I used to be scared of thunderstorms. But now I love them after getting used to them last summer in Piedmont and Rapid City, South Dakota and Park City, Utah.
opposite for me. i used to love thunderstorms because i liked chaos and destruction as a kid. i moved to kansas, and saw a tornado for the first time. ever since, thunderstorms are just too normal to be fun.
I wish I had a camera to make videos like this. It was actually relaxing. Seeing those lower clouds suddenly move in from the complete opposite direction was awesome. I wish I coulda recorded the electrical storm we had last weekend. I bet that looked awesome coming in. I like when a storm clears out just before sunset, and everything is highlighted in bright orange or pink. And to think......our worst storms ain't nothing compared to ones on other planets.
@@michaelolsen2348 I’m just using a GoPro, so if you can afford one, it’s a good investment. We’ve had several sunset storms this year that were pretty impressive, there was an orange and purple one last month that was surreal, and a severe storm last year that was magenta. I’ll look for them.
Where I live, this year spring is more bout dust storms and wildfires than thunderstorms. Sometimes it's June before the big storms come because of the arid conditions
@@non-influential Alberta. Spring is typically very dry, and this year is extremely dry as we came out of a snowless winter, unable to maintain a stable snowpack. Sometimes we get a big storm during the melt in March or April as the air is filled with the moisture of melting snow which is not the case this year. Otherwise it's not until the green up in May when strong thunderstorms begin. During extreme drought it can be well into June before severe thunderstorms would get going. About the only differences between the plains in Alberta and Arizona would be how hot it gets. Temperatures have been just warm enough to get a storm going but the dewpoint is south of -10C(14F) and humidity as low as 10-15%. Further south and east, moisture from large bodies of water such as the gulf of Mexico will trigger outbreaks well before the landscape turns green. The Coriolis effect prevents most of it from curving this far west. It happens but only during the peak of summer when the low level jet is strong enough to curve all the way here. A pattern I call "the dragon's breath" as it resembles a dragon blowing fire on the Rockies on the dewpoint maps.
GoPro 8 using a night lapse, except when I moved the camera to the back to get a better view of the strongest storm cell and used the timewarp setting, although I can’t remember what the rate was, maybe x10 or x 15.
@@non-influential Thank you for the information, in fact it was good footage from the rear view, it was actually possible to follow the arrival of the heavy cloud
So dark with lightning Flashes
What a sunset
crazy watching a timelaps video of life, really shows us how much we take for granted - such beautie in every second -
There are details you would never notice in real time that are pretty amazing to see!
@@non-influentialcan you please do background music with either Michael Jackson or Queen please
Funny how life works
Very peaceful. Thanks
Those sunrise scenes are just beautiful.
I used to be scared of thunderstorms. But now I love them after getting used to them last summer in Piedmont and Rapid City, South Dakota and Park City, Utah.
opposite for me. i used to love thunderstorms because i liked chaos and destruction as a kid.
i moved to kansas, and saw a tornado for the first time. ever since, thunderstorms are just too normal to be fun.
That's crazy it makes me feel like the clouds are gonna land on the ground
X2
Cozy
This video reminded me the time I went camping at Kansas and when I was about to go to sleep out of nowhere it started pouring down raining
During the day you can see the cold front coming in before hand O.O
really peaceful to watch!
I wish I had a camera to make videos like this. It was actually relaxing. Seeing those lower clouds suddenly move in from the complete opposite direction was awesome. I wish I coulda recorded the electrical storm we had last weekend. I bet that looked awesome coming in. I like when a storm clears out just before sunset, and everything is highlighted in bright orange or pink. And to think......our worst storms ain't nothing compared to ones on other planets.
@@michaelolsen2348 I’m just using a GoPro, so if you can afford one, it’s a good investment. We’ve had several sunset storms this year that were pretty impressive, there was an orange and purple one last month that was surreal, and a severe storm last year that was magenta. I’ll look for them.
th-cam.com/video/SH8kiWcoxUg/w-d-xo.html
That was the one from last month
th-cam.com/video/L3JS_V9T2v4/w-d-xo.htmlsi=EF_7ES706hCdY2nN
April from last year, sky was bright magenta.
12:20 in 2x speed is crazy
This music is so satisfying😊
hi
THE CLOUDS LOOK LIKE FLUFFY COTTON BALLS!
Nice timelapse
I like the lightning😊
Where I live, this year spring is more bout dust storms and wildfires than thunderstorms. Sometimes it's June before the big storms come because of the arid conditions
Arizona?
@@non-influential Alberta. Spring is typically very dry, and this year is extremely dry as we came out of a snowless winter, unable to maintain a stable snowpack. Sometimes we get a big storm during the melt in March or April as the air is filled with the moisture of melting snow which is not the case this year. Otherwise it's not until the green up in May when strong thunderstorms begin. During extreme drought it can be well into June before severe thunderstorms would get going. About the only differences between the plains in Alberta and Arizona would be how hot it gets. Temperatures have been just warm enough to get a storm going but the dewpoint is south of -10C(14F) and humidity as low as 10-15%. Further south and east, moisture from large bodies of water such as the gulf of Mexico will trigger outbreaks well before the landscape turns green. The Coriolis effect prevents most of it from curving this far west. It happens but only during the peak of summer when the low level jet is strong enough to curve all the way here. A pattern I call "the dragon's breath" as it resembles a dragon blowing fire on the Rockies on the dewpoint maps.
Retë super përrua kanë ndikuar në zonën tuaj kjo është një skenë e rrallë
amazing seens
Scenes*
nice
@@Thatmoneyplays🤓
What state is that neighborhood in? Definitely giving gvo(good vibes only) chill/calm vibes
Nebraska
@@non-influentialalright thanks
Beautiful, this 32 minutes is really worth it 😅. Which camera did you use?
GoPro 8 using a night lapse, except when I moved the camera to the back to get a better view of the strongest storm cell and used the timewarp setting, although I can’t remember what the rate was, maybe x10 or x 15.
@@non-influential Thank you for the information, in fact it was good footage from the rear view, it was actually possible to follow the arrival of the heavy cloud
So - three storms, with the 2nd one being the strongest?
Yep, it was probably good that one only brushed by us. I don’t remember the other waves being severe, just lots of lightning and heavy rain.
Do you mind if I ask where in the world this is?
america
Nebraska
earth
Solar system
@@rengokukensou they said where in the world
or you are joking-
Whay he still lt walking😮 11:37
Yea
what state was that in
Nebraska
😮
you mean sunrise?
That too! When I named the video, the focus was the big storm that started building around the 14:15 mark.
😮😮
That is a huge tornado 19:44
Never mind it broke😂
28:02
National Oceanic Atmosphere Administration NOAA
National Hurricane Center NHC
National Weather Service NWS
YEHP
I aint watching allat
FR
Exactly
Rude
REAL
I was watching in irl so WOW!
Dont see anything special.