A Swede reacts to: OH MY GOD! To close footage of Tornadoes!
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- Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
- So scary, so intense...
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Heya Recky! If you're interested in this sort of thing, Daniel Shaw (an Australian stormchaser) has a video of the El Reno tornado, infamous as both the largest tornado on record, and for the loss of the Twistex crew. Daniel was probably the chaser who got closest to the tornado & survived, being roughly 1/4 mile from the core of a mile wide superwedge. It's possibly the most intense piece of footage of a tornado I've ever seen. It's over an hour long, so maybe not reaction material, but it's definitely worth a view.
Link - ruclips.net/video/S7Slw16PThM/видео.htmlsi=CcprLQq27MGEnKp1
I live in Tornado Alley in the American Midwest. The threat of tornadoes are a way of life for us, but even so it never becomes normal and is still scary. The hair on the back of my neck still goes up everytime the eerie wails of the tornado sirens go off and its not testing day.
When that Tornado hit Joplin, MO back in 2011 and people got sucked OUT of underground tornado shelters when the doors were ripped off, or out of their cars through the sunroof or crushed in their basements when their houses caved in, and steel beams were wrapped around cars like pretzels, and tornado debris fell from the sky over 20 miles away, it remains a sobering reminder.
There is NO safe place in a Tornado. The safest place from a Tornado is at least 50 miles away.
Even testing day scares the hell out of me. Every first tuesday at 6pm, my heart stops and my stomach drops. And then I remember is the first tuesday at 6pm, and feel a bit foolish. Tornadoes are just really scary.
Decades ago an old neighbor moved to Oklahoma. The house he purchased has a good sized poured concrete storm shelter in the back yard. The door you'd open to get in lifted upwards and was lightweight. The idea for that was if getting to the shelter late it was easier to open in windy conditions than a thick strong heavy door. Inside there was a steel plate door that was strong and heavy. It has a counterweight system to make it easy to close from the inside. With it closing upwards the more suction it was under the tighter it sealed. Plus if there was any debris on the door after a storm he wouldn't have to try to lift a strong heavy door with whatever might be on top of it and possibly end up trapped in the shelter for some given period of time. Opening the door downward was something that could be done not standing right under it so if smaller debris fell in no one was likely to be hurt, but if enough fell in or if enough covered the door after opening it he could still end up trapped. It removed the getting sucked out risk and lessened the being trapped risk. He used it a number of times but never took a direct hit or close enough hit that he really needed it .... though using it was always the intelligent thing too do.
Congratulations on Sweden being approved for full NATO membership.
Great video Reckey! On December 10 2021 a tornado hit my house. My daughter and I were in the house . Picked us and the house up and deposited it the next street over. She was in the hospital for 3 weeks. I was in a chemically induced coma for 40 days so my injuries could heal. Tornadoes are no joke. 👍👍
Ah... the Quad-State Tornado? Or another tornado from that outbreak? Either way, its probably the closest we've come to another Super Outbreak. I hope everyone in your family is okay now.
Glad you're both still here today ♥
That was the scariest night of my life, hands down. I watch that storm make a straight line towards my house for hours.
Recky the 3rd video was Clarence Schultz and he said that he believed the tornado was going a different direction but in reality it was heading straight towards him then when he realized it it was to late. Also, check out the the video "Inside of a tornado TIV2 intercept" - they have special vehicle's TIV1 and TIV2 to withstand winds of tornadoes which are completely amazing to see.
Had an EF 2 hit less then 500 meters from my house. Naders are unreal. I'll never forget the sound of it.
That's one bummer about all the greatest of tornado videos, they never do the sound justice. Never captures the rumble under your feet. And the pressure change that comes with the roar. Just have to be there for it.
I will explain the MAJOR problem with the EF scale as compared to the earlier F scale for tornadoes. The F scale was based on tornado wind speed. The EF scale is based ONLY on the damage done by the tornado. Therefore, you could have a tornado with 1,000 mph winds that hit a dry lake bed and causes no damage and would be rated an EF- 0. Or you could have a tornado with 75 mph winds that hits an expensive but lightly constructed neighborhood, destroys all the weak houses and be rated an EF-5.
The original Fujita scale was based on damage as well. The problem with that scale was that the wind speed estimates used were far too high and the damage descriptors were vague and didn't account for construction quality. The Enhanced Fujita scale revised the wind estimates to be more accurate and provided better damage descriptors which accounted for construction quality.
Your dry lake bed example would be accurate (except for the windspeed) since no damage to structures or trees was done. Your second example isn't true as the EF scale would account for the construction quality of the homes and rate the damage accordingly.
@@Decimator92 WRONG! It was based on wind speed. It did list damage that was likely to happen at that scale but the tornadoes were NEVER, EVER assigned an F rating based on ANYTHING but measured wind speed. I worked at NOAA when that scale was in use.
@@protonneutron9046 You are lying about working for NOAA (unless you swept the floors or something).
The Fujita scale was always based on damage, with wind speeds associated with each F number being nothing more than educated guesses. Dr. Fujita's guesses were the best anyone had, since no one had ever managed to measure winds of a strong tornado directly. Tornadoes destroy the equipment that measures wind speed (anemometers) well before the peak wind speeds arrive, and most structures don't have anemometers anyway.
Fixed doppler radar (which did not exist when Dr. Fujita created the F-scale) lacks the resolution and scans the circulation at too high of an elevation to get any kind of accurate wind speed readings close to the ground.
It has only been with the advent of Doppler on Wheels (DOW) that we can get wind speed ratings for some tornadoes... but even now the large majority of tornadoes are never scanned by a DOW. Out of 1200 tornadoes that occur each year, there may be direct wind speed ratings on maybe a dozen of them.
Prior to the first deployment of DOW in 1995, it was not possible to measure the wind speed of a decently powerful tornado, and the odds of an anemometer being in the direct path of a weak tornado made that quite unlikely too.
The original F scale was based on destruction done to well built wood frame houses. Any other structure was not useful as far as giving it a rating. The enhanced scale covers a lot more types of structures, and accounts for differences in build quality of each of them.
The wind estimates for each EF scale rating have been reduced to match the new information (such as the DOW data) that has come in since Ted Fujita devised the original scale. It is in every way superior to the original scale, and has been designed to be directly comparable, so that a properly rated tornado using the F scale would have the same rating on the EF scale.
I've lived in both an earthquake zone and a moderate tornado zone, respectively, and I gotta say earthquakes are nowhere near as pants-poopingly frightening as the roaring of wind with that apocalypse-siren going off.
That video taken by Clarence Schultz is SO terrifying to watch! I remember this storm very well since my friend lived on his street. Thankfully she and her husband survived in their basement, but there was nothing left of the small apartment they lived in.
Tornadoes are hypnotizing. It's hard to walk away.
They can be so deceptive to our vision how close they are, how fast they are really moving, how much debris is coming down on you 😢
I am there with yo Ricky; grieving for these people.
There really is a luck factor when it comes to a tornado. They can obliterate a house to the foundation, then leave the next house completely intact and then jump down again and take out the next one. They can see-saw back and forth.....they really are wild events courtesy of Mother Nature.
That set of videos with no sound around the 9:00-10:00 marker were CCTV footage from the elementary and High School buildings in Joplin MO
I love tornado videos but that was really intense! Thanks Recky.
Yupp! A butt clinching moment
Bless your hearts! How terrifying! I'm glad you and your daughter are ok.
That moment when you can hear the tornado over the microphone of whatever the videographer is using to film it...! Man, that gets me every time. Thanks for a great reaction to some terrifying videos.
You gotta love that toddler who really, REALLY wanted to go outside.
Lived in Oklahoma most of my life (Arkansas now) but Ive had two run ins with tornados. One , we were at my mother in laws. I was on the front porch and the air just changed, it felt like pressurized? i turned back and told my son to get in the hallway. I followed him . We hunkered down as it sounded like the house was about to tear apart. I was waiting for it to be in the house with us any minute. Then it went silent. I got up went back outside to total darkness (it was night and the power had went out) and just heard screams . It had crossed the road and hit the trailer park on the opposite side of the street. just people screaming in the darkness. ofc ambulances and police got there quickly but the whole trailer park was gone. The next day, we had half a bathtub in our front yard. a couch in one of our trees. and other just random things liek someones garlic powder bottle. Luckily I dont think any one was hurt too badly. The second time wasnt even a very big tornado -but it knocked a tree over onto our house and landed in my sons room. lots of damage but no one being hurt is what matters.
Most of these tornadoes receive special attention from the United States National Weather Service. They take care of sending out specialized warnings for these types of tornadoes. The meteorologists working for the Weather Service are able to spot these tornadoes on computer radar sometimes before they're even fully on the ground. Once someone who sees the tornado sends a report of its size and speed, they can update the warning with stronger words like "deadly", "confirmed large and extremely dangerous tornado", "particularly dangerous situation". The worst of the worst get the highest tornado warning possible which is referred to as a "tornado emergency". I'm not sure what the extent of that would be in Europe, however.
Ive lived in Texas my whole life and have only seen 2 tornadoes in person. The closest one was half a mile away. Im fascinated by the weather.
Shit I live in Illinois and see one every other year Lol also see a lot of little spouts in the fields trying to form. One took my trampoline rolling over to the neighbors field about 300ft away watched it through the window like shit lol it was rolling fast and hit a bump came down and exploded springs everywhere lol happened all in like 30 seconds and we just got that trampoline.
Im kinda fascinated to!
Recky, we have automated weather warnings on our cell phones , tvs etc. When severe weather starts happening we are notified and we the smart ones) start to prepare. We know what to do, and its not stand around filming.
Scary stuff. Hope to never see one of those close up.
I agree with you, Recky. That third video, from Mr. Schultz in Illinois, breaks something inside of me every single time I see it.
I've been in one tornado that did some structural damage and in another one that took our shed but left the bicycles inside still standing. I live in Tornado Alley here in Texas, so tornadoes are unfortunately, a way of life in the spring, especially.
Planet Earth is so beautifully destructive.
I live in Arkansas and we had a bad tornado hit our town in 2020 and it took out a lot of businesses including our mall which is about half a mile away from me. We were actually grateful for the pandemic because most of the businesses were closed which prevented any deaths or major injuries. Our local weather forecaster saved a lot of lives too because the weather service actually cancelled our tornado warning because it didn’t look like one would hit but our meteorologist said he didn’t like the look of the radar so to stay in our safe space. It was really scary!
I live in tornado alley in the US. I have never understood the brazen stupidity of people who stay out in storms and get close to tornadoes. So many of these clips were from people who filmed right up until the point the tornado was tearing their own homes apart, that's absolutely insane to me. Get to shelter immediately and stay there, I think your life should be worth more to you than a 60 second clip of a tornado destroying your neighborhood.
I'm so glad u got to see the devastating effect of a tornado as it happened instead of the before and after
Tornadoes are one of my top three fears. I live in the deep south and we get them regularly and I HATE them...they are nightmare fuel.
I don't know I would say get used to tornadoes. You live in the Midwest, Tornado Alley, Dixie alley you do get a lot of tornado warnings. Most people will take cover, a lot of times after looking outside first. Unfortunately when hit in populated areas it is just devastating. First Tornado damage I ever see was the Plainfield, IL F5 Tornado in Aug 1990. I was in High school. When you see how destructive it can be in person you do respect it even more. That Tornado did not have a warning and was not visible.
These monsters are what nightmares are made of, passing over lakes, it just might rain fish.
Living in tornado alley, I'm used to staying in the basement during tornados but the news can't track them well. You're just listening to the storm inside. at least standing by the window you can see what direction its traveling and run for cover. security cameras are the best option
The EF rating is based on the cost of the damage, not the intensity, size, or casualties of the tornado. That's why you get an EF-1 that takes a roof off a house. Maybe it didn't hit anything else.
The guy in the EF4 video actually is the luckiest person ever since you actually shouldnt stop under an over pass. They turn into wind tunnels. The suggestion these days is to get into a ditch, but he also had plenty of time to turn around. Cool video though, he certainly has a story to tell.
You should check out the tornado documentary about the 1974 super outbreak. My father-in-law survived one of the tornadoes from that outbreak. An F5 went through his home town in Perry County Indiana.
I remember the Andover, Kansas tornado. I was debating with my dad (who is also my storm spotting partner) if we should go up there or not. I looked at radarscope and saw that there were about 150 storm spotters already there or headed there. We decided against it and kept on storm spotting all through that night into early next morning. I was awake for 4 days and nights during that severe weather event. A severe thunderstorm watch has just been issued for my area for quarter sized hail and 70 mph winds from now until midnight tonight. Gonna sign off and see what's going on.
The Andover KS was actually an EF4
The EF-4 in Illinois when the guy was sitting in his truck is the same tornado as the next video (the one you hate).
Wow. That guy got extremely lucky.
Really enjoy watching your reaction to tornadoes. These scare me as well. Way too close lol
4:00 thats actually the same tornado as the one before it, with the guy in the truck
It’s kind of funny living in tornado alley if it’s not moving but seems like it’s standing still means it’s coming at you or going away from you. If you see them and they are big but aren’t looking to be moving ya prob need to take precautions rather hold ur camera to film it. Granted alot of the clips are from mounted cams on stores or whatever. But the footages of one moving while filming, I’m like dude turn ur camera off and head for safety.
My words exactly. What is wrong with these people? 🙄🤥
Checking in again. Did you watch Brandon Ivey Inside a tornado? Storm chasers with IMAX cameraman in a tank go through an EF3 tornado. You see the violence within the tornado. Best footage out there.
The first one, the "little" EF-1 has winds between 86-110 mph. That's 138-177 Km/hr. If that hits you straight on, it can tear a house up. That house with the roof torn off got a direct hit. And, one of the worst things outside of getting hit straight on is getting hit with the debris swirling around. Ever see a 2x4 punched through a brick wall? Or a piece of hay stuck in a telephone pole? Yep, that's the kind of thing you see with even an EF-0 or EF-1 if it hits very close. As the EF-scale goes up, the damage goes up. But a EF-0 can kill you like a higher EF tornado will if it hits you.
From about 7-10 into the video was a school that got hit. Thankfully, no one was there, it demolished some of it. The video was all security footage, which was very good. That "tarp" was the tar paper from the roof, which was the first two layers. Some people are watching, as much to see if it's coming your way, but also to see where they have to go to save people. Several of these, however, are security cameras. The guy in the pickup was a moron, seriously. That was WAY too close and he's lucky the inflow wasn't pulling straight into that mess. I would have been pulling a backup u-turn and flooring it to get out of there. The one in Montana looked like it hit a lake, which turns it into a waterspout. That's actually good because water is very heavy and will help dissipate the tornado for the most part. Now, once it gets back on land, if it's got enough energy still, it can re-form into a tornado and hit just as hard.
(and, my husband was a chaser in the late 1970s so I always check my facts through him.)
Even the regular 70-100 mph windstorms we get in the Midwest can cause this kind of damage, whether a tornado touches down or not. Edit-- And night tornadoes are the worst because you don't know where to go, you can't see it. Luckily most people have basements or shelters and we have fairly good advance warning systems in place. The last big ones we had here in Iowa, was December 2021 when 9 tornadoes touched down. They let the schools out early and most of the parents left work to get their kids home and everyone safe in the basement. We also have backup comms/radio for when things go south like this.
So I watched your video on the Jarrell tornado.
I was a first responder in Jarrell. I was a wrecker truck driver, coming back from Waco Tx and had to pull over to ride out the storm that was ultimately to hit Jarrell, although there was no tornado in my area.
As I resumed, a call came over the police scanner in my truck, asking for anyone with any medical training to come to Jarrell in response to a tornado. I had just recently earned my first responder certification and had my bag next to me in the truck. I was only 9 miles from the Jarrell turnoff on Interstate 30, southbound.Truthfully, I am sorry I made the decision to go.
DPS was blocking the exit, so I showed them my med bag and they let me through.
Recky, I am not going to talk about what I saw and what I had to do. it would upset people and some things are best left unsaid or unknown. But here's my problem.
The people in Jarrell had 30 minutes warning. But the skies were sunny and it was a warm May day and no one took the warnings seriously. By the time they did understand, it was too late.
Look, any forecaster will tell you never to try to outrun a tornado, but if those people had looked at the radar on TV, then got into their cars and drove away from the approaching storm, many of them would be alive today. Now, they tell you not to because with the heavy rain and the hail, people lose their sense of direction and forget where they are supposed to go, but it's really simple. Just drive away in any direction except where the storm is approaching.
I found myself getting angry at these people, as I had to pick up their body parts...parts that were hard to distinguish from cattle tissue. If they had done what their common sense told them to do, they would not have had to die. Over half of those people were 15 and under. That is the greatest tragedy of all.
When you have an EF 4-5 coming directly for you it doesn’t matter what you kind of house are in, underground is the only safe place. Building codes have helped keep roofs and buildings from crumbling under sustained wind speeds, but if it’s a direct hit it’s a bomb going off.
Need to watch the one about a 16 year old kid who's in his truck as it flips spins on side then flips upright and then he drives away..think truck company bought him a new truck
EF 1 can remove roofs. Depends on how good roof, how it hits roof etc.
Yup, an EF1 (baby tornado) came through a couple weeks ago and ripped the roofs off several apartment buildings. Thankfully, they were being built, so no one was inside. I shared the video with a friend from another country and was mortified it was a 'baby tornado' doing that much damage.
Several in the USA were videos using Ring, a doorbell that records and you can talk to the owner. And some videos with CCTV connections. Both will film without a human being present. The China and New Zealand ones I've never seen before. As technology continues to grow we will be seeing more videos taken without humans present at the time of recording. BUT the human factor will most likely continue because of the adrenaline rush and mezmerizing appearance of tornadoes.
@recky the guy in the truck was simply going about his day and happened into the tornado. terrifying huh!
When people are behind the camera and their eye is in the viewfinder, there is a tendency to get tunnel vision. They just lose their situational awareness, it's closer than it looks and the camera won't save you. A few people have died as a result of this.
I have a feeling the EF -1 in the first clip was upgraded after reports came in about structural damage.
surprisingly no, it's still classified as a "high-end EF1" but what most people dont know is that it wasn't originally a tornado. it began as a waterspout that came up onto land. the only damage it actually caused was to some boats, a bed and breakfast, mild roof damage, and a guy in a RV i think got hit but i mean even an EF1 can harm you in those little beloved deathtraps. otherwise no houses were actually destroyed, but it did have windspeeds of about 110 mph so it's high-end EF1 given the damage only to roofs and windows. but yeah even EF1's can do some harm
I grew up in tornado alley and we were always told the worst place to be was near glass which seems obvious for anyone with common sense. But for something more positive, happy early welcome to NATO Sweden
That second guy in the truck sounded way to calm
I lived in Ohio through many of tornadoes. You learn your basement is your friend. Watch the Wizard of Oz
I remember watching the footage of the first one on that island in Maryland, U.S. cuz my partner is originally from Maryland so it stuck out. Also it occurred on a very small island community and was WAY stronger than any small island tornado should have been, hence the people taking the video escalating gradually from “oh wow” to “oh crap” to “holy fuck!” If I remember correctly no one was killed in that one, it was just a very unusual location. I just had a moth the size of my fuckin fist hit me in the head. It made the weirdest sound. Sorry, random but it happened so I thought I’d share. Last month, my area in the southwestern U.S. got hit by numerous tornadoes, super unusual for this area. If you want to see pics of our iron gate drilled into concrete that was pulled out of the ground completely and some electrical poles snapped in half and what one whole side of our house looks like without windows, hit me up. I’m too embarrassed to post the video I took when we started getting hit by baseball sized hail cuz I have PTSD so I was screaming and swearing and yelling, trying to be louder than said hail hitting our metal roof for 35 minutes straight. I’d have to do a LOT of editing to be able to feel confident enough to upload that lol.
Enhanced Fujita Scale EFU Unknown No surveyable damage
EF0 65-85 mph Light damage
EF1 86-110 mph Moderate damage
EF2 111-135 mph Considerable damage
EF3 136-165 mph Severe damage
EF4 166-200 mph Devastating damage
EF5 >200 mph Incredible damage
Even if you experience tornados several times they never stop being scary. The closer you get to them the scarier they get. In 2006 I made the stupid decision that because the tornados were a county over to the West and I was living to the North and they were supposed to be heading South I could make the run through the storm 25 miles or so to where I was living. The storm turned East and I found myself on a Kentucky backroad snaking along ridgelines with multiple tornadoes all round. I was running from 70 to over a 100mph down that road. At one point I had to pass by a tornado so close the funnel was touching the edge of the road, running over downed power lines and dodging a downed powerpole as it sandblasted the side of my truck with debris. I literally had to repaint the truck after that because even after cleaning off debris the paint looked like I'd taken sandpaper to it from the scouring effect of soil pulled off the freshly tilled fields blasted across my truck and you could see the pitting like it'd been struck by thousands of golfballs just hard enough to dimple all the body panels enough to notice.
Many places outside of the usa don't realize how deadly they are because many have never seen one, much less heard of them. China, New Zealand, etc. I wonder if some ppl in Sweden would know what to do, or what was going on, if they never saw one on youtube and yet suddenly one is going by. I can fully understand the awe and wanting to watch this unreal, mindblowing chunky wall of loud wind coming toward you (general "you", not YOU 'you' lol) or going by you. It's only when they either get too close, slam into the home, or toss something at the unsuspecting person like in the last video from New Zealand do they realize something isn't right at all. :(
It’s hard for me from living in Oklahoma to watch these videos. I get why some have a interest in it. But to me i it’s saddening to relive some of these videos. Cause of not only it effected me, my family and friends so directly but how it effects others also. But Im So thankful because of the technology we have now days so many life’s can be saved because of the advance warnings. What sadden me usually after a tornadoes is seeing the devastation and loss of ppl personal stuff. Like family photos, the new car they just now could afford, the food to feed their family, and such. My uncle watches a lot of these kind of videos because he was at wedding and one hit the church and almost took them. And I’m like why do do wanna watch them we have lived them. But we all deal with our tragedies in our own way. I’m gonna watch this but it’s prob gonna bring up some sad memories. Still love ya Recky and carol ty for what y’all do.
Welcome to NATO , at long last!!!!!!! The wildest Tornado footage I have ever seen was on a Weather Channel special that showed an oil tanker car that was part of a freight train being pulled from the train and blown hundreds of yards away. Mother Nature does not mess around!
Thank you!!
This is exactly why I live in WV
An EF-1 or EF-0 even can kill you just as easy as any stronger one.
Watch these in this order "Haysville to Wichita tornado - Tornado at McConnel Air Force Base - Wichita Andover tornado. All from the same storm!
In some of these, like the guy in the truck, I'd be peeing myself. Actually, I'd probably have a heart attack first, then die, then pee myself. Tornadoes scare me more than any other weather event on the planet. I live in the US, and you couldn't pay me to live anywhere near tornado alley.
I live in tornado alley and that's how I feel about living on the coast. A tornado may or may not form and hit but a HURRICANE? It's going to hit and it's going to do damage. Don't care to experience that.
a couple of those videos seem to be from security cameras
Don't think an EF1 is a just a gusty breeze that will do minor damage. If one hits a house it can so serious damage. It will seldom flatten or totally remove a house -- it would have to be a poorly built or very old poorly built house ... but one can rip off a roof or section of roof without all that much difficulty.
I’m trying to see if you’ve done this already I can’t find it on your channel but have you done the El Reno tornado from 2013?
13:33 pissed me off because you can hear those babies crying for their mother and she isn't doing anything to soothe them! Terrible parent, too worried about the damn tornado. Those kids are scared, take care of them!!!
The second one was VERY lucky. At certain distances you can safely sit & watch one. But as close as he was, one little change in direction or a satellite tornado & he would have been gone.
He's lucky the inflow didn't pull him in as soon as it passed
I'm from Illinois
Ricky it's not luck, it's called stupid.
You doing tornado videos you need to do the Nebraska Iowa tornado out break April 24 2024 welcome to tornado alley
Horrifying
The Andover tornado looks almost fake, until you realize it was real....
The first 1 wasn't an EF1
ohh, didnt it say that?
@@Reckyj they messed that up
@@FallenMuse81 lol
It was rated a EF1 because those houses it hit isn't one of them sturdy type houses, specific homes handle different specific wind speeds, plus those homes wasn't well constructed. For example, if a tornado was an EF3 and hits a home that wasn't well constructed, the home would've been completely swept away just like a EF5 can sweep a well constructed home away, when it comes to tornadoes hitting buildings, it depends on how well or unwell the structure is made, that's what the damage survey team always look out for.
Some o🎉the videos were from security cameras, so the color change.
An ef1 can flip a car.
Now u see the shit we deal with in the USA
3:40 he did the right thing by taking cover under the bridge/overpass. That is one of the safest places in a tornado if you are a trucker with a trailer.
hiding under overpasses is actually incredibly dangerous because they become wind tunnels, and essentially amplify the wind traveling under the bridge
And people want us to be making brick houses in these areas for “protection” or because they use dirt blocks to build in safe regions we should copy them Lmao. It’s just not cost or resource efficient, it will still take heavy damage no matter what when these storms hit literally yearly or every couple months. And it’d be the same price for a repair as buying a brand new home. Some don’t understand that basic logic. If you want America to build with brick, create your own manufacturing and distribution to cut cost so it could be as affordable. Otherwise the cost just outweighs the minor “safety” you get from a brick home. So unless you’re making insane amounts of money, why? I’ve seen brick buildings and homes collapse from the same storms but be worse from the added weight and more costly for repairs. Just to explain a little of the American mindset on housing in these dangerous areas.
Sorry but that screaming kid in Montana needs an attitude adjustment. Sounds like he’s screaming “I want to go outside!” Okay then! Go outside!
🏳🌈
Hey Recky congrats you are in the NATO alliance now if Russia or anyone screws with you as the 32nd member we now got your back even if it means nuclear weapons
2:08 one of best Recky moments. Weather . gov and local news list it as a “high-end EF1 waterspout” that moved ashore.