadoes but never personally had any damage from them. Was quite scared last year as my husband and I had to spent several hours in our basement as tornado warning after warning kept popping up. One went a mile north of us and a mile south. I have seen a waterspout before on the Gulf of Mexico and it was a beautiful 5 miles out to sea. They are beautiful but not to be underestimated.
Sending love. I love seeing them watch science videos like this..
Some of those were dust devils. Wtf !!!
Yeah, they’re kinda neat but not the scariest things really.
There's plenty of real tornado footage out there far worse and scarier than what was shown. Using CGI film clips from movies was unnecessary.
If a cow get trapped in the tornado, its torn appart, nothing left but the skin and bones sometimes...can you imagine if a person gets trapped in one!
She is so sweet and kind
Usually,you will see the sky turn a yellowish green, hail storm before the tornado. I was living in Tacoma , Washington when St. Helen erupted. The smoke ash was seen for hundreds of miles.
We have extreme cold weather, hot weather, fire storms, tornadoes, hurricane's, snow, freezing rain, blizzards, .......on and on..... fun huh??!!😬
Yup. We Americans may have advantages geographically, but are very disadvantaged for extreme weather and geographical conditions depending on where you live.
@seraphi3387 😂and volcanoes!!!
A few of these are from a movie (the helicopter) or AI (the dirt swirling next to those people)…
Not pictured in this video, there's at least one case where a plane flew into one: NLM CityHopper Flight 431. No one survived.
That looked like a dust devil. No clouds in the sky. Real, but mild.
There are people who chase tornadoes for a living
Many people have storm basements to hide in. Hot wet air from southern waters mixes with very cold dry air from the arctic and we get lots of violent weather in the middle. Other continents have mountains that stretch from east to west which block such extreme air mixing.
Not sure where you are but I know no one with any shelter such as storm basement like you mentioned.
We had a young man in a red truck out in the tornado, got flipped a couple or three times and he landed back up and drove off. That was in Elgin, TX in March 2022. The video is out there.
@sylviafarese8837 They're most common on farms, root cellars mostly, out in the countryside where most tornadoes hit. Cities, and, like, trailer parks, are different, but there are municipal shelters in most cities, if you have time. I grew up in Houston, which is too close to the coast to have many basements. But most houses have a large closet, bathroom, or interior room without exterior walls to seek shelter. They recommend pulling a mattress over yourself in a bathtub, if nothing else. A couple of houses at the end of the street got wiped out once, but that's as close as I got. My grandma and my aunt had farms in Oklahoma, though, with storm cellars that they used most years.
I've looked for a tornado my whole life, not too many where I live since I'm on the edge of Tornado Alley, but one hit my house in 2017. I looked out the window after I heard some rattling and saw yellow, and water. A few windows blew out and a tree fell onto a few cars in the driveway. Mine was spared.
I did see a tornado as a kid, but it was behind a tree line and must have been moving away from us or at least past us. Our house was untouched. We were very fortunate.
Also, she is a very kind woman, so I would like to mention that after these disasters you usually find many communities coming together to help those who were struck to recover the best they can, and rebuild stronger homes and businesses that can resist future storms. Not every community recovers this way, but many times a disaster brings out the kindness in people.
And I am just as saddened to hear of tornadoes in Bangladesh, which does get them. They’ve had some very bad ones from time to time and the death toll and damages are cruelly high, far more devastating than most of ours.
Well, I worked the 2013 Tornado in Moore Oklahoma at the Plaza Towers where the kids lost their life. Also was in the El Reno the same month. I'm a CERT Instructor because of what I saw. Ham Operator for Emergency Communication.
Ive been in one before 2004 lexington kentuck (i was just working there that summer im from owensboro. The house shook. The houses directly across the street were demolished. The house where i was staying was ok. No one died from the tornado. But 1 woman on oxygen died due to the power outage i believe?
Owensboro kentucky has had some tornadoes but never the part of town i lived.
I wouldn't be able to live in oklahoma or some other state in the tornado valley. It woupd suck to have tornadoes more frequently
They should watch the movie Wizard of Oz!
The tornado effects hold up surprisingly well.
A tornado went through my backyard last year. It destroyed my dog kennels and left debris from other peoples property in my yard.
Large tornados are NASTY MONSTERS that can level huge areas. The tiny ones they show first are "dust sprites" and they aren't as strong. Cars found in trees; homes and businesses EXPLODE. Livestock have been known to be caught up in the wind and thrown. They arre every single year in some areas. I'm too afraid to live there.
i live at the edge of Tornado alley I'll tell ya hearing those sirens go off will make you move fast
Watch the movie, Twister. Gives you an up close look at people who chase after these storms.
I grew up in the state of Indiana and experienced many times in our basement and my mo. Hadto drive us through one.
I've been in one tornado and it was one too many.
Miss Sobia is so sweet and caring.❤
Check out the tornandos that just occurred in California wildfires. Looks like Hell on earth
There are bad people everywhere. And good as well. Pakistani people are very good and caring.
Some of these are Dust Devils, not Tornadoes.
Have them watch JOPLIN TORNADO.
Are you going to show them the wildfires in California? And the damage from the hurricanes in North Carolina?
4:24 That one is fake, it's from a movie. I think the movie is called "2012" In real life, no pilot would fly that close to a tornado, they are trained better than that.
Not all of these are tornadoes some of them are dust devils
United States has disaster relief if the storm is declared a disaster,.
But only for some states
You didn’t even show them the worst ones
Why would you confuse them with dust devil videos? You make them afraid of something that does no damage and is not a tornado. Explain that to them…
That helicopter one was fake.
Operator, please make your captions smaller. They take up half of the screen..It also would be better if they commented after they watched it and gaver their opinion..I like watching them react but sometimes it's annoying with all of the talking because I think that they feel they need to talk. They don't have to fill the video with constant chatter....
Not a good tornado video at all