Great. My Son lives there and so will i when i retire........just great!
@joymorton72956 жыл бұрын
sorry I tried to find it. I apologize for this. God bless you and I hope you all are having a nice summer.
@BillyBob-qh9fm6 жыл бұрын
pretty sure apache junction/ gold canyon ... in that area got some blowing dust yesterday 7/5
@smoebal84416 жыл бұрын
Oh my...
@carolhale37226 жыл бұрын
Where did this happen? I live in SE Az and didn't experience this today.
@joymorton72956 жыл бұрын
Carol Hale apparently here, tucson.com/mile-wide-dust-storm-is-the-talk-of-phoenix/article_aa52eb5c-2970-59ce-85fb-ab1829809862.html
@joymorton72956 жыл бұрын
Carol Hale sorry I tried to find it. I apologize for this. God bless you and I hope you all are having a nice summer
@joymorton72956 жыл бұрын
PHOENIX - Arizonans are calling it the mother of all dust storms. The mile-high wall of ominous, billowing dust that appeared to swallow Phoenix and its suburbs is all that locals can talk about. It moved through the state around sundown Tuesday, halting airline flights, knocking out power to nearly 10,000 people, turning swimming pools into mud pits and caking cars with dirt. The sky was still filled with a hazy shade of brown Wednesday as residents washed their cars and swept sidewalks. Because dust storms, also known by the Arabic term "haboobs," are so hard to predict, Tuesday's took everyone by surprise. Seemingly out of nowhere, the 100-mile-wide storm moved like a giant wave, the dust roiling as it approached at up to 60 mph. Once it hit, visibility dropped to zero in some areas, the sky turned nearly black, trees blew sideways, and even downtown Phoenix skyscrapers became invisible. "Just the height of it looked like a special-effect scene from a movie, like a dust storm out in Africa," said Charlotte Dewey, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Phoenix. "It looked so huge, looking at the city down below, it was just specks of light and miniature buildings. "I have a feeling that people will be talking about this for another week or two, at least," Dewey said. She said meteorologists were still trying to get exact measures from satellite and radar to figure out how big the dust storm was and compare it with previous ones, but they estimate it was more than a mile high and more than 100 miles wide. "People who've lived here their whole lives, 30 or 40 years, are saying they've never seen a storm this large," Dewey said. She said winds from separate thunderstorms in the eastern and southern parts of the state collided somewhere between Phoenix and Tucson and combined with a severe lack of moisture to create the wall of dust. The storm also hit the Yuma area in southwestern Arizona, and far western Arizona. Haboobs only happen in Arizona, the Sahara Desert and parts of the Middle East because of dry conditions and large amounts of sand, Dewey said. "It's a pretty rare thing to be able to see," she said. While some Arizonans revel in the strange weather, many were unlucky enough to be outside when the storm rolled in. They got blasted with dust that went up their noses, behind their contact lenses and in their mouths, leaving behind a gritty taste. Holly Ward, a spokeswoman at the Maricopa County Air Quality Department, said pollution levels skyrocketed. Particulate matter at one monitoring site hit an hourly average of more than 5,000 micrograms per cubic meter. Tuesday's 24-hour average was as high as 375 micrograms per cubic meter, more than double the level federal standards consider healthy. "You didn't have to go far anywhere in the dust storm to feel the remnants of that dust in your throat and in your nose," Ward said. "If someone already has breathing problems like asthma and bronchitis, this is an incredible health challenge and serious health threat for those folks." Local hospitals were expecting an increase in a disease known as valley fever, a fungal pneumonia, because of the storm. The fungus thrives in the hot and arid Southwest and is found just a few feet beneath the earth's surface; it can be stirred up by construction, wind and other activity. The dust storm also grounded flights at Phoenix's Sky Harbor International Airport for 45 minutes. At least three flights were canceled and more than a dozen were delayed, while several incoming flights were diverted to Tucson and Ontario, Calif., said airport spokesman Julie Rodriguez. Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Lynn Lunsford said planes need to be grounded during dust storms because of the low visibility, high winds and potential damage from the dirt. "If you think about it, glass is made from sand that has been melted, and if you think about the temperature inside a jet engine, it's hot enough to melt sand," he said. "If you can't see through it, you definitely don't want to fly through it." He likened the storm to volcanic ash that wreaked havoc in the skies in April 2010, when an eruption grounded flights across Europe for days, disrupting travel for 10 million people.
@carolhale37226 жыл бұрын
Joy Running Wolf Morton the article you copied was dated 2011. Someone sent me the same link.
@joymorton72956 жыл бұрын
Carol Hale sorry I tried to find it. I apologize for this. God bless you and I hope you all are having a nice summer
@joymorton72956 жыл бұрын
some one sorry I tried to find it. I apologize for this. God bless you and I hope you all are having a nice summer
@chuckmcgill48566 жыл бұрын
I been caught in them before in Arizona, but his is a BIG ONE !
@congoboymbeyas24406 жыл бұрын
where I'm in Arizona but i don't see nothing hell not
@joymorton72956 жыл бұрын
Mbeyas Baron Tv online apparently here, tucson.com/mile-wide-dust-storm-is-the-talk-of-phoenix/article_aa52eb5c-2970-59ce-85fb-ab1829809862.html
@carolhale37226 жыл бұрын
Fake news
@joymorton72956 жыл бұрын
Carol Hale sorry I tried to find it. I apologize for this. God bless you and I hope you all are having a nice summer
@abdulalnaqqash31466 жыл бұрын
Me too
@abdulalnaqqash31466 жыл бұрын
Why i just see a lighting
@lei20446 жыл бұрын
Its really laggy but theres a storm A BIG ONE TWO TREES FELL DOWN
@truckitwitbox90596 жыл бұрын
Just _Leilana yeah it was bad here in Tempe . It came out of nowhere
@lei20446 жыл бұрын
same ;_;
@casetandersen80826 жыл бұрын
It wasn't that bad to be honest
@johnhuston30916 жыл бұрын
Then obviously you don't or didn't have a pool to clean all the dust out of!!!!!!!!
@babydogysfunday1296 жыл бұрын
It's happing right now in Arizona I'm scared that I cried cuz some of my mouse broke
@eamonnsiocain64546 жыл бұрын
Dust bowl days: Tent cities, Fascist marches, and a Conservative DC.
@marcellamcduffie82186 жыл бұрын
The powers that be lol.thanks for sharing this video.