We have an American at my work in Christchurch, he's from the Midwest. We had a decent storm the other week, it was a good one! He had a half smile on his face and when I asked him about it, he said that this 'massive' storm was just a baby compared to what he's experienced at home! That's nuts! Funny what you get used to
@Suprachiasmatic2 жыл бұрын
I’m from Iowa in the US and we had tornadoes every couple weeks in the summers. I remember going outside to watch them come with my parents when I was a kid. 😅 our community was even hit with one but you just kinda get used to them! We also got used to the rivers flooding every summer, we lost our house finally in 2017 from one of them!
@spjr992 жыл бұрын
One time my uncle was pumping gas back in the 80s. It was -50 outside. The gas would not pump. He just started people's cars all day by taking their batteries insides, warming them up, and bringing them back out to start the car. And that was in Chicago. It gets cold with the lake but there are plenty of colder places
@codyfromhumanresources64352 жыл бұрын
Same convo happens in some parts of the US. I live in a place that gets pretty cold, but not usually below -18C or so. It was like 10 degrees F the other day (-12C), and I mentioned how it was cold to some customers, they said “oh we’re from the Midwest this is nothing.”😂
@purplecreature8178 Жыл бұрын
I mean its currently -12 farenheit and theres also a giant blizzard where I live in Michigan so I'm used to snow too 😂
@lueannabracha2472 Жыл бұрын
@@spjr99 We use block heaters in Montana to keep our cars from freezing when it is below zero. It was -45 a couple weeks ago.
@justanothermichigander46832 жыл бұрын
Here in Michigan, my parents told me a ton of stories about the Blizzard of ‘78. My mom has very vivid memories of snow being packed so high and tight that she could sled off of her roof!
@sarahsherman38102 жыл бұрын
Ohio as well.
@Assassyn19802 жыл бұрын
I was there too. I remember it vividly
@kylaluv8453 Жыл бұрын
Yep, I remember that blizzard very well. I was 6 and we couldn't just plow the driveway cause my brother's car was completely buried and we had to find it first, and only an inch of my parents van was showing. When they finally got the driveway plowed the snow bank went to the top of our 2 story house. Couldn't play outside without a stick cause dad said if we fell threw the snow then they could find us by the stick poking out the snow.
@michellesmith6558 Жыл бұрын
I was 6 and it was great for kids. I lived in MD.
@filam7371 Жыл бұрын
My oldest sisters first birthday party was postponed because of that blizzard. With any luck this blizzard they're predicting this weekend won't be bad.
@joeryan70242 жыл бұрын
Chicago Joe here...I remember the blizzard of 1979 and the snow was above the front door and above the cars.
@southerngirljess19872 жыл бұрын
As a southerner, I was offended that the Blizzard of ‘93 was not on this list, haha. Everyone has a story about it. 😂 I would definitely recommend looking at Pecks Hank’s videos on the largest recorded tornado, which he captured, and it was over 2.5 miles in diameter and an F5. We do have some crazy weather here in the States. Love seeing y’all again and enjoyed looking at Denzy’s face throughout this and his intro. Much love!
@beverlywalker41112 жыл бұрын
I remember that so well in East Tennessee!
@sheenakinman85062 жыл бұрын
In Northern Kentucky we had no power for a week luckily our heat was a wood stove and we had cistern water
@mattfulgurite47462 жыл бұрын
I remember that in Iredell county; police were giving tickets to persons driving around in unsafe weather
@carolfrazer80672 жыл бұрын
What about the one that hit Moore, OK?
@sumerfluffy2 жыл бұрын
Pecos Hank. Yes, most definitely!
@kristiemccoy56042 жыл бұрын
My worst weather experience was when I was probably about 8 years old and I had just been picked up from my dad's house (he lived the next town over, about a 20 minute drive). The highway between his home and my mom's home is rather curvy and passes over some fairly significant hills. There had been a storm brewing, but as we approached the hills, the sky suddenly turned so green and ominous. The wind started pushing the car around, and a couple drops of rain splattered the windshield. No sooner than my mom realized she'd have to pull over because the wind was so strong she was unable to keep control of the car, it just stopped. Everything stopped. No more wind, no raindrops...just a terrifying green sky so bright directly above us, that our skin and everything in the car appeared to have a green hue to it. She leaned forward to look at the sky through the windshield, and immediately she unbuckles my seatbelt and rushes me to climb into the back floorboard and curl all the way down on my knees and cover the back of my head with my hands. I climbed between the front seats, and before I had both feet in the back I heard a loud WHAM and the sound of our windshield being crushed leaving a crater at least 5-6 inches across. I got down as quick as I could, then heard another...And a few seconds later, another....!! Until after about 20 seconds or so, the sky suddenly just let loose on us and SOFTBALL sized hail stones started raining down on us so quickly it sounded like BlackCats (firecrackers) going off inside the car with us! And the car was rocking and shaking, and at one point (by which time it was completely dark around us) we felt the back of the car lift from the ground slightly, and swing from side to side about 4 times, each time leaving the back tires about 2 feet to the left or right of where they'd been. I don't know how long this lasted, but it felt like hours! I was certain we were about to be meeting God face to face and I was screaming prayers to Him, as was my mother. Then....no less suddenly than it began, it ended. The car looked like a golf ball and the windshield was absolutely impossible to see ANYTHING through, though it somehow held together. There was some small brush in the road but nothing we couldn't navigate around alright, with the windows down so we could see. No homes in that area, and cell phones were still pretty uncommon for most people. Wouldn't have been cell service there anyways, as there is none to this day in that area. But we eventually made it the rest of the way home (10 or so miles) to find my brothers who were 18 & 19 at the time, both in hysterics. My dad had called the land line to check and see if we had made it back when the storm got bad, and because we hadn't, everyone was absolutely terrified. We kept one of the hail stones that fell in our front yard in the freezer for some time. It was the size of a large tomato, but even it wasn't as big as what pounded our car that night. It seems the tornado had just been coming over the side of the mountain as we were coming around it, and our view of it was completely obscured until it actually cleared the mountain side and met the road. I don't know how close it was to us, as we never actually SAW it, unless it WAS the darkness that enveloped us. But it ended up being on the ground for long enough to get to the little town we lived in, and tear the roof off of the gym side of the school I went to and flip a nearby trailer house upside down. Nobody killed, or even injured. But quite a bit of property damage in the area. Easily the most terrifying night of my life.
@JaggedRecordsVa2 жыл бұрын
Your kids are low-key learning so much from all these educational videos you watch. Great family, good example. God Bless!
@WarrenVanWyck152 жыл бұрын
The ice storm of 2009 is easily the craziest weather event I have witnessed. Kentucky and the surrounding states were hit hard. It rained so much and froze so quickly that power lines and trees were torn down from the weight of the ice. Most of us went days, weeks, or sometimes even longer before regaining power in our homes. One thing I’ll never forget is how quiet it was. You could go outside and not hear anything. No traffic. No animals. No heaters running. Just the sound of limbs in the nearby woods crashing to the ground one at a time every 20-30 seconds.
@ashleywatts62352 жыл бұрын
I lived thru that in Western KY. It was scary to hear large trees break due to the weight of the ice. It sounded like a cannon went off when a huge tree in the field behind our house split.
@heatherkelley53852 жыл бұрын
Oh I agree. From Missouri here. We were out of power for over 3 weeks from that storm. Thank the Lord we heated with a wood stove or it would’ve been much harder. Although having a baby and trying to sterilize bottles and such wasn’t that fun. Nor was trying to bath the kids or ourselves. We learned to get a gas hot water heater after that storm. Also thank the Lord for our generator that kept our outdoor wood stove blower running. At the very least we were toasty warm. The scariest part was all the trees cracking and all the branches snapping off and crashing down onto our home all night. We literally had to cut our way out with a chainsaw the next morning. Crazy crazy!
@Matty_Patty502 жыл бұрын
I lived through that and it was rough, we had to go to our local high school for two days cause our power was out for so long, luckily at the time we lived near the police station and fire station so our power was up pretty quick.
@mysanityizgone45762 жыл бұрын
That happens in the Willamette National Forest frequently here in Oregon which happens to be where i live. Surrounded by trees. Can't even see the town even with an aerial view. Breaking branches and falling trees are the norm during ice freezes. Meh.
@gamiyalit29752 жыл бұрын
Yep, I was in that. The creepy silence with tree limbs cracking, plus having no power that night was scary as hell!
@jameshelm28472 жыл бұрын
Something that wasn't mentioned when discussing the coldest days where the temperature reach -60° was the wind chill factor. Back in 1982, I believe it was, Chicago got down to about -15°, but with the wind chill, it was -67°. I can't imagine how cold it got with the wind chill if the temp was already -60°.
@denisestaley27242 жыл бұрын
I've lived in several states up and down the east coast and over seas in Iceland. I've dealt with hurricanes, blizzards, tornados, earthquakes, but no volcanic eruptions. Iceland was kind enough to wait until I left for that. Love watching you all react to the craziness of all things U.S.
@firstjohn31232 жыл бұрын
Same here. Seen snow over my waist, -50 deg.F in the winter, 3 tornadoes up close, with 2 additional going over my head (the trees were waving up & down). Hail the size of grade A eggs (literally), 5 inches of rain per hour (I filled a drinking glass in under a minute - yes, we flooded), 100+ mph winds, 106 deg F+ temps (in the shade in Ohio/Pa)...Only small earthquakes though (4.5 for me), and only seen the Hawaii volcano-no Mt. St Helens types...oh, and lightning strikes - my brother & uncle were both struck (& lived). I've been within 10ft of being hit myself. That's was an eye-opener. We do have diversity of weather...love seeing others' reactions though. An F5 tornado in Pa stripped a mall to the pavement. Poles were sucked out of the ground...NOTHING left. Destroyed miles of forests in the Allegheny mountains. We pay attention to the weather pretty close here. Been without power for days as well. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Life as an American.
@RydiaLS832 жыл бұрын
no volcanic eruptions true. BUT my mom Told me. in the 1980 Mount.St.Helens eruption. was so powerful. New Jersey had an Ash cloud came over it and rain ash for a day.
@denicesanders45862 жыл бұрын
I have lived through all of those in various states including Mt. Saint Helen's volcano May 1980. oh what fun that was... Forgot about the earthquake in Everett, WA in the early 2000's. 6.8 on Richter Scale and the tornado on the freeway going back to Texas from Little Rock, Arkansas.
@argynews28252 жыл бұрын
@@firstjohn3123 Minnesota I freaking laughed at the somehow survived-20 -20 is when they stop school in Minnesota there was a 3 day period of blizzards and -50 average and still went out they sometimes cancel school for above 12 inches of snow but half the time they don’t and now you just do e learning then you got a bunch of tornadoes and ice and stuff but ice is meh
@firstjohn31232 жыл бұрын
@@argynews2825 Exactly! Here's an idea of our environment in the U.S. My home can keep me cool @ 120°, warm at -80°F (with 36" of snow), withstand 115+mph winds, and pump water out of a basement at 156 gal/minute... And some bugger wants to either nuke us or starve us, I already feel like a human cockroach 🪳 trying to survive! 🤣🤣 Not anticipating Yellowstone going off or anything ...🙄 But...holy mackerel. Give us a break. 🤟🤣
@stevestunningsteve34502 жыл бұрын
I live in Illinois the craziest was almost ten years ago when the snow ❄ fell none stop covering our cars 🚗..no way of getting to work unless you had a snowmobile. I remember that day cause they shut down all stores and streets and the none stop shoveling. Living in between Illinois and Wisconsin. When we get hit with snow ❄ wow we get alot.i hope this season gives us less snow ❄ and the temperatures 🌡 dont drop below zero.as every one knows living in Illinois each season is a surprise with both the temperatures and snow ❄.
@davidcosta22442 жыл бұрын
Checking in from Tampa, Florida after hurricane Ian. Because it shifted east right before making landfall, Tampa was spared the brunt of the storm. Instead, Ft Myers, and Sarasota took most of the Cat 4 wind damage, and the storm surge, which was compounded because the ground couldn't absorb water since it was so saturated from previous rainfall. Things are back to normal in Tampa, and rescue, and recovery is progressing further south.
@wheredidthetimego80872 жыл бұрын
Colorado has sent all of Florida our prayers. So sad to see so many have perished. 🙏
@andriagoneketo97842 жыл бұрын
I'm in Plant City ( about 30 minutes east of Tampa). So scary to think that could have been our area.
@lynchmob722 жыл бұрын
Im in Bradenton (Just North of Sarasota). We didnt get it too badly, but South Sarasota and Fort Myers were devastated. They say that they cant get power turned on because the power grid was completely destroyed.
@carolfrazer80672 жыл бұрын
Glad you are safe. I have friends in Pensacola. They were fine too.
@kcojco2 жыл бұрын
Prayers from a Georgia neighbor
@c00mgoblin2 жыл бұрын
I lived in North Dakota and just a few years ago it was -65 during a blizzard. It was scary even being warm indoors.
@stephaniecopeland8232 Жыл бұрын
Omg that is the freakiest thing I’ve ever heard.
@negativeonexiii Жыл бұрын
I live in Fargo, and I remember that one. It was that bomb cyclone that hit us. At the time, I was working at Tecton Products, and one of our emergency exit doors had gotten completely packed shut under a mound of 20 feet of snow against the building. Being outside one night in one of those blizzards, after we had all gotten off work, peoples cars wouldn't start, and just being outside long enough to get your battery jumped was enough to cause intense pain in your hands from the cold.
@ChristianJ03238 ай бұрын
The difference is that -65° blizzard we got was with windchill. I believe the record breaking temperatures were without. I could be mistaken but also grew up in ND for 18 years.
@islajadepierre90602 жыл бұрын
You guys are adorable. Denzel cracked me up at the beginning.
@Peri2C2 жыл бұрын
I was a kid living just outside of Dayton, Ohio on an airbase in 1974. The huge 5 mile wide tornado that devastated the city of Xenia passed over our home. My father was at home already as it was late afternoon, and he had us come out of our shelter spot to see the weather because the tornado was so large that it had a calm eye like a hurricane. We then returned to our spot as the second wall passed overhead. It was incredibly frightening. Only a few miles away that city was gone.
@garretthorsch81432 жыл бұрын
Americans are a hardy group of people. I think it has a lot to do with the history of having all of these crazy weather phenomena, war, etc. keep the videos coming guys!
@braindamaged17002 жыл бұрын
Weather is known as a “common enemy”.
@brigidtheirish2 жыл бұрын
@@braindamaged1700 Yep. Every winter, I plan for being snowed in much of the time and there to be at least one month when the effective temperature never gets above -40. I think every house should have at least two, probably three, sources of heat. A storm cellar is also important, along with *thorough* waterproofing.
@carolfrazer80672 жыл бұрын
@@brigidtheirish That's all fine if you can afford it. But I can't. Apartment living is dangerous with no where to stay safe. It's all I have.
@brigidtheirish2 жыл бұрын
@@carolfrazer8067 Yeah. I'm lucky to be renting from my sister. We live on the family farm in a house that's stood against North Dakota weather for over a hundred years. Even when I lived in regular apartments, though, I managed pretty well. One of them was even built a bit like a bunker, the entire structure being made of concrete block and the side my apartment was on being three feet underground. I've also gotten pretty good at stocking up for the winter. *Lots* of canned goods and other non-perishables. And making sure I have plenty of batteries for my camping lamp if the power goes out. The bathtub is a really good place to curl up in during a tornado if you don't have a storm cellar, by the way. Being small rooms with typically no outside walls, bathrooms are generally the safest rooms above ground and bathtubs add an extra layer of protection.
@brigidtheirish2 жыл бұрын
@jz Or improve (and actually ENFORCE) building codes. Like actually *bolting houses to the foundations.* I've seen houses in places like Florida sail away almost whole in winds that would *maybe* take a few shingles up here.
@adventureswithgmurphs58772 жыл бұрын
Here in Buffalo NY, in 2014 we had snowvember. At my house we had between 7 and 8 feet of snow fall overnight. It was a crazy time, out of school for about 2 weeks!
@sonnytavares20062 жыл бұрын
I remember the blizzard of 1978 in New England. I couldn't get out of my house because the snow had drifted up my front door up to 6 to 7 feet high. I climbed out a bedroom window and dug through the snow to get outside. Once I got out there was tons of snow piled up in huge drifts everywhere. We were without electricity, food and other essentials for over a week. These storms are rare, but we in New England can get them.
@1SCme2 жыл бұрын
As a kid, I loved it! We didn't have power outages and weren't short on food. No school. The neighbor had a snow blower on his farm tractor, it was a flat area but he formed a massive mountain of snow which I made into toboggan runs. All of the cats and dogs were inside. We built a house out of straw bales in the barn for the neighbors goats. Mom went into cake, cookie, and homemade candy cooking mode. Thinking back, my parents probably had a different opinion of the event.
@jaclyndeboer79122 жыл бұрын
My oldest brother was born during that blizzard. My dad was out plowing all night, when my mom went into labor. She said the doctors were getting to the hospital on snowmobiles. (Michigan)
@brandyroseann2 жыл бұрын
I was three and have been told stories about it. Me and my mother lived with my grandparents and she told I wanted to go outside so she bundled me up and let me go out on the back porch. She told me there was a wall of snow on each side of me and I just stood on the shoveled path and stared at it. And she also told me that all the men in the neighborhood all came to the house with a pick up truck and they all went to the grocery store to get food together.
@danielcobbins90502 жыл бұрын
My grandmother had an important job as administrator in a nursing home two towns to the west. The Massachusetts State Police had to come to her house, and then escort her to her job. That happened in the '78 blizzard, too.
@nelsonhemstreet35682 жыл бұрын
I remember that year in Buffalo, NY. 30" of snow in less than a day.
@stevetalley1872 жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in Northern Illinois, and currently live in North Western Minnesota, just an hour south of the border to Canada ... it is nothing for us to see -60 degrees fahrenheit with wind chill during blizzards. We actually have engine block heaters that we plus in that keeps our vehicles vital engine parts warm to they will start in extreme cold.
@TiffanyG12 жыл бұрын
Born & raised in Florida USA...the 2 worst hurricanes I went through were Ian & Charlie, borderline category 5. Ian was far worst because it was a direct hit, the eye went over us here in Fort Myers FL. Charlie's eye was much smaller & moved way faster. Both catastrophic, in the process of trying to rebuild! We had sharks & alligators swimming in the flooded roads! Also in FL, the lightning on reg days is incredible. Florida is the lightning capital of the U.S. There can be a severe thunderstorm on 1 side of the street & nothing on the other!
@trottheblackdog2 жыл бұрын
I'm up in the Orlando area. Charlie knocked down all the Laurel oaks in the city. Ian wasn't as bad.. more like Irma was.
@AddiLovesChrist Жыл бұрын
I’m from Texas and the worst one that I have been through was probably Hurricane Harvey, but we always learn in school about The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 and now when I think of Galveston I think of the hurricane.
@epicjason21 Жыл бұрын
It catrina?
@TiffanyG1 Жыл бұрын
@@epicjason21 No, not Katrina. Katrina hit Louisiana (New Orleans) & Mississippi! One of the worst devastations & loss of life, caused by flooding from the levees breaking!
@danieltello11792 жыл бұрын
Back in '86 .. early Spring started beautiful clear day, got windy,, turn into a dust storm, then rainy, hailstorm, And then started snowing !!! Happened Twice here in Lubbock Texas!!! Love you guys!!!❤️
@mindofzay20242 жыл бұрын
I just started watching all your videos and I love it. As an American I love watching videos of what people think of our country. There's a stereotype sometimes within America that the whole world hates us. And to watch all these videos seeing ppl so fascinated with learning about it. Makes me happy. I want to travel the world and learn about other countries too. But seeing all this reminds me I should be proud to live here! And I think I've heard New Zealand has a lot of beautiful locations and mountains if I'm correct. Gots to check it out there too lol
@meversace2 жыл бұрын
I live in the US. Here in NY we had snow so high once when I was a kid that we could sled off the roof of the house. I've been through a few hurricanes down South, and had a tornado rip through a mile down the street from my college.
@natemalnaa12 жыл бұрын
I've lived in Montana all my life and I've always loved that fact about the coldest recorded temperature and from what I've heard that was before windchill was a thing. Also our highest recorded temperature is 117°F (47.2°C) it also mean the temperature range for this state is 187° which is insane lol
@marthamitchell9452 Жыл бұрын
My husband lived in Lincoln for several years, although not at the time of the record low. He arrived not long after Ted Kasinsky left.
@jamebrooke894 Жыл бұрын
As a Marine I've been to the Artic Circle, Alaska, and South Korea in the winter including the 1978 Blizzard. But being in North Carolina when they get 1" of snow in Eastern North Carolina they shut down EVERYTHING.
@jenrod19892 жыл бұрын
I was raised in Florida, so we have had our share of Hurricanes. But when I was in Kindergarten 1977 it snowed down in Miami. I remember getting let out and dancing in the snow flakes something most of us had never seen before.
@jamesmerkel1932 Жыл бұрын
Been through blizzards, a couple tornadoes, a good number of sand storms. Crazy weather stateside, but fun
@jajacobs1002 жыл бұрын
We live in South Texas. Last hurricane we went through was Hurricane Harvey. Houston had its annual rainfall within a matter of hours. Huge areas flooded. We were safe, thank God. Some people still haven't completely recovered and that was in 2017. It's hurricane season now until November 30th
@MxPotato842 жыл бұрын
In the northeast, we get 3-4 false springs and 5 different winters before spring actually sets in. And in autumn, we experience all 4 seasons! Depending, we get a Halloween hurricane (like super storm Sandy), or a Halloween blizzard. The northeast has some of the craziest weather. Tornadoes are rare but really scary when one appears. My hometown got pretty messed up from a micro burst back in May of 2018. I live in an apartment and my building was shaking like crazy. I had no power for 64 hours.
@The7Reaper2 жыл бұрын
I remember the tornado super outbreak of 2011, I live in North Carolina and luckily there was never any touchdowns in my area but it seemed like there was a tornado watch almost every single day for a couple months, tornadoes are one of my biggest fears and I was 14 at the time so it was a very anxiety inducing time for me lol
@williamanderson52952 жыл бұрын
I was living outside Chicago Illinois at the time, and it was a warm 72+F day. On the horizon I saw what looked like a sideways tornado tearing across the landscape that filled the horizon. In a few minutes it rolled over us and the temperatures plummeted and it started to snow. Just like that, strangest thing I ever saw.
@babydoll228552 жыл бұрын
I was living in Alabama on April 27 2011 and experienced first hand the tornado outbreak. The warnings overlapped each other most of the day. One tornado (waterspout) missed the boat I lived on by 8 feet. The scariest day of my life and I'm almost 68 years old!
@bazzer1242 жыл бұрын
From 1960 - 1963 I lived in Ft Wainwright (Fairbanks) AK. My birthday is in Jan. On my first b-day there, it got to -44°F. You would literally keep the car running all winter long to prevent the gas and oil lines from freezing. I live in Chicago now and people here moan about cold winter weather all the time. If they only knew! Cheers....
@Linerunner992 жыл бұрын
Getting caught in a tornado here in Rhode Island is the freakiest weather I've ever been in. Tornados are exceptionally rare here so when my friend and I spotted one coming toward us we didn't really get what it was at first. Once we did we barely made it inside before it hit. There was damage but luckily no deaths from it.
@thoroakenshield72832 жыл бұрын
My favorite Kiwi family! I live in Maine and lived all over the United States during my career with the Army. I've been through blizzards, ice storms, hurricanes, and tornadoes. Never a dull moment in our weather.
@David_F972 жыл бұрын
You guys should react to a video just about tornadoes. Your reactions were great when they talked about tornadoes
@dustinheese2 жыл бұрын
The "water spout" in this video gets me every time. A water spout is basically a weather phenomenon and this guy shows a drain because it's what came up on his stock footage search. Most of these events have images or video available that he choose not to search for.
@ESUSAMEX2 жыл бұрын
I'm originally from NY, and I now live in Florida. I have lived through many hurricanes, a couple of tornadoes, many blizzards and an earthquake while living in Mexico. Just last week was Hurricane Ian. Ian wasn't that bad near me, but the tornado warnings were very scary. Since most Florida homes do not have basements, we needed to get into a windowless room like our bathrooms. I tracked the tornado by computer while waiting for the warning to officially end. The coldest temperature I have ever felt was like -35 F in northern NY State on the border with Canada in the early 1990s. The hottest temperature I have felt was 120 F in the Summer of 2003 at Phoenix International Airport in Phoenix, Arizona.
@twilightmemoryfox2 жыл бұрын
and most older houses in Florida don't have a windowless room so its the hallway you have to go, nothing comforting there
@stevenmills32 жыл бұрын
I live in up state New York I remember a blizzard that dropped 10 or twelve of snow it was over a week before we went back to school! We made a snow fort out our back door!!😊
@baileypaliolonga56202 жыл бұрын
The craziest weather event I have ever experienced in fact just happened… Hurricane Ian. I had to evacuate so instead of experiencing it at a cat 4, I experienced it at a cat 2, but it was still something wild!!! I stayed awake the entire night constantly checking out the window to make sure the road wasn’t flooded. Thankfully the road didn’t flood more than a few inches and no trees fell down… Just some big branches were ripped off by the winds. At home though quite a few trees fell down and now I have a new view outside my apartment window!!! Lol.
@narsil1002 жыл бұрын
It got a brief mention in this video, but the Dust Bowl is an interesting topic to look into, especially if you're interested in environmental history like I am. It's deeply entwined with American westward expansion, environmental conservation, and the cultural impact was huge as it forced millions to move out of the Plains and into California and the Pacific Northwest in the midst of the Great Depression.
@TedBronson19182 жыл бұрын
I've lived through lots of snowstorms and blizzards that have dumped feets of snow, but I think ice storms are in a category of their own. There's nothing like waking up at dawn, after a night long ice storm, and peering out your window before there is so much as a footstep or tire track breaking the freshly fallen ice/snow. It looks like everything has been dipped in crystal - it's quite beautiful. Then everyone wakes up and starts moving around, the accidents start in and the damage becomes apparent as daylight comes to the full. It's a good time to take a couple of sick days until the roads are cleared and they've taken fallen electrical wires/poles out of the roads.
@cherylbrunette24902 жыл бұрын
I remember those they are the worst, during one of those storms, my car wouldn't start so my boss told me to start walking and he would pick me up, I could not stay on my feet, I did get to work, the storm got worse throughout the day, crazy boss, luckily my boyfriend at the time came to get me home safely.
@Doug44222 жыл бұрын
Living in the American Midwest, I see some really crazy weather, from all four seasons in a single day, to 6 foot of snow in a matter of 3 weeks. The most recent was winter 2011, when we caught 2 feet of snow in 12 hours.
@ibuguru2 жыл бұрын
Buffalo, NY is notorious for "Lake Effect Snow," and has even had October Blizzards which dumped 6 feet of snow in a couple of days. A friend got stranded downtown and slept on the lobby floor with a couple hundred others for 3 nights until roads were cleared enough to get home - just a couple miles north of downtown, a distance she typically walked.
@tracygalley87132 жыл бұрын
Buffalo ny here too was just about to comment on snowvember lol
@Menace2Society92 жыл бұрын
The snow fall in Buffalo NY(near by areas) in 2014 was amazing.. over 7ft of snow in around 5/6 days. Also in 1993 there was a massive blizzard that dumped snow on many!
@saber1able2 жыл бұрын
On Halloween of 91 in Northern Minnesota we got 3 feet of snow in about 7hrs. Went into the bar in early evening with no snow on the ground and left after midnight with 3 feet of snow covering everything and snowmobiles running up and down main street.
@russellhoyt5882 жыл бұрын
I'm in Western NY, too. I remember that.
@jasonrichards37852 жыл бұрын
Y'all need to research the Blizzard of '93. Oh my, that was a storm. It stretched from Cuba to Canada. My dad worked for the Georgia Department of Transportation at that time. They were in charge of clearing the highways of snow. Some places in Georgia (in the deep south) had 6 ft. (2 meters) of snow in the highway. Military Humvees got stuck trying to rescue people. At my mom and dad's home, we experienced -20 Celsius temperatures (in Ellijay, Georgia). It was a beast of a storm.
@Rzar2 жыл бұрын
Couple years ago, in April, the weather in Wisconsin changed from high sixties to four foot snowfall. It was so bad that people had to dig out of their doors. It all disappeared in a couple days from the sun.
@tina62772 жыл бұрын
I got 12 inches from that storm at my place. Snow was gone on my granddaughters birthday she and her friends were playing outside 2 days later I was trying to dig our way out to get to town.
@deniselove15852 жыл бұрын
Saw it rain frogs once in Odessa, Tx. I was 7 years old, and we had a lot of fun catching them. Never forgot the sight of the ground moving with tiny hopping frogs! Enjoy your channel.
@joemmac2 жыл бұрын
I lived through Hurricane Sandy which was that huge storm in 2012 that made a left hook right into the coast of NJ (where I live). The coastal flooding caused by storm-surge, was historic and the damage caused was amazingly wide-spread.
@beckiturbeville33812 жыл бұрын
I was in VA went Sandy hit, we lost power for a week. That was a bad storm.
@funnyusername86352 жыл бұрын
@jz 🤡
@ryangibbons67232 жыл бұрын
@jz bruh people 30 miles inland didn't have power and cable for 3 weeks after sandy and the subsequent noreaster
@Espnfan8802 жыл бұрын
I also live in NJ
@tommyharmon93172 жыл бұрын
From Long Island, my house was destroyed
@MrGary10k2 жыл бұрын
I live in Northern Iowa. We are are in tornado and severe thunderstorm country. We also see Derechos (high straight line winds) The coldest winter temperatures we have had here the past couple of years was -60°F with windchill. It gets cold here on the plains. When you see Sundogs(vertical rainbows) around here, you know it's cold. We are a hardy folk here, so we take it in stride. It was fun to watch your reactions to this video. Best wishes to you and yours!
@timothyscheidler63652 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio. I remember well the tornadoes of April 3rd 1974. Lived through it. We had fifty funnel clouds in and around Cincinnati that day. It was terrifying. We had a town two counties to the northeast (Xenia, Ohio) that was completely leveled by a funnel cloud that was over a mile wide.
@imweakfordeaky2 жыл бұрын
Cincinnatian here too !
@timothyscheidler63652 жыл бұрын
@@imweakfordeaky what part of town?
@visasmom Жыл бұрын
I remember that day vividly! I lived just outside of Cincinnati in Okeana, OH. It was crazy.
@timothyscheidler6365 Жыл бұрын
@@visasmom it was terrifying.
@wesandchelle2 жыл бұрын
I have lived in the South (Mississippi, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Florida, Georgia and Tennessee) my whole life. I have been through many hurricanes, so were quite devastating. I've seen tornadoes forming. We have to find shelter almost yearly for tornado warnings. I felt a small tremor once, but never a major earthquake. Tornadoes are the scariest to me because they are so unpredictable.
@robertkulevich35282 жыл бұрын
When I was in Pennsylvania, the Blizzard of '93 was the most severe weather event I had experienced. Snow for three days straight left snow drifts of over 8 feet tall. We had to "dig tunnels" through the snow for people and cars to pass throughj!
@tubeyou222100 Жыл бұрын
I was snowed in at work for three days during this event in PA snow drifts covering the exits that opened outward and were blocked by the snow drifts.
@susanengel-ix8bl Жыл бұрын
Yep!! That was really awesome!!
@kellibarnes44902 жыл бұрын
This summer has been one of the craziest I’ve experienced in Texas…nearly 70 days straight without rain, almost a month straight with triple-digit temperatures (approx. 40+ degrees Celsius I believe). Dripping sweat and hard to breathe just going to check the mail, curly hair didn’t stand a chance in the humidity, and especially difficult having recently developed a sun allergy. I’m so ready for some sweater weather.
@nightshadewinter69152 жыл бұрын
Dude same! The Summer was unbearably hot. For me the temperature was consistently over 100°F all July.
@amandakallas89082 жыл бұрын
Definitely a Hot one this summer. Over 100 F for at least 2 straight months in West Texas.
@mysam45042 жыл бұрын
This summer had been pretty ridiculous-I had completely spaced because, for me, TX is supposed to be hot. For me, I chose 2021's Deep Freeze as the wildest weather I've encountered.
@sparkle51642 жыл бұрын
I got lucky since it stayed about the same in my area (I'm also in Texas) however it was still in the 3 digits. I think the hottest it got here was around 115 F (About 46 C) which although is hot, is pretty normal here. I stayed inside all day so I guess it wasn't too much of an issue XD
@WyattRyeSway Жыл бұрын
So true!
@dreamweaver89132 жыл бұрын
I live about 35 miles from Chicago. After seeing the Hurricane Ian aftermath pictures and videos from Fort Myers and Sanibel Island over the last few days, my heart goes out to those people. Houses flattened, fishing boats and yachts slung into homes like they were toys. Just unbelieveable.
@ironseabeelost11402 жыл бұрын
My wife and I are both retired SeaBee's living in Pensacola, FL. The hometown of the US Navy "Blue Angels". In our military career and up to today have seen and live through a bit of these things. Much preparation needs to be done before. Many hours are spent aiding those that have lost everything afterwards.
@ChaoticBirb0072 жыл бұрын
My personal weirdest weather experience was in 2014 in Afghanistan. It was shortly after the new year, so it was still a pretty cool day. The area I was in rarely dropped below 50°F. I was sitting on the roof of our building just watching the sky when I noticed a massive rain cell coming my way. Naturally, I move to get out of the impending storm because it’s also the middle of monsoon season. As I turned around, a massive wall of sand was coming from the opposite direction. We were about to be slammed by monsoon rains on one side and sand storms on the other. It rained mud for a couple days after that
@jasonrichards37852 жыл бұрын
In 1974, Yellow Creek Baptist Church in Pickens County, Georgia was blown away except for the floor of the church, the pulpit, and the Bible left on the pulpit.
@randomuser34272 жыл бұрын
I love your videos, keep up the hard work
@kazzellinempanger89982 жыл бұрын
I live in Minnesota (midwest, bordering Canada), and we get our share of tornados up here, but not as bad as tornado alley, which we're barely inside of. The closest tornado I've lived through was in the 80's--passed a couple of miles from our house, flattening an under-construction shopping mall/apartment complex area. Mom drove us kids up to see the destruction; had a healthy respect for tornados after that. 😬 If you want more extreme weather videos, there are a few channels that are run by weather chasers, and some posted by the ones in charge of running the aftermath. The Joplin tornado and "5 Minutes in May" come to mind.
@jaehee95192 жыл бұрын
When I was in grade 2 Hurricane Isabelle hit my peninsula. We were without power for over two weeks, even with being on a hospital grid. I remember the sound of chainsaws filled the air from morning to sundown every day. Great pine and oak trees littered every road, more houses than not had blue tarps over holes in their roofs. It is a place that is accustomed to hurricanes though, so people with medical need had backup generators, everyone had propane and grills, extra gasoline and chainsaws, landline phone connections, and community was strong in sharing supplies as needed. I enjoyed the weeks without school and power as my brother and I played hoard games with our family and read books by lamplight.
@theresawheat91422 жыл бұрын
I'm from the east coast of Central Florida in the Daytona Beach area and the flooding was awful. DNR was rescuing people from residential areas by air boats and people were using their kayaks to get around. I heard that an alligator swam through a woman's house....and there is some great footage of a shark swimming down a street in Fort Meyers. He looked really 😊 😳 happy
@beckybanta1262 жыл бұрын
I have been in 4 tornados in different states.....scary indeed. God blessed our family & homes with no injuries or distractions. Lots of pray & help given to others. As you might of heard, the storm Ian has been beyond belief. Prayers & resources
@arkboi21452 жыл бұрын
Hi! Thank you for the video. As someone who lives in the USA, I’d like to expand on our weather a bit more. Each region or zone of the USA experiences different types of weather events as well as the severity of them. Here is a list of some typical weather events one might expect: [The West Coast/South West - CA, NV, AZ, OR, UT, ID] - Dry Air - Wind Gusts - Heat Lightning - Drought - Bushfires - Fire Tornados - Sand/Dust Storms (Haboobs) - Landslides - Earthquakes - Volcanic Eruptions [The East Coast/South East - FL, GA, AL, MS, LA, SC, NC, VA] - Humid Air - Thunderstorms - Rain - Floods - Hurricanes - Tornados (Cat.1-2) - Ice Storms/Ice - Bug Swarms [The Midwest / Middle States - TX, NM, OK, AR, KO, KS, MO, WI, NE, IA] - Wind - Downbursts/Upbursts - Tornados (Cat. 3-5) - Thunderstorms - Rain - Floods - Hail - Snow - Dust Storms (Haboobs) - Landslides - Earthquakes
@guitarplr34292 жыл бұрын
The April 2011 tornado outbreak sent several tornadoes through southeastern Tennessee. The one that hit in the morning damaged my neighborhood and was awesome to see but also terrifying at the same time.
@emilienicole3702 жыл бұрын
Yea I live in southwest virginia and I remember that night vividly. It hit here right before sunset. We had multiple in virginia with 2 hitting the county next to me. That area was also where a lot of my family live so it was stressful to say the least.
@rdshadden12 жыл бұрын
I was in the 2011 tornado swarm when I lived in Huntsville, AL. The F4 tornado crossed 2 miles north of our house. The sound is something I will never forget.
@LiveSimpleLiveFree2 жыл бұрын
In Colorado we had baseball sized hail and tornados one summer day. Smashed 2,700 windshields in our town and caused massive damage.
@saintchuck31322 жыл бұрын
I love when u say "Far out" which to me born in 1987.. Is an old hippie type-a phrase from the 60-70s era term...love it..just my understanding here in a Detroit, Mi suburb
@yugioht422 жыл бұрын
you should see the footage from Hurricane Ian and that is nuts
@boondoggled12 жыл бұрын
Sharks swimming in the roads 😬
@lindsayruiz37892 жыл бұрын
I made a video about it.. watching it helps me heal/deal with my new reality...
@denisewilliams70182 жыл бұрын
Love your laugh Sam! And Denzil, spot on the American English accent. Sending love from San Antonio, Texas🤠
@natalieulschak88552 жыл бұрын
I am from Louisiana. And have experienced hurricane Katrina. It was so bad and the traffic going on the interstate was horrible. I was displace many different states. One time I traveled from Louisiana to North Carolina then left and went to live in Lawrence Ville, Georgia. Then back to Sneeds Ferry ⛴ North Carolina and then to Palaka , Florida. But I am glad to be back in Slidell , Louisiana. Because home is where the ❤ is.
@LazyDaze862 жыл бұрын
Yes ma'am. I'm from Baton Rouge myself, spent near a decade traveling the world and I'm right back in Baton Rouge lol.
@ChaoticBirb0072 жыл бұрын
I was in middle school (8th grade) in Texas when Katrina hit. We had so many kids transferring over from Louisiana to get away from it. I remember being at my mom’s house and watching the sky turn from a beautiful sunset to an incredibly unnerving green in a matter of minutes because of Katrina
@danastearns79392 жыл бұрын
another fine reaction from our NZ Family! My husband's dad & siblings survived the Tri State Tornado in March 1925. His dad was 8 and his siblings, 3 brothers and 3 sisters, along with his Dad & Mom were living in Murphysboro, IL.
@carolfrazer80672 жыл бұрын
I live in the Upper Midwest USA. The coldest it's been where I live is about -30, but the windchill make it so much worse. I've seen snow as high as driving through tunnels. I'm in a rural area where it's not too populated. When the wind blows the snow, we get something called a white out and black ice. My town has been hit by tornados and a Derecho. I've lived through 5 tornados. They are scary. Especially at night when the power goes out. It's pitch black and you can't see a thing. But you can hear the roaring of a freight train. (there are no train tracks near me. Closest is 30 miles away) I have no shelter except my bathtub. It also floods here. Turn around, don't drown we always say. Maybe it's time for a trip to the Upper Midwest so you can experience our weather first hand.
@David_Theisen2 жыл бұрын
You must live in Iowa cuz I live in Dubuque! That was a crazy summer because of that Derecho!! But my folks and I lived in Northern Minnesota in the early 90s, in 94 on January 4th it was brutally cold!! So much so that my day of classes at my college was cancelled! I can’t remember what the high temperature was but including the wind chill factor it was -89* F!! Brutally and bitterly cold!!!
@throughthoroughthought8064 Жыл бұрын
You "have no shelter" in tornado-country?? You've got a tiny closet, (3'x3') take several 2x4s and fortify it. If you can, do it on the inside of the closet walls and around the outside, if you want to put a little extra effort on the wall-repairings. Yeah, white-outs and black ice are both pretty bad, as well as coming out from behind some woods into a strong cross-wind can be a hairy deal.
@mindweavers2 жыл бұрын
Well I was born during thundersnow (A thunderstorm with snow instead of rain, thunder and lightening included), I've stood under a forming F3 tornado, We had an ice storm that had us listening all night to the popping(as they snapped) and falling trees and had our power out from Christmas Day to New Year eve. Probably more but they elude me at the moment. Great reaction, enjoyable video. Blessings to you all.
@marleybob31572 жыл бұрын
I live in Maryland where we get four distinct seasons. In 2011, we even had an earthquake though not the type that destroys buildings. I was on the floor playing with the dog when the ground started to shake. It lasted about ten seconds and was actually quite pleasant. Turned out to be a 5.8. The worst was in in 1996 when we had two and a half feet of snow in two days. Then it kept snowing. By the end of the week, my Honda was completely buried under snow. It took forever to dig that out!
@Meriale462 жыл бұрын
Did you forget that In 2016 we had a blizzard that dropped nearly 30 inches of snow on Maryland? In 2003 nearly 27 inches...the 1996 blizzard was very close to the one in 2003 at just over 26 inches of snow.
@danielcobbins90502 жыл бұрын
I was caught in the blizzard back in '96, in Virginia. Was stuck for a day and a half before I got out. I travelled south on I-85, and there was snow as far south as Georgia. Heard about the quake of 2011. The epicenter was in Louisa County, VA.
@Espnfan8802 жыл бұрын
@@Meriale46 we had snow on Halloween in NJ I remember one year we had an earthquake in August
@powdertrax97422 жыл бұрын
A weather event that was near and dear to my heart, was the World Record single season snow fall record at the Mount Baker Ski area in Washington State. The record set was 1140”/95’/29 meters and made for some of the best powder snowboarding I have ever experienced. With that amount of snow it filled in areas that normally could never be ridden, placing tracks in some insane areas. On chair #6 where it crests the first hill the ski patrol were digging out the chairlifts by hand, while on the chair you were actually lower then the surface of the snow. If you ever go boarding/skiing there pay attention to some of the chairlift poles (Riblets), when the snow was at its deepest the patrollers went around the resort and painted a white line with “98-99” signifying the year of the storm. Some of those paint lines are literally 30’ above the average snowfall years, which Mt Baker consistently has the deepest snow of any resort.
@sueby19622 жыл бұрын
I've lived in Tornado Alley (Kansas) my entire life and have seen numerous tornadoes. The largest one I've seen was an EF 4 that hit McConnell AFB in 1991. My husband was on base at the time and I was home with my kids (3 and 1at the time). It hit the base and was heading right for us but took a turn and missed us by a mile or so. It hit Andover, Ks and tragically killed 22 people. The thing about Ks is we experience all the seasons. Bone chilling cold (last winter it got down to 15 below zero) to mind frying hot (it was 112° just a couple months ago). There's no place like home.🌪❄☀
@allenwhitmer81922 жыл бұрын
That tornado just kept picking up in intensity. It started as an F3 around Clearwater, and by the time it hit Andover, it was an F5. If I remember right, the very next year, another tornado followed the same path, just not near the intensity. This spring, Andover got hit again and pretty much wiped out the YMCA. It was pretty strange seeing cars 2 floors up sticking out the front of the building.
@markhicks98642 жыл бұрын
as a child growing up in charleston west virginia, i went to bed one night in 1977 or 1978, im old and cant remember. the snow had just started to fall. i woke up at 6 am and was getting ready for school and my bestie knocked on my door and said, what are you doing, i said getting ready for school. he said there is no school today and fell backwards off my porch and disappeared . we got 27 inches of snow overnight. town was no go for about a week and a half. sweet memories.
@michaelkemp26962 жыл бұрын
The weather event that I remember most happen in December 1976. On December 24 which was Christmas Eve, it was 61 degrees Fahrenheit that day. By 22:00 a thunder storm hit us. Thunder storms this late in the year are unusual. When I had awoken on Christmas morning a heavy snow had began to fall. By the end of the day we had received about 6 to 8 inches of snow on the ground. We received more snow through out most of the winter by the end of winter we had received around 20 inches of snow. It was not until early March before we could see the ground. The winter that followed a year later we were to get more snow and temperatures fell to more than 20 degrees Fahrenheit below zero. But the snow we received on Christmas Eve 1976 was my favorite because it meant a white Christmas. Of course these two winters were unusual for us here in South central Ohio, our winters here are usually more mild. But in states like Minnesota, Montana, Michigan, Wisconsin and prairie States they would be considered mild to what they are used to.
@J__T2 жыл бұрын
The two that instantly came to mind was the time when the Mississippi river flowed backward due to a storm (hurricane? don't remember really) & the TWO times the river in Cleveland, Ohio caught fire. As in the water itself caught fire. Good times.
@Cricket27312 жыл бұрын
The Mississippi River went backwards due to the New Madrid quake, too!
@folkflying22 жыл бұрын
The chemicals and oil dumped for years is what burned in the Cuyahoga. That and the huge amount of trash. She actually has caught fire more than a dozen times over the years.
@sandylee95642 жыл бұрын
I was in Oklahoma on May 3 1999 when a humungous tornado ripped across the state and I was on the road headed home and I saw a rornado to my North that turned deadly just a few miles down the road. I feel blessed.
@gardenalways2 жыл бұрын
I've survived a couple tornadoes; a few ice storms; a couple of blizzards and all happened in Ohio. Look up the Blizzard of '78. It buried entire semi trucks and mobile homes. I lived in a mobile home park at the time and the National Guard had to dig me out. Went to bed that night and it was snowing pretty hard. Next morning I couldn't see out the windows or open the door. I was under a snow drift. Banging on pots and pans till rescuers heard me.
@briandstephmoore49102 жыл бұрын
Love watching the reactions! So wholesome and may I say you've got a Beautiful family.
@codygates74182 жыл бұрын
As a southerner the only weather we get worried about is snow lmao 😂 I also live in the southern region of the Ohio valley and we are PLAQUED with tornados. We latterly had like 3 in 1 month. Thankfully where I live it usually passes over, but the last one hit only a few miles down the rode from my house. Pretty scary
@codygates74182 жыл бұрын
@jz I’m not from Ohio. I’m from KY. Aka below the Mason-Dixon Line. The Ohio Valley is geographically linked to about 7 states Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia, and parts of Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee.
@vault71372 жыл бұрын
I live in western PA, so we're quite lucky weather-wise. We don't see many tornadoes, large-scale forest fires, hurricanes or winter storms. That's not to say we haven't had our share of bad weather. The blizzards of '93 and '94 were something, and our last bad winter storm was in 2010. I remember extremely cold temperatures in 1977 when my brother was born. It was late January and I remember my dad hanging a heavy blanket over the doorway of our living room, and my mom & brother slept in there for the first month of his life. We always had a wood burning stove going as well as the furnace, but dad also kept the fireplace in the living room lit where mom and Jason were, just as a precaution.
@michaelschemlab2 жыл бұрын
The craziest weather I’ve ever experienced was back in 2016 there was a massive blizzard dubbed “snowmageddon” that produced up to 3 ft (0.9 meters) of snow. It caused my school district to close for an entire week, and the Governors of a lot of east coast states declared a state of emergency
@erinmineo8302 жыл бұрын
Christmas 2017, most snow I've ever seen in my entire life. I live in Erie, pa..we got about 6 feet of snow in two days, there was no leaving the house
@themountainkrafttake22 жыл бұрын
I live in NW Montana and just a couple winters ago it reached -35 degrees that day and stayed in the negatives for about 2 days after.
@Brylj752 жыл бұрын
I'm a Texan and my wife a kiwi. We have been through 2 tornadoes in one day. It was during hurricane Rita
@Jacob_Roberts2 жыл бұрын
I live close to Dallas, Texas. Texas is frequently called "tornado alley" because of all the tornadoes we get.
@rayworx2 жыл бұрын
Love your channel... Both my parents lived through the 'dust bowl' in Oklahoma in 1935. Which led to them moving to California in 1938. They didn't know each other then but both moved to the Los Angeles area which was the Mecca for the Okies (as they were called because they were from Oklahoma). Watch 'The Grapes Of Wrath' for a pretty accurate account of life in and after the Dust Bowl.
@3DJapan2 жыл бұрын
A couple years ago we had 8 tornados here in the Philadelphia area. To my knowledge we never even had a warning here before that.
@bintheredonethat2 жыл бұрын
Witnessed a hundred year flood along the Mississippi River around St Louis, MO. Water as far as you could see. I live in the Midwest and the tornado sirens were tested yesterday, Oct 3, not a cloud in the sky. They test them on the 1st Monday every month. When the weather is really bad & those things go off it makes the hair on the back your neck stand up, especially at night when you can't see what's coming. Very eerie, mournful sound. Been in a 3 day long blizzard that buried my car. Was on top of Steamboat Springs, CO skiing when a white out hit. Could barely see your hand in front of your face at times. Took at least a couple of hours to get off the mountain, which by that time had been closed.
@Wyoboy72202 жыл бұрын
Love the video, I live in Wyoming so we get blizzards, occasionally a tornado and lots and lots of wind.
@saber1able2 жыл бұрын
I thought that maybe the snowstorm we had on Halloween in northern Minnesota back in 91 might have been mentioned. Local drinking establishments often have Halloween parties. We entered the local bar in early evening with zero snow on the ground. When we left, just after midnight, there was 3 feet of snow covering everything. Another thing that we get is very cold weather during the winter. I have seen -60F on many occasions, -35F is not uncommon and -30F is to be expected each year. Thankd for sharing.
@RobynS97222 жыл бұрын
Easter Sunday, 4.12.2020, we were hit by a 2.25 mile wide tornado. Most my family live in the same community around Laurel, MS. We lost our homes, vehicles, gardens... but no lives were lost from my family. A couple of neighbors died, I was hurt trying to climb out but am ok now. I had nightmares and would wake up screaming, I've even jumped off the bed in my sleep, hurting myself landing on the floor, hitting furniture, etc. I saw the tornado and just made it inside my bathroom when it hit. I hope and pray I never see another one as long as I live. First good night's sleep I got was the day my storm shelter was delivered. I tear up every time I see it. I can't begin to explain the sound, the feeling or the smell. There's just no words.
@christinadvorak72642 жыл бұрын
I live in southern minnesota and i have been in 3 different tornados in my life. They were very scary and i thought i was going to die every time. I am always listening during a storm now for a train. That is what a tornado sounds like.
@hipzipper12 жыл бұрын
I realized today how long I've been watching you guys. Your tikes are growing up so fast. Keep on with your vids and I'll keep watching. Thanks.
@lindaburgess72902 жыл бұрын
You guys really love each other and have so much fun too! Love it!❤❤❤❤
@stuartthompson50032 жыл бұрын
I live in tulsa,ok. We are smack dab in the middle of tornado alley. Sometimes we get some very serious weather. I find it exciting, up to a point. I dig watching your videos. Keep them coming. Thank you.
@kenmartin19192 жыл бұрын
Hello all from Georgetown California!!! Home of the Rubicon Trail.
@TheRyelandfamily2 жыл бұрын
In Michigan we have a saying “wait 5 minutes the weather will change”. In 1 day I experienced rain, sleet, snow, thunderstorm, and a tornado warning. Luckily no tornadoes. Later in the afternoon the weather cleared and it was a beautiful sunny afternoon