Finally? There’s thousands of videos that are regular time, not time-lapsed, and last even longer than this video..I think you’ll be even more happy to see those video’s! Lol
Time lapses "deliberately" skip frames and when that is done, you would miss essential details, visual information. Slow those down, and they turn into colorized movies from 115+ years ago. These then go hand-in-hand, with turning a video into a gratuitous, narcissistic selfie; patronizing [kindergarten-level] commentary featuring poor grammar & accents unintelligible to American ears; captions that are the aural equivalent, plastered across the action that you're trying to see; and, worst of all, making clownish jokes about something that's obviously terrible and tragic--making fun of some poor people's acute sufferings.
I live in Brookings SD and I was stuck in walmart the whole time this was happening. I'm glad there is people like you out there that has gotten video of this storm from damn near start to finish. Thank you!❤
I had just left Walmart a minute or two before the storm hit. I was crossing the interstate when the wind hit and thought it was going to flip my truck. Must say that was the only time that I ever actually wanted to be inside of Walmart 😂😅
I was in Walmart at the time as we were ushered to a back area to wait out the blast. I met the woman of my dreams huddled back there. We chatted like we ki knew each other are whole lives. Like a fool, I didnt get her phone number.
This made me think about what it must have been like during the Dust Bowl. Can you imagine roaring winds tearing up miles upon miles of parched dry soil just compounding the effects of the storm. And these storms raged for hours literally burying everything in their path with feet of topsoil. It must have been hellish.
WOW, that is crazy. For about 5 minutes it looked to be "end of the world" kind of scary. Not having ever been in a bad dust storm I think I can say I've no idea what that would be like, day turning into night. Thanks for sharing.
@HK Guitar, indeed, consider tho what the real "end of the world" is going to look like... Actually, as the clouds rolled in it reminded me for a second of "Independence Day" where the alien ships would slowly start to appear out of the clouds! Just think tho, this is another variation of "wind". We know some forces of wind can toss into the air, objects weighing tons, it can twist and bend large steel beams and "separate" the fibers of telephone polls and shove a piece of straw into it. It can also gently move across your skin & hair as a relaxing, cooling breeze... In all of this it's completely "invisible" but it's effects are still seen, heard and felt.
I’ve experienced a few of these when I lived in Phoenix. Day to night in seconds. I also think I have valley fever from breathing in the dust during those storms. Ah well, the storm freak that I am loved being out in the middle of them.
@Skyward Music Good Point Skyward. I live in Northern Michigan and years ago I had friends visiting from Arkansas who had never experienced a Blizzard. We had places to go and once we got on the road during the Blizzard conditions my friends kind of started unraveling! Like you said, its all what we get used to, are conditioned to accept and live with.
It's also possible for Derecho to create conditions darker than night. Dust blocks out all ambient light and your headlights become useless. I experienced that.
From what I understand is that there was a 1400 mile wide sand storm headed to the east side of the US. Now I wonder if a sandstorm is in correlation with a derecho. I live in the PNW so I don't know what this is like. I've been in a couple of micro bursts (driving not fun) but it didn't completely block out the sun.
You’re so right about headlights being useless. I was out in the middle of nowhere and you could not see. Leaves, dirt, dust and corn shafts going by at unbelievable speeds. I’ve been in 3 tornados but I was never so scared as I was driving through the derecho. Not only not being able to see, but my 21’ Silverado was picked up & thrown in a ditch with the greatest of ease. PTSD to this day.
Yikes. What a storm. Have experienced a derecho in Tulsa (2012) that left behind damage that was comparable to tornado damage- most of the city's power was out for days, no groceries, it was crazy. But even having lived in TX and OK with many strong storms and tornadoes, to my recollection none of them made it pitch black like this in the daytime. That makes it feel so sinister. Glad you shared this with us.
Derecho's have been around a long time. Meteorologist's just referred to them as "straight line winds" till fairly recently. I was in one back in 2008/2009 in Indiana. You could literally see the rain going perfectly horizontal, while lawn furniture and other loose objects blew along with it! lol Haboob's however, are rarer. A "dust storm" is lower to the ground and caused by surface winds. "Haboob's" are much higher up because they are part of a thunderstorm's winds. It's kinda like the whole storm system becomes an E-F1 tornado ... without the circular motion. Having both at the same time is phenomenal to watch - but I wouldn't want to be in it! Great job videoing!
Haboobs are not rare. They happen constantly in Arizona, Texas and New Mexico. Without a derecho there will not be a haboob. The only thing rare here is the state in which it happened.
I think derechos simply used to be under the label of "squall line" despite being somewhat different than a typical squall. The term "straight-line winds" was never used to label a type of storm.
@@SagebrushRambles the original commenter stated they had experienced it in Indiana, I would think its safe to assume, us hoosier folks dont even know what a haboob is... so it'd be fair to claim its extremely rare and unheard of especially in southern indiana.
It's best to think of a Derecho as an unwrapped Tornado. Instead of cyclonic spin, the storms maintains all super cell properties but can widen to 600 km wide. So instead of an ultra violent 30 second Tornado, you get a 2 hour land hurricane.
We experienced a derecho that came thru our small town and it felt just like I imagine a tornado would!! It was terrifying! You could hear the nails squeaking as the wind pulled violently at the frame of the house! We were praying for sure!! Blew down almost every tree in town and exploded multiple windows in our house!
Only 100-years ago, living in a shack on the plains, people had almost nothing to work with. So, they pasted newsprint on the walls to keep the piles of dust from coming in the cracks.
I deal with it daily, here in North Dakota, on the prairies. That superfine dust permeates the walls and windows and gets on EVERYTHING. But yea, 90 years ago, during the 1930s, it happened for the first time in recorded history to the point it was devastating to the entire midwest of the country.
@@rhondaalbrecht I used to live in the hills/Mtns of San Diego and it was super dusty there. If I dusted in the morning it would show dust later that day. That superfine dust is the worst though.
I live in Texas and have been through 17 tornadoes. I've been deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan three times and dealt with sandstorms. This looked like the worst of both. I'm moving to Sioux Falls in August. I guess I'll feel right at home :D Corporate farms that clear the land and don't plant any trees for wind breaks are the cause of this. South Dakota needs to reform some of its laws.
@Ian, thank you for your military service! 17 tornadoes, good grief! I've only witnessed one that stopped a mile from my house & that's not a straight mile but a twisty one as the streets curve a lot. I never saw the funnel but the rotating cloud. The sound of the wind isn't something you forget and then the damage you could here being done in the distance. I wasn't sure what to call it but there was a small "ghost tornado" that spun off from it which came down the side street in this direction carrying some debris about 50ft? up... I looked at that thing like, "No, it has to go!" and thankfully it vanished and the debris fell. All went silent just as Fire & Rescue dispatched. It was like a war zone at the entrance/exits to the neighborhood with mangled electric poles, trees on/in houses etc. That storm traveled a length of nearly 50 miles picking up & setting the tornado back down. It was said to be ~137mph winds here. Hadn't been one in this area in nearly 100 yrs.
Guys, HERE is The Savior HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH” YaH is The Heavenly Father YaH is Who Created “Man (Adam)” YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING YaH was Who they Crucified for the sins OF “Man” ** NO female involved WHATSOEVER ** - Hebrew Book of Isaiah Isaiah 42:8 "I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols. Isaiah 43:11 I, I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me. Isaiah 45:5 I am YaH, and there is none else.
I’ve lived here most my life and these don’t happen…my middle son lost a teacher at his high school from this storm and my oldest son lost his former manager at his previous job. Others died in surrounding communities as well. I hope these don’t start happening more frequently but you’re right, lots of dry fields aren’t helping. The city itself isn’t what it used to be, unfortunately, but welcome nonetheless.
HOLY COW THAT'S INSANE. IT LOOKS LIKE THE END OF THE WORLD. IT WENT FROM DAY TO NIGHT IN MINUTES. I'M IN FLORIDA AND WE GET STORMS, BUT NOTHING LIKE THIS. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR TAKING THIS VIDEO AND SHARING IT WITH US. GOD BLESS YOU AND YOURS, STAY SAFE ALWAYS.
Hurricanes get just as bad if not worse. Florida is actually one of the most vulnerable states due to it bordering both the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean, both being warm during the summer. This storm only turned day into night because of the dust caught due to the low level winds caused by low pressures.
Having been through two Derecho’s in Quincy, IL (2011/2015) that shut the city down for a week with devastation you can find yet today…..I’m completely impressed with this video!! Where I was at, I couldn’t see but could definitely feel and hear what was going on! While they are beautiful and amazing to watch, unfortunately they are very dangerous. Thank you for posting this and letting us all see what a derecho looks like when it comes in and goes out. I actually started to film the 2015 however when it came in, I bailed inside. On a side note, thank you for posting a very worthy video documenting a very serious storm and you took the matter serious and was obviously protective of your family. I happened to watch another video of this same storm that showed the storm coming in with horrendous “narration” by some woman who was more inclined to video tape the storm than protecting her son…thankfully there was a boyfriend that was….kinda🙄. Hopefully y’all got through the storm unscathed❤️
That line of clouds over the tops of those trees looked like an evil, wicked lip, cruelly snaring at you…. And then- wow! Such darkness! Just a moment after leaving your brightly lighted hallway and showing us just how incredibly dark it was outside, we saw a car with its light on. Until I figured out that your camera shook a little bit, I thought that car was being sucked up into a tornado! Lol! Great video- thanks for sharing it. Like others from Texas, I’ve been through a bunch of tornadoes, but I’ve never seen anything like this! I had to look up some new weather words, too!
Haboob? I haven't heard that word since I moved out of Mesa Arizona! I've driven through several Haboobs when I lived there, and have seen several multi-vehicle accidents as a result of them
This was great… heart pounding 💓 You must’ve been so nervous! You braved it out though and now we have this awesome footage 🏆 I couldn’t believe how FAST 💨 it went from bright to brown to BLACK !!
haven’t had a derecho since July 2021 and I’m certainly grateful, I’m glad that there are people like you out there who are certainly not afraid of massive storms!! Very nice and brave video.
Probably half were storm chasers, and the other half just people running home to their families. Watching " Ryan Hall, Y'all " on TH-cam is a good way to tell if you're about to expect weather like this, and the moment that a tornado touches the ground. I don't live where tornados often form, but it is exciting and interesting to watch. He's in close touch with storm chasers and shows you a weather map live, so there's a good chance he covered this storm, too.
My mom and I were driving back from the airport. We didn’t know the weather was supposed to be bad…. Lol it looked like a beautiful day before and after ! It was wild
@@kittmarie8285 we pulled into a gas station that was attached to a hotel. I know when it’s windy the Semi Trucks flip over if they are empty. There was a LOT of semis when we were driving so I didn’t want to take a chance it would flip over on us. I didn’t know it was going to be that crazy though lol. About 10 us took shelter in the gas station until it passed.
I currently stay in Maryland near Washington DC...I am looking to move to Brookings..We had a Derecho here a few years back Woo Wee that storm was mean,,I got my Grandmother mom and aunt in the basement of the house and waited out the storm......Parts of the area got hammered real bad..Blessings to you and many others.. So glad you are ok
HERE is The Savior HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH” YaH is The Heavenly Father YaH is Who Created “Man (Adam)” YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING YaH was Who they Crucified for the sins OF “Man” ** NO female involved WHATSOEVER ** - Hebrew Book of Isaiah Isaiah 42:8 "I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols. Isaiah 43:11 I, I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me. Isaiah 45:5 I am YaH, and there is none else.
While rain starts to effect other parts of the country more often it will rain less in other areas causing very dry conditions. This causes sand storms to develop over those dry areas pushing the sand along with it.
some towns didnt set off sirens and tried to avoid trouble by classifying it as a derecho instead of tornado a lot of people were angry and lost things because of it
Im in the NG unit just 45 min south of Brookings, and had been going to SDSU at the time. Was activated the next day to help clean up the mess is the area.
What a good video and the best I have seen yet of what happened! Most just show the approach and so thank you so much for sharing this! I just cannot believe how dark it got!!!
My grandparents live in brookings and i used to live there as well. My grandma was on the computer when it hit and a chunk of tar went through the window in the bathroom.
Caught a bit of this storm footage on the weather channel while at work. Nice job capturing it. It's interesting to me because I've actually looked a bit into Brookings as a possible place to move to in the near future.
Guys, HERE is Our Savior HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH” YaH is The Heavenly Father YaH is Who Created “Man (Adam)” YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING YaH was Who they Crucified for the sins OF “Man” ** NO female involved WHATSOEVER ** - Hebrew Book of Isaiah Isaiah 42:8 "I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols. Isaiah 43:11 I, I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me. Isaiah 45:5 I am YaH, and there is none else.
A derecho can sometimes have winds as high as 165MPH! That's category 5 on the Saffer Simpson Scale. It's also accompanied by hail, thunder and lightning and torrential rain. Tornadoes can sometimes form in a derecho. This storm is an inland hurricane.
I was in the direct path of the 2012 Derecho in Ohio and it was the most terrified I’ve ever been. Never heard of one until that point so I thought it was a twister when the sirens and alerts went off for tornado warning. We didn’t have power for 2 weeks after. We don’t have storms like that often so I have a new sense of respect for those living in tornado alley!
I didn't even think the two could happen simultaneously. Civil alert sirens? We don't have those in hurricane country. Odd the traffic...guess they didn't get the memo.
that looks like it's going to be quite intense. I grew up in Minnesota and we got some interesting weather there, but sad to say the weather in Los Angeles is quite boring lol
Man I know it'd be redundant, but I wouldn't mind a few extra moments walking around the inside of that building just to show the total atmospheric change
One thing I learned…..we could see it coming and there was weather reporting several minutes before. My brother grabbed some plastic bags (the kind you get when shopping in a food store) and some duct tape. I helped him. We covered all the outdoor air vents (dryer, bathroom vents, fresh air intake for the AC system…etc) and taped them shut. Then we ran indoors and taped shut the door facing the storm arrival. This all resulted in far less dirt inside after it was over. After the storm was over, he also changed the AC air filters.
So that's what they are called. in the 60's as a kid we lived in north-central Iowa near Gilmore City and Humbolt. We just called them dust storms. Ours then would sometimes last 1-2 hours of total darkness with the wind never letting up.
Most Americans haven't heard or used the word derecho until that big Iowa storm last year. Derechos and haboobs mostly occur overseas, and as such are only known to weather nerds :)
We have derechos almost yearly in Michigan, but we don't have haboobs. It's strange to not have a weird weather phenomenon, we have pretty much everything else.
🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆MY OH MY OH MY OH MY 😯😯😯😯😯😯 Looks like the sky went from daytime to the dead of night in a matter of minutes. Now THAT'S TRIPPY!!!! Thanks for sharing!!! 😍😍
In 2020 we were not able to seek shelter due to Covid-19 so me my family weather a category 3 hurricane Delta stated in our house. We said some serious prayers here in Belle Chasse, Louisiana.
What?! Wow. I would risk covid over a hurricane, tornado, or any other deadly storm ANYDAY. And if someone showed up at my door and was like "I have covid but I don't have a basement and there's a tornado" I would let them right on in, anyone who WOULDN'T is a monster that I have no respect for.
I’m in Virginia and we had a bad derecho come through back in 2012. It’s still talked about till this day. It came at night about 9 something which was very terrifying to witness. I never been through something like that beforehand. Unfortunately there was no dust though. Winds up near 60. Ours came from out in the middle of the country and made our way by night. They’re nothing to play with that’s for sure. I was in a mobile home at the time and I thought it would come off the bricks at any moment. But it didn’t. Power was out all over Lynchburg And the surrounding areas. My neighborhood was very fortunate not to lose power because every day leading up to the derecho and days after was at 100.
Seeing this video is for me like reliving a nightmare. Hard to believe that it'll be a year next month and I remember it with clarity. It was a little before 5 in the afternoon when things started to get bad. I live in Madison by the way.
Finally, a video of this storm that isn't a time-lapse or just a minute long. Nice video.
There are several really good ones out there like this but I do appreciate how this one is much longer!
Finally? There’s thousands of videos that are regular time, not time-lapsed, and last even longer than this video..I think you’ll be even more happy to see those video’s! Lol
Time lapses "deliberately" skip frames and when that is done, you would miss essential details, visual information. Slow those down, and they turn into colorized movies from 115+ years ago. These then go hand-in-hand, with turning a video into a gratuitous, narcissistic selfie; patronizing [kindergarten-level] commentary featuring poor grammar & accents unintelligible to American ears; captions that are the aural equivalent, plastered across the action that you're trying to see; and, worst of all, making clownish jokes about something that's obviously terrible and tragic--making fun of some poor people's acute sufferings.
I live in Brookings SD and I was stuck in walmart the whole time this was happening. I'm glad there is people like you out there that has gotten video of this storm from damn near start to finish. Thank you!❤
did they feed u guys , or isn't it a Super Walmart??
they didn't feed anyone
I had just left Walmart a minute or two before the storm hit. I was crossing the interstate when the wind hit and thought it was going to flip my truck. Must say that was the only time that I ever actually wanted to be inside of Walmart 😂😅
I was in Walmart at the time as we were ushered to a back area to wait out the blast. I met the woman of my dreams huddled back there. We chatted like we ki
knew each other are whole lives. Like a fool, I didnt get her phone number.
@@kentgutzmer1977 Don't sweat it chap. If she's meant for you, you will meet again maybe. Plus there's other opportunities.
This made me think about what it must have been like during the Dust Bowl. Can you imagine roaring winds tearing up miles upon miles of parched dry soil just compounding the effects of the storm. And these storms raged for hours literally burying everything in their path with feet of topsoil. It must have been hellish.
WOW, that is crazy. For about 5 minutes it looked to be "end of the world" kind of scary.
Not having ever been in a bad dust storm I think I can say I've no idea what that would be like, day turning into night.
Thanks for sharing.
@HK Guitar, indeed, consider tho what the real "end of the world" is going to look like... Actually, as the clouds rolled in it reminded me for a second of "Independence Day" where the alien ships would slowly start to appear out of the clouds! Just think tho, this is another variation of "wind". We know some forces of wind can toss into the air, objects weighing tons, it can twist and bend large steel beams and "separate" the fibers of telephone polls and shove a piece of straw into it. It can also gently move across your skin & hair as a relaxing, cooling breeze... In all of this it's completely "invisible" but it's effects are still seen, heard and felt.
This is the first time i have seen a video conveying just how dark the sky can get in a storm
I’ve experienced a few of these when I lived in Phoenix. Day to night in seconds. I also think I have valley fever from breathing in the dust during those storms. Ah well, the storm freak that I am loved being out in the middle of them.
@Skyward Music Good Point Skyward.
I live in Northern Michigan and years ago I had friends visiting from Arkansas who had never experienced a Blizzard. We had places to go and once we got on the road during the Blizzard conditions my friends kind of started unraveling! Like you said, its all what we get used to, are conditioned to accept and live with.
Crazy how all the dust can turn it from daytime to even darker than night all in the span of minutes.
Just when you think you're you're going to be okay and then the sirens go off. That was like a scene out of a movie. Very impressive
Wow! That was crazy... it must have felt like the end of the world it got so dark. Nice job filming and thanks for not talking through it!
It's also possible for Derecho to create conditions darker than night. Dust blocks out all ambient light and your headlights become useless. I experienced that.
From what I understand is that there was a 1400 mile wide sand storm headed to the east side of the US. Now I wonder if a sandstorm is in correlation with a derecho. I live in the PNW so I don't know what this is like. I've been in a couple of micro bursts (driving not fun) but it didn't completely block out the sun.
You’re so right about headlights being useless. I was out in the middle of nowhere and you could not see. Leaves, dirt, dust and corn shafts going by at unbelievable speeds. I’ve been in 3 tornados but I was never so scared as I was driving through the derecho. Not only not being able to see, but my 21’ Silverado was picked up & thrown in a ditch with the greatest of ease. PTSD to this day.
I'd like to know where all the birds go in this. What a day it must be flying away from this weather.
And the baby birds. That storm looks like it could catapult every nest in every tree. Poor things.
They head to Canada and come back. Basically they fly north.
They sense these storms coming in, and get out ahead of it.
You can even see cows acting different before one of these storms!
we have haboobs every year in Arizona, but I've never seen one turn day to night like that. that was definitely some strong winds
You sweet precious bubble blower.
That’s so scary, poor animals living outside
Yikes. What a storm. Have experienced a derecho in Tulsa (2012) that left behind damage that was comparable to tornado damage- most of the city's power was out for days, no groceries, it was crazy. But even having lived in TX and OK with many strong storms and tornadoes, to my recollection none of them made it pitch black like this in the daytime. That makes it feel so sinister. Glad you shared this with us.
Thank for recording this. Never seen such a thing before. I have never been in a storm that got so black!!! Great Job
I love that you don't drown out all the sound and atmosphere with music. Wow! Air raid sirens!
Derecho's have been around a long time. Meteorologist's just referred to them as "straight line winds" till fairly recently. I was in one back in 2008/2009 in Indiana. You could literally see the rain going perfectly horizontal, while lawn furniture and other loose objects blew along with it! lol
Haboob's however, are rarer. A "dust storm" is lower to the ground and caused by surface winds. "Haboob's" are much higher up because they are part of a thunderstorm's winds. It's kinda like the whole storm system becomes an E-F1 tornado ... without the circular motion.
Having both at the same time is phenomenal to watch - but I wouldn't want to be in it! Great job videoing!
Haboobs are not rare. They happen constantly in Arizona, Texas and New Mexico. Without a derecho there will not be a haboob. The only thing rare here is the state in which it happened.
I think derechos simply used to be under the label of "squall line" despite being somewhat different than a typical squall. The term "straight-line winds" was never used to label a type of storm.
@@SagebrushRambles the original commenter stated they had experienced it in Indiana, I would think its safe to assume, us hoosier folks dont even know what a haboob is... so it'd be fair to claim its extremely rare and unheard of especially in southern indiana.
@@redraptor9688 Bet. Don't know where you live, but here in Indiana, meteorologists refer to them as "straight line winds" all the time.
It's best to think of a Derecho as an unwrapped Tornado. Instead of cyclonic spin, the storms maintains all super cell properties but can widen to 600 km wide. So instead of an ultra violent 30 second Tornado, you get a 2 hour land hurricane.
We experienced a derecho that came thru our small town and it felt just like I imagine a tornado would!! It was terrifying! You could hear the nails squeaking as the wind pulled violently at the frame of the house! We were praying for sure!! Blew down almost every tree in town and exploded multiple windows in our house!
2 hour land hurricane sounds horrifying
Omg that kind of thing would give me a heart attack, I would probably kill myself trying to run from it lol
It’d be more like 20 to 60 minutes, but pretty much yeah.
Or just think of it like it is. A large line of straight line winds and heavy rain..
Only 100-years ago, living in a shack on the plains, people had almost nothing to work with. So, they pasted newsprint on the walls to keep the piles of dust from coming in the cracks.
Cross the border into Mexico and you’ll see plenty of shanty shacks put together with spit and glue.
I deal with it daily, here in North Dakota, on the prairies. That superfine dust permeates the walls and windows and gets on EVERYTHING. But yea, 90 years ago, during the 1930s, it happened for the first time in recorded history to the point it was devastating to the entire midwest of the country.
@@rhondaalbrecht I used to live in the hills/Mtns of San Diego and it was super dusty there. If I dusted in the morning it would show dust later that day. That superfine dust is the worst though.
I live in Texas and have been through 17 tornadoes. I've been deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan three times and dealt with sandstorms. This looked like the worst of both. I'm moving to Sioux Falls in August. I guess I'll feel right at home :D Corporate farms that clear the land and don't plant any trees for wind breaks are the cause of this. South Dakota needs to reform some of its laws.
@Ian, thank you for your military service! 17 tornadoes, good grief! I've only witnessed one that stopped a mile from my house & that's not a straight mile but a twisty one as the streets curve a lot. I never saw the funnel but the rotating cloud. The sound of the wind isn't something you forget and then the damage you could here being done in the distance. I wasn't sure what to call it but there was a small "ghost tornado" that spun off from it which came down the side street in this direction carrying some debris about 50ft? up...
I looked at that thing like, "No, it has to go!" and thankfully it vanished and the debris fell. All went silent just as Fire & Rescue dispatched. It was like a war zone at the entrance/exits to the neighborhood with mangled electric poles, trees on/in houses etc. That storm traveled a length of nearly 50 miles picking up & setting the tornado back down. It was said to be ~137mph winds here. Hadn't been one in this area in nearly 100 yrs.
I totally agree with you
Guys, HERE is The Savior
HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH”
YaH is The Heavenly Father
YaH is Who Created “Man (Adam)”
YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING
YaH was Who they Crucified for the sins OF “Man”
** NO female involved WHATSOEVER **
- Hebrew Book of Isaiah
Isaiah 42:8
"I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols.
Isaiah 43:11
I, I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me.
Isaiah 45:5
I am YaH, and there is none else.
I’ve lived here most my life and these don’t happen…my middle son lost a teacher at his high school from this storm and my oldest son lost his former manager at his previous job. Others died in surrounding communities as well. I hope these don’t start happening more frequently but you’re right, lots of dry fields aren’t helping. The city itself isn’t what it used to be, unfortunately, but welcome nonetheless.
Every video....really?
HOLY COW THAT'S INSANE. IT LOOKS LIKE THE END OF THE WORLD. IT WENT FROM DAY TO NIGHT IN MINUTES. I'M IN FLORIDA AND WE GET STORMS, BUT NOTHING LIKE THIS. THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR TAKING THIS VIDEO AND SHARING IT WITH US. GOD BLESS YOU AND YOURS, STAY SAFE ALWAYS.
Florida here too. Although our hurricanes can turn day to night.
Hurricanes get just as bad if not worse. Florida is actually one of the most vulnerable states due to it bordering both the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean, both being warm during the summer. This storm only turned day into night because of the dust caught due to the low level winds caused by low pressures.
Once i seen this once up in north Texas scary . We were trapped in the car
I'm in Sioux falls and that was some crazy ass weather that day lol
Having been through two Derecho’s in Quincy, IL (2011/2015) that shut the city down for a week with devastation you can find yet today…..I’m completely impressed with this video!! Where I was at, I couldn’t see but could definitely feel and hear what was going on! While they are beautiful and amazing to watch, unfortunately they are very dangerous. Thank you for posting this and letting us all see what a derecho looks like when it comes in and goes out. I actually started to film the 2015 however when it came in, I bailed inside.
On a side note, thank you for posting a very worthy video documenting a very serious storm and you took the matter serious and was obviously protective of your family. I happened to watch another video of this same storm that showed the storm coming in with horrendous “narration” by some woman who was more inclined to video tape the storm than protecting her son…thankfully there was a boyfriend that was….kinda🙄.
Hopefully y’all got through the storm unscathed❤️
Meanwhile I'm just on my couch, eating peanut butter cookies while I have heartburn. Life is great
That line of clouds over the tops of those trees looked like an evil, wicked lip, cruelly snaring at you…. And then- wow! Such darkness! Just a moment after leaving your brightly lighted hallway and showing us just how incredibly dark it was outside, we saw a car with its light on. Until I figured out that your camera shook a little bit, I thought that car was being sucked up into a tornado! Lol! Great video- thanks for sharing it. Like others from Texas, I’ve been through a bunch of tornadoes, but I’ve never seen anything like this! I had to look up some new weather words, too!
I’ve witnessed daytime darkness caused by strong thunderstorms before but this is whole other level.
Woo...a derechabobo...just like the one we had in Sioux Falls!
Looks like the dust storms of the 1930's but with rain. At that time, there were no vegetation windbreaker and over-plowing of the land.
Haboob? I haven't heard that word since I moved out of Mesa Arizona!
I've driven through several Haboobs when I lived there, and have seen several multi-vehicle accidents as a result of them
This was great… heart pounding 💓
You must’ve been so nervous!
You braved it out though and now we have this awesome footage 🏆
I couldn’t believe how FAST 💨 it went from bright to brown to BLACK !!
That is some real Little House on the Prairie weather.
Thank you for this. Its nice to actually see a longer video and not some 1 minute or less. Also big balls standing out there in it. Thats dope.
haven’t had a derecho since July 2021 and I’m certainly grateful, I’m glad that there are people like you out there who are certainly not afraid of massive storms!! Very nice and brave video.
That’s a lot of cars passing by for such a small town ! And why are they driving with a storm like this ? Very good video
Probably half were storm chasers, and the other half just people running home to their families. Watching " Ryan Hall, Y'all " on TH-cam is a good way to tell if you're about to expect weather like this, and the moment that a tornado touches the ground. I don't live where tornados often form, but it is exciting and interesting to watch. He's in close touch with storm chasers and shows you a weather map live, so there's a good chance he covered this storm, too.
This started at around 5:25, so a lot were getting off work thinking they could get home before it hit
My mom and I were driving back from the airport. We didn’t know the weather was supposed to be bad…. Lol it looked like a beautiful day before and after ! It was wild
@@Lola-385 What did you do? Pull over? Timing is everything! Glad you made it home ok. ;)
@@kittmarie8285 we pulled into a gas station that was attached to a hotel. I know when it’s windy the Semi Trucks flip over if they are empty. There was a LOT of semis when we were driving so I didn’t want to take a chance it would flip over on us. I didn’t know it was going to be that crazy though lol. About 10 us took shelter in the gas station until it passed.
I currently stay in Maryland near Washington DC...I am looking to move to Brookings..We had a Derecho here a few years back Woo Wee that storm was mean,,I got my Grandmother mom and aunt in the basement of the house and waited out the storm......Parts of the area got hammered real bad..Blessings to you and many others.. So glad you are ok
HERE is The Savior
HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH”
YaH is The Heavenly Father
YaH is Who Created “Man (Adam)”
YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING
YaH was Who they Crucified for the sins OF “Man”
** NO female involved WHATSOEVER **
- Hebrew Book of Isaiah
Isaiah 42:8
"I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols.
Isaiah 43:11
I, I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me.
Isaiah 45:5
I am YaH, and there is none else.
The speed it was coming in at was impressive, I have never seen a storm move like it was being chased by a person with a missile launcher.
While rain starts to effect other parts of the country more often it will rain less in other areas causing very dry conditions. This causes sand storms to develop over those dry areas pushing the sand along with it.
You know things are getting real when those sirens start blaring. That dust storm rolling in was crazy too. Hopefully those derechos are rare.
The darkness makes it sound wicked
Have there always been dust storms like this here? Or is it poor land management? Looks like the Dust Bowl days.
Farmers have been working in their fields prior to the storm
This is rare for this area.
Impressive! Dark as night. I've never seen anything like that either.
You can hear the tornado sirens at 4:05, I guess that was how dangerous it was!
I believe Sioux Falls had 80-100 mph wind gusts!
some towns didnt set off sirens and tried to avoid trouble by classifying it as a derecho instead of tornado a lot of people were angry and lost things because of it
Im in the NG unit just 45 min south of Brookings, and had been going to SDSU at the time. Was activated the next day to help clean up the mess is the area.
Looks like our Florida afternoon Supercell T'Storms we get in the summer.
From day to night…pitch black even. That’s crazy, never seen anything like that before.
I watched Ken Burns’ Dust Bowl. Freaked me out. This reminded me of that. This was one crazy storm. Talk about fade to black….
Yep that storm was not fun at all and that kind of storm doesnt happen very often here plus the 5 tornadoes that were on the ground
What a good video and the best I have seen yet of what happened! Most just show the approach and so thank you so much for sharing this! I just cannot believe how dark it got!!!
Now THIS is truly frightening !!!!
I feel like the word haboob belongs in a Beavis and Butthead movie.
The way the sky darkens is terrifying
Crazy storm! Thanks for sharing
Pitch black haboob/ severe weather event.
South Dakotans: I can't drive 55!!!
My grandparents live in brookings and i used to live there as well. My grandma was on the computer when it hit and a chunk of tar went through the window in the bathroom.
That was wild. I've never heard of or seen anything such as this. Thank you for sharing.
Crazy how it sounds like a jet engine
I can’t believe how pitch dark it got in such a short period. My God, that must have been scary as hell!!
Caught a bit of this storm footage on the weather channel while at work. Nice job capturing it. It's interesting to me because I've actually looked a bit into Brookings as a possible place to move to in the near future.
I hear Brookings land is going cheap now-a-days. Problem is, ya have to drive to Nebraska to get it.
Guys, HERE is Our Savior
HalleluYAH translates “Praise ye YaH”
YaH is The Heavenly Father
YaH is Who Created “Man (Adam)”
YaH arrives via the TENT OF MEETING
YaH was Who they Crucified for the sins OF “Man”
** NO female involved WHATSOEVER **
- Hebrew Book of Isaiah
Isaiah 42:8
"I am YaH; that is my Name! I will not yield my glory to another or my praise to idols.
Isaiah 43:11
I, I am YAH, and there is no other Savior but Me.
Isaiah 45:5
I am YaH, and there is none else.
Oh my gosh! I've lived in Indiana and Texas and I've never seen anything like this nightmare before! Wow! 😬
When the siren blew I said "Ya think?!"
Hoping everyone is okay over there! Living in Alberta I thought it might come west from ontario! That's a scary storm
They're using Weather Weapons America,look up Tesla Weather Weapons ,HAARP , Weather Geoengineering, Chemtrails!
A derecho can sometimes have winds as high as 165MPH! That's category 5 on the Saffer Simpson Scale. It's also accompanied by hail, thunder and lightning and torrential rain. Tornadoes can sometimes form in a derecho. This storm is an inland hurricane.
I was in the direct path of the 2012 Derecho in Ohio and it was the most terrified I’ve ever been. Never heard of one until that point so I thought it was a twister when the sirens and alerts went off for tornado warning. We didn’t have power for 2 weeks after. We don’t have storms like that often so I have a new sense of respect for those living in tornado alley!
I didn't even think the two could happen simultaneously. Civil alert sirens? We don't have those in hurricane country.
Odd the traffic...guess they didn't get the memo.
Derboobs are no joke.
that looks like it's going to be quite intense. I grew up in Minnesota and we got some interesting weather there, but sad to say the weather in Los Angeles is quite boring lol
A glimpse of what it was like in the Dirty Thirties?
Did you get any rain out of that? Or just wind & dust?
Keep making cool videos like this one! Incredible work!
A year ago I heard term derecho for the first time.
Today I learn of haboobs.
Man I know it'd be redundant, but I wouldn't mind a few extra moments walking around the inside of that building just to show the total atmospheric change
where do birds go on storms like this?
Nuts. I used to live here. Never had something like this come through!
I used to live there also I've never seen anything like that either
One thing I learned…..we could see it coming and there was weather reporting several minutes before. My brother grabbed some plastic bags (the kind you get when shopping in a food store) and some duct tape. I helped him. We covered all the outdoor air vents (dryer, bathroom vents, fresh air intake for the AC system…etc) and taped them shut. Then we ran indoors and taped shut the door facing the storm arrival. This all resulted in far less dirt inside after it was over. After the storm was over, he also changed the AC air filters.
I grew up in west Texas back in the 60s we used to have some dust storms that were crazy!
So that's what they are called. in the 60's as a kid we lived in north-central Iowa near Gilmore City and Humbolt. We just called them dust storms. Ours then would sometimes last 1-2 hours of total darkness with the wind never letting up.
Epic footage, thanks for sharing.
I grew up in San Angelo TX. Every march we would get a least one that would cause all the street lights to come on . Seems they all hit around 3-4pm.
This is scary as it is... I don't even want to think about what nuke looks like if this is just weather.
This can't be normal right? This most be rare for this area right? Wow!!!
No, that is what we call straight line wins. We get those down here in Texas as well.
Am I the only person who has never heard of a derecho or haboob?
Most Americans haven't heard or used the word derecho until that big Iowa storm last year. Derechos and haboobs mostly occur overseas, and as such are only known to weather nerds :)
Derecho is just one more word that 2020 so kindly added to my vocabulary.
We have derechos almost yearly in Michigan, but we don't have haboobs. It's strange to not have a weird weather phenomenon, we have pretty much everything else.
it would be interesting to see that from 40,000 feet up.
🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆MY OH MY OH MY OH MY 😯😯😯😯😯😯 Looks like the sky went from daytime to the dead of night in a matter of minutes. Now THAT'S TRIPPY!!!! Thanks for sharing!!! 😍😍
The light coming back like cloudy water settling in a fish bowl was something else
In 2020 we were not able to seek shelter due to Covid-19 so me my family weather a category 3 hurricane Delta stated in our house. We said some serious prayers here in Belle Chasse, Louisiana.
What?! Wow. I would risk covid over a hurricane, tornado, or any other deadly storm ANYDAY. And if someone showed up at my door and was like "I have covid but I don't have a basement and there's a tornado" I would let them right on in, anyone who WOULDN'T is a monster that I have no respect for.
Amazing. Thanks for posting
I’m in Virginia and we had a bad derecho come through back in 2012. It’s still talked about till this day. It came at night about 9 something which was very terrifying to witness. I never been through something like that beforehand. Unfortunately there was no dust though. Winds up near 60. Ours came from out in the middle of the country and made our way by night. They’re nothing to play with that’s for sure. I was in a mobile home at the time and I thought it would come off the bricks at any moment. But it didn’t. Power was out all over Lynchburg And the surrounding areas. My neighborhood was very fortunate not to lose power because every day leading up to the derecho and days after was at 100.
That howling is so eerie. Why does it get so high pitched? Incredible what the sky can do at the flip of a hat.
I think the high pitch is a siren
@@bravobby8773 It could be, it's hard to tell.
Omg.i can't believe how dark it got so quick. Crazy!!
Forgive me . I'm from East Tennessee. What exactly is a Haboob ?
Dust storm in Sudan… bull crap term
Sirens went off alittle late lol.... Did it really get that dark from the storm itself?
Dang, by the time that siren went off, it was TOO late!
Wow, it turned day into night!😱How high did they say the winds got?😨
Maximum recorded wind was 107mph it was crazy even nocking over bins and silos
@@Charlie-sh2du - Wow, this is sooo scary.😱 I hope no one got hurt or became a casualty.😨
One person did get killed when a tree blew over on his car
@@Charlie-sh2du - Oh nooo, sorry to hear that.😞
Yeah, this is some of the better weather in Brookings SD, such a lovely place!
i agree sir, what the **** indeed. that is the strangest thing i have ever seen. the day turned to night in the time it takes to microwave a lunch.
Does anyone know how far that storm travelled?
That was truly scary! The start when it was coming in was so ominous!
Seeing this video is for me like reliving a nightmare. Hard to believe that it'll be a year next month and I remember it with clarity. It was a little before 5 in the afternoon when things started to get bad. I live in Madison by the way.
How long did the storm last?
Never heard of a haboob before?