Swedish couple reacts to, Hawley, TX Tornado Up Close!!
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I live in Hawley... i watched the tornado come straight towards my house and it lifted right before it got here thankfully 🙌
I'm so happy to hear that it lifted before hitting. I live in Killeen and have a friend in Temple, about 25 mins from Killeen, who lost his house and both their family cars.
Glad you are ok. I grew up in Michigan. We had warnings all the time but no close calls thankfully.
We had one like that last month west of Clarendon, one on the ground and headed towards town and another funnel started forming next to it. Shortly after the second funnel started forming the first tornado began to weaken and went back up in the cloud about a mile or two from town. The internet was out that day and the weather stations in Amarillo only had fire danger warnings so the first warning we got was when someone spotted the tornado 6-8 miles from town and they blew the sirens.
I'm in Abilene and was watching the radar and watching the storm from here. Glad it lifted.
Please continue, Recky. I think it's important for others to understand what we deal with. Too many people think we, in the USA, just live day by day like nothing in the world touches us. Not true. We have disasters that take lives everyday. Some people just don't know. Thanks.
I lived in Tyler, Texas when my son was 2. His father worked 4 days a week out of town, so I was alone with him one night and was making dinner while he played in the living room. He was in front of the TV watching Toy Story. All of the sudden I heard a roar so loud it was like a freight train and I ran toward my son. There was a huge boom and the lights went out and wind was howling through the house. I couldn't get to the living room because there was something in the way and I noticed that someone was screaming. I didn't realize it was me until the next day when my voice was gone. Straight line winds or a derecho had twisted a 60 foot pine tree next to the house out of the ground like a corkscrew, flipped it upside down and drove it like a javelin through the living room roof and down into the floor. The living room was gone and the wind was so loud that I had to wait for the sound to stop to start calling for my son. I sat there just terrified until I heard "mama, mama?" quietly from behind me. It was my baby. He said that a nice man had walked over, picked him up and carried him into the hallway. Then he told him to sit down and cover his face with his hands and not to move until all of the noise stopped. Then the man smiled at him and left. I know that an angel saved my son. The house was completely destroyed but I didn't care. Now, every time I see a tornado, I pray for the people in it's path. I hope that they're being kept safe too.
It reminds me of the Joplin butterfly people. Children reported that they saw butterfly people coming down to protect them during the tornado.
@@KimKinzer I never heard about that. That's amazing and beautiful. I'm going to try to read about it. Thank you!! My son is 26 and he still remembers what he calls the man made of light.
Oh my heart!! That’s such a beautiful thing. I’m so glad you were both saved and that the Angel came to help your son.❤️🤗🐝
If not an angel, perhaps Christ himself. What a fascinating story. Thank you for sharing it!
@@deborahdanhauer8525 Thank you Deborah. What a sweet, beautiful comment.
If Carol is interested, and it appears so, I think it's wonderful to include her in these videos. The videos are amazing, and her input is heartfelt and sincere. Qualities you both possess and refreshing to watch! ❤ Thank you for sharing.
Not far from Hawley, in a town called Hodges , Tx. During this same storm. A Storm Chaser actually saved a family of 4 and got them to the nearest hospital. There is a Video showing the rescue
Where can I find this video??? Hi from Killeen, TX
@WolfLove89 The chasers name is Freddie Mckinney. If you look up texas family saved by storm chaser it should come up.
@@sanoraray Thank you
I remember seeing that.
For the past 3 weeks (daily), the Midwest, Central Plains and Ohio Valley have been getting slammed with tornadoes and derecho’s (damaging wind storms)! Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, Arkansas are just a few of the states with massive destruction in cities from these storms! I would love to see you do more reactions on tornadoes especially ones that have happened this year!
Agree the chasers have said these are the biggest they've seen. And was especially difficult for the YT weathermen (Ryan Hall) to keep up there were Soo many popping up in several states at once.
Kentucky, Missouri also, it’s been wild.
Add North Alabama to your list. We've had several confirmed this past three weeks as well, and I was actually under the one that hit Columbia, Tennessee, just north of us an hour past the state line, while driving on the highway the wind became intense in a way I knew was not safe just as our phones alerted for the tornado warning. I asked my friend who was not driving to tell me where the tornado is. When he pulled up the warning they provided, and was loading a radar app, he said with a hollow voice, "we just lost gps" and just a few seconds later, the wind intensified in a way that is indescribable only in part because I could only see it briefly before we could not see anything besides water and debris for 15 seconds or so, followed by the tornado we could then see heading from the highway out into an adjacent neighborhood. I didn't tell very many people that anything happened at all, and this is the first time I've described it fully and I definitely have the weirds in my stomach from recalling it so vividly.
I would LOVE to see Carol's reaction to the Joplin and/or Moore (2013) tornado. If she is amazed by this one, she wouldn't believe those tornadoes are even real.
I agree with you that either Joplin or Moore tornado documentaries are the ones to watch, although it will break her heart to see the devastation. It's still unimaginable, even after watching it.
She would also see the community coming together to help their neighbors out in their time of need.
Last Saturday a tornado hit Valley View and Celina, TX. 7 people were killed in Valley View (4 children). Then in Celina the same tornado hit a stable and killed 4 horses. They found one of the horses in the top of a tree the next day. It's just so hard to imagine the force of the wind. Celina is about 20 miles northwest of me. KVUE channel (Austin, TX) has good videos and survivor stories of the 1997 F5 tornado in Jarrell, Texas that killed 27 people, many of them children and entire families. That one was absolutely devastating and still makes me cry. I personally have been in 2 small ones, EF0 and EF1, and I hope that is the worst we ever experience. We also had a microburst once that did more damage than the tornadoes. It is the scariest feeling you can imagine.
My sister has been assisting in the relief from that tornado
@@benjeminecarpenter2894 That's very kind of her.
If Carol wants to see more...then Recky needs to show Carol more...and then we will be here to watch Carol watch more 😉
They need to watch some Reed Timmer videos of him intercepting in the Dominator.
Carol the largest tornado ever recorded was the El Reno tornado it's 2.6 miles wide at the ground level
I've literally seen a drinking straw shoved into a tree from a tornado
I saw that in a tornado film 40 years ago at school in kansas
On par with paper sliced into a tree from a hurricane.
I've always heard stories like that but I've never actually seen one in person but boy do I believe it
@@BAYBAY_316 it was the Plainfield Illinois tornado 1990, it was a McDonald's drinking straw, I seen it with my own eyes
My grandmother lived on a farm in Kansas back in the 1930s-40s and went through several tornados. The strangest thing she ever saw was _pieces of straw_ driven all the way through a tree trunk deep enough to come out the other side.
Recky, you and Miss Carol should watch a video of the 1965 Palm Sunday Tornadoes. It's an outbreak no one talks about anymore.
Your storm reactions mean alot. Thank you! Thank you for this one with both of you!
It hit the neighboring town to me (Monroe WI). They've had several more throughout the years.
I was 4 years old and the tornados went over our house, broke every window.
That was in Toledo Ohio
@dalefunk2457 I was in Southern Michigan. That was a horrendous, unbelievable day. So many souls gone, terribly hurt, and lost everything. And some of the strangest tornado anomalies ever. That's the one that Dr Fujita surveyed and instituted the F scale. I'm so glad youre ok.
@@dalefunk2457 I'm glad you're ok.
I am in Texas and have not had electric off and on for 2 weeks-- all food in fridge is lost- thank for good neighbors- power back on and just had eggs, sausage and toast no tornado, just lots of trees down on lines
During the 2 week time we didn’t have power after the Longview 2019 derecho, we ended up cooking food non-stop for our closest neighbors because they had only electric and we have gas stoves. We also had lots of people using our shower. Since then, our neighbors have converted to gas-powered stoves and hot water. Good thing too, since shortly after was the Snowpocalypse.
Just a tip for people If you rent, make sure you have renter’s insurance. Ours replaces all the food lost during outages lasting longer than 24 hours.
Recky is the tornado teacher now, I LOVE IT!
Check out Reed Timmer's drone vid that came out last week. It's the best tornado footage ever
Yes I was going to recommend this as well, it's the best tornado footage I've ever seen! Absolutely stunning! The drone footage doesn't even look real!
The dead man walking? That one was a behemoth and the details were so crisp.
I vote for more - perhaps Joplin. Definitely intense but it's like you're actually there.
I'm afraid the Joplin tornado may be too intense for Carol, Recky had a hard time watching it
Rick B.
I don’t think she’s ready for Joplin, but I’m not sure many of us were💔
I did think about that. You both are probably right😉
There is a endless supply of tornado videos. Carol can be busy for a long time watching these.
I love when you react to tornados and I’m glad Carol is joining you.
I am a survivor of the chandler lake wilson, Minnesota tornado of June 15th 1992, it was an f5, nothing left.
They are very beautiful, until they destroy something. Much like a shark before it decides to attack.
I live in Louisiana. We are not in tornado alley, but this year we have had quite a few tornados. Thank God none have been to severe. Texas has taken a beating this year. God bless our neighbors, As I write this, the weather here is very stormy, and from what I understand, there could be a threat of tornados tonight. In Louisiana it is not possible to have a basement or underground shelter. The water table is so high here if you dig down 15 feet you hit water. You would have a big pond for a basement. My daughter built a house a few years ago and they decided to have a tornado safe room built (per government specifications). It is plated in steel - walls and ceiling with no windows. The door going in has 6 deadbolt locks on it and weights 500 pounds. They made their laundry room in the safe room so it serves double duty. In the last few years I have been in it several times because of tornado warnings, and it is a comfort to know that they have it. Thank you Recky and Carol for doing this reaction. As always it was great. Well done.
I'm from Arkansas. We're part of Dixie alley.
@@ghost56539....and part of "traditional" Tornado Alley too. Just say'n. Take care!
Definitely more tornado reactions. I've lived all of my 68 years here in the upper Midwest (Michigan) and this is the time of year where I'm paranoid of every dark cloud. Those beasts mean business no matter what their size.
Tornado Alley: Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Illinois, Kansas, Nebraska, South Carolina, Tennessee, Minnesota, Illinois, Ohio, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota and the Eastern part of Colorado. Then there's "Dixie Alley" which is an oval shaped off shoot of Tornado Alley. Includes Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, South Carolina, and North Carolina, Kentucky. Parts of Florida too are prone to tornadoes but hasn't really been designated in either "alley".
.....and Indiana.....
That’s right don’t forget my state neighbor👆🏻…we’ve been through heaps! IL got you IN, we share so much and I’ve jumped our boarders more times then I can count👍🏻
Basically the whole middle and eastern part of the country gets them. Look up a tornado map, most of the flippin states are covered. 😰
@@ReidandGracie Yes, the Ohio Valley especially. Grew up in Newburgh but moved to Kansas years ago - from the frying pan into the fire!
You forgot Iowa
Recky you should know, we can’t get enough tornado reactions. All tornadoes all the time would be fine.
There are quite a few youtube channels that cover tornadoes live. Lately it's been every night.
Look up Lubbock tornado 1970. There are several documentaries. That tornado was the basis for the F1-F5 rating system.
Great to have Carol on board. You folks work well together.
Tornados are the worst! The destruction can be immense. I have been through 2 in my lifetime and fortunately was never in the direct path.
Texan here! We’ve gotten wrecked this month and our huge oak trees in our yard were ripped in half this week, took out our fence and power lines. We got lucky our house was safe
It's been a sad year lots of tornados and victims
And I'm not looking forward to the hurricanes starting up. My family/friends are in the south.
yes more reaction from you both on tornados. Illinois resident here I have seen and been in many, very scary.
Most of those cars are storm chasers. If there's a chance for storms there could be 100 chasers on one supercell.
Check out Nebraska Iowa tornado alley March 2024. There was 58 tornados that day
It was a high-end EF-3 with 165 mph wind speed.
Hey FAM i need a reaction from you guy's Iam Tongi American idol audition👍👍
Watch Reed Timmer! He’s one of those daredevil storm chasers!
@Recky you should look up Reed Timmer. Hes a meteorologist and storm chaser who has built a specialized vehicle that has driven into a tornado.
16:15 That debris is your primary danger. I am a decades long resident of Joplin, did not experience F5, but lived 25min or so south. Saw next day damage to my 15+ year neighborhood 1/2 block N of destroyed hospital. I can never see that old neighborhood again. It was all wiped clean like a chalkboard. I saw a quarter ton pick-up wedged up in a tree’s branches! Some died of impalement by debris. A broken 2x4 in Joplin was driven through a curb and left imbedded there.
I currently live just east of El Reno, OK. If they have a pds and there is a ‘violent tornado’ they will say “You have to be underground to survive this.”, and they mean it.
A common practice is to have a motorcycle helmet if you must shelter at ground level. Just a heavy blunt object alone at those speeds will nalive you.
Thanks for the video. Mother Nature has been rather destructive this year. Hurricane season begins June 1. Meteorologists are predicting more huricanes than average as Gulf of Mexico temperatures are already at August levels. If you need to take a breather, you might want to consider reacting to Jolly, as they have come out with a video, British Highschoolers try Girl Scout cookies for the first time. It is about 13 minutes long; unless, you already saw it
Oh we need to do that, thank you Duane 🌼
Instant sub.. you both seem like fantastic people. An even more up close accounts video to react to are the "Real Time Tornado" series
I recommend you start with "Tornado Alley" or the Moore Oklahoma F5 from Real Time Tornado.
Have you ever watched a livestream of people chasing tornadoes? A couple of storm chasers that come to mind are Reed Timmer and Connor Croff; I think Connor is storm chasing right now. My all-time favourite tornado guy, though, is Pecos Hank. He's such a cool, funny guy. I'd recommend watching some of his videos.
I love tornado reactions but just be careful of what you react to. Most storm chasers are very protective of their footage. As a weather enthusiast, I've been fascinated with tornadoes and severe weather for a long time. I follow storm chasers and watch Ryan Hall Y'All's tornado outbreak Livestreams. It wasn't until May 7th this year that I truly knew what it felt like to have a tornado impact your community. We've had some false alarm tornado warnings in the past but this one turned out to be the real deal and I've never been so scared. A High end EF-2 tornado hit Portage, Michigan with winds of 135 mph and traveled 11 miles. It was surreal listening to your neighborhood named by a local meteorologist and Ryan Hall as being in the path of the confirmed PDS (particularly dangerous situation) tornado. Thankfully, it stayed away from my neighborhood but the damage was bad were it hit. A FedEx building that is about 2 miles from my house was severely damaged. The tornado hit several homes and businesses including 2 mobile home parks. Miraculously, no one was killed.
Love your reactions. You guys are awesome. We love ya Recky but we are glad Carol is in these now too! 😁
You should have her react to the "Tornado Alley - Real Time Tornado: Joplin, Missouri" video. Its one of the best tornado depictions on youtube in my opinion. I believe Recky, you already reacted to that one but Carol DEFINITELY needs to see it too. 👍
I saw the aftermath of a tornado in Illinois uproot a mature pine tree and thread it through a chain link fence. The fencing was intact around the tree and the tree trunk was horizontal and completely through the fence.
I live in Texas, in Tornado Alley, and have seen more tornadoes than I care to admit. At the end when you guys are talking about the construction of houses and such, a lot of "older" homes aren't built to what are modern day standards concerning tie downs and the like. Most are brick with a brick facing. Also, there are many people who don't have access to a basement or storm shelter. We always have to keep an eye out during storm season. Property can be found or replaced, people cannot.
Also, the "modern" warning system has increased lead time tremendously. When I was a small child, we were lucky to get 5 minutes, but with better radar and satellite technology, the "average" warning time is about 13 minutes. It doesn't sound like much, but we take what we can get.
Finally, of all the tornadoes, the ones at night are the WORST. I've been in a couple and one was an EF-1 we actually drove into because we couldn't see it until it was right there. The EF-1 dropped behind an EF-3. The car took a hit, but the chaser I was with and I were okay. Freakishly scary though.
People often think that a large tornado is stronger then a tornado with a smaller base but overall width has nothing to do with actual wind speed and large circulations at times can actually indicate rotation that isn't as tight. Larger "wedge" tornadoes with F3 and stronger ratings are rare and only account for less then 1% of all tornadoes. F5 tornadoes with a 1 mile or larger diameter are once in a decade or two monsters. The largest and strongest tornadoes in recorded history happened in the same area just west of Oklahoma City; the 1999 Bridge Creek tornado with the highest radar indicated wind speed ever recorded at 307 mph and the 2013 Moore, Oklahoma tornado with wind speeds up to 210 mph and the largest ever recorded width of 2.4 miles at the base. Both were devastating but the Bridge Creek tornado didn't even leave the concrete slabs of some of the homes it took.
I am in Dallas Texas and I just had my power restored. We have been without electricity or cell and internet sevixe since 6am Tuesday. This was from straight line winds up to 80mph.
Funny that today I have service and you are showing our crazy weather ie tornado 🌪.
If Carol can handle more tornado videos, sure, but they are really destructive and cost lives. If that is too much for Carol then don't have her watch them. Up to her. I would hate to see her cry.
Mother nature can be beautiful and deadly.
Recky over in Valley View Texas, a tornado killed seven including kids. The kids were found later in a field deceased, that storm roared through like freight train. Prayers needed, that storm killed twenty people in total. 99 percent of tornado's rotate counter clockwise, the other 1 percent which are very rare, rotate clockwise.
I live in Florida where we get Hurricanes and one of the worst things about a Hurricane are the Tornadoes that it spawns and then the winds and the Rain.
This was Thursday May 2. The road that he stopped on and got out of the car is the road my parents lived on while they were alive. My nephew lives on the last little road that he turned down to check on people after the tornado passed. The camera didn't catch his house, it was on the right side further down. He was lucky compared to his neighbor across the road and a neighbor north of them. It totally obliterated their houses. I subscribed to your channel 2 days after this happened as I was looking for Hawley tornado videos. Thankfully, no one was killed, a few minor injuries. It was 5mph shy of an EF-4 when it came his little road, 165mph wind. I can't believe you reacted to this one! This is where I live. Thanks for your reactions. I love them.
The Jarrell Texas tornado was actually 700kph wind because it was 320mph so they can actually go much faster than 400kph.
It's tornado season. It's an active year but it's not the worst year. This time of year and the fall is when we get them. I live where you can't have basements so we leave when they come. I missed one last week and it got right over my house but never dropped, thank God. We lost electricity
You can't see it well because it's surrounded by rain. They are beautiful, but destructive. Scary too! If it doesn't look like it's moving its coming right for you or going directly away from you, I always assume it's coming towards me.
There were twin tornadoes videoed in Midland Texas a few days ago. Traveling side by side.
I am 62yrs old. I grew up in Missouri right along side the Mississippi river and now live in Illinois right along the Mississippi river. When I was in 8th grade (back in the very early 1970s) our school had just let out for the day. A tornado was heading straight toward where me and my friends were walking home. We took shelter in a hardware store. My mother happened to come to get us because of the sirens going off. 5 mins after she picked us up and sped away the hardware store was hit. Totally demolished the store. Luckily the people that were still there made it to a storm shelter behind the store. It saved their lives. This wasn't the first or last time our community was hit by tornados. Where I live now is right close to where the Illinois Amazon warehouse was totally destroyed by a tornado. 6 or 7 people were killed. I have always lived in fear of tornados. My family was on our way to New Jersey in the 1960s when our car was picked up by a rain wrapped tornado. We were spinning around for at least 10 minutes before being set down in the middle of a corn field, 2 miles from where the highway we were on. That was right outside of Canton, Ohio. Life in the USA is dangerous. If it aint tornadoes, its earthquakes which we have all the time or major floods along the Mississippi river. But I really love it here anyway.
That's crazy...
I was let out of school during tornado sirens. Got lost walking home, my dad was out looking for me. He gave the teacher hell, l was 5.
Your father must have been frantic!! Why aren't our schools built with tornado shelters? And why do they let children out of school knowing dangerous weather is present? This is something all americans need to push to have changed. Americas children are our next generation. We should protect them from dangerous weather better!
We live around the same area! I hope you’ve been safe in all this crazy weather we’ve had, and hopefully we won’t have it as bad in June!
Beautiful and terrifyng as well
We went through one in Shawnee Oklahoma very scary. Luckily our shelter saved us
They do sound like a train...at least the one that went by our house in the middle of the night once sounded like a train. Storm chasers have more guts than sense. The sky can turn an eerie shade of green. Water spouts will form if the tornado goes across water, like a lake. They can skip one house and take the one next door. The flashes of light were probably power transformers. They can drive a piece of straw through a fence post.
Awe supervisor Moa and love you guys!
I live in Tornado Alley and let me tell you that no matter how well-built your house is a powerful tornado will always chew it up and one other thing, in reality most people realistically do not have storm shelters contrary to what some people may think. It's just too expensive and the common person is not going to have the money to spend on that.
The comment about the warning system being much better is probably true in most areas but I can tell you from my local area that it is horrible. They " test " the tornado sirens at random times which makes it unreliable because if it goes off you have no idea if they are testing it or if it's malfunctioning or if it's a real tornado
We get them all the time down here in Canton TX. My chainsaw needs a break.
I would love to see both of you do more reactions together....
Houston here, we had a huge storm this week, over 200 trees down in our neighbourhood.
Kingwood here! Yes, the storms have been insane this season, praying hurricane season isn’t as bad as they are forecasting!
@@artifactdad Kingwood too.
@@artifactdad And earthquakes
It's been bad here in Texas this year and it's just the beginning.
Carol and Recky remember this
if there is no debris you can not see the tornado
It’s been an active year so far for sure 😢
Tornadoes are no joke!
I watched this live on the news so i just wanted to stop by and give a like and a comment👍👍
I was wondering if we were ever going to get Ms. Carol reacting to tornado videos.
They can be beautiful and Deadly at the same time.
The largest recorded tornado was 2.6 miles (4.18 kilometers). So they can get really huge.
I live in Nebraska tornado alley welcome Carol this happens every spring and summer. Welcome Carol to tornado alley
Oh, wow! You said Hawley correctly. I know because it's only a 20-minute drive from where I am now, and where my grandparents lived for all of my life. I knew there had been a tornado there, but didn't know about this video. I've been watching you, Recky, for awhile, and am also following the two of you as Becky has joined. Keep up the great work! [I was born here and have seen 2 tornados with my own eyes. And while they can be devastating, they are still fascinating and, many times, beautiful. My brother has a place in town where he goes to "hide" from tornados (an underground structure) and we have a pact that he will always come get me ... I have no car of my own.]
Please have Carol do more tornado reactions with you Recky, especially those with real time people involved...even if you've seen it already Recky. Thank you....I saw on my feed Carol and you doing a tornado reaction and I clicked right away because I know Carol never sat with you during all your tornado reactions over the past year. Thank you Carol for your reaction too. As devastating as most of these footages are, you still know that humanity and caring for your fellow human being always exists in all our souls. And you also know how truly destructive Mother Nature can be at a moment's notice when the conditions are just right.
This one was barely an F1 Recky, and dissipated very quickly, thank God. 💙🌺
Thank you guys for viewing these. It’s been a very ruff Tornado 🌪️ season for us all, specifically Texas. Last nights were crazy also!
And they are predicting a very active hurricane season. 😩
This is gonna be a rough weather year here in the States. Oklahoma has had 80 tornadoes so far this year, from what an Oklahoman told. Nebraska, Ohio and Texas have been hit a lot this year. 2 hit in Temple, TX last week (25 mins from me here in Killeen). Friend of mine lost his home and the family's cars.
@@TexasRose50I heard that too. 😢
@@WolfLove89 I’ve lived in south central Texas for 28 years. Tornadoes are not normal this low in the state (unless there is a Hurricane. I remember 2 “warnings” in this time frame. I’m originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, hands down, I’ll take an earthquake over a tornado any day.
These things are very scary. (I have a friend who was an unwilling participant of the storm a couple of weeks ago, in the town above me San Marcos. Her trampoline from the back yard is still gone, but they received the neighbors mangled trampoline in exchange. They are in a mobile home, felt the push, they road it out in the closet. Her husband was preparing for heart surgery that following week. Crazy few hours during that storm, and, as she said when they finally checked in, we are all alive!)
I was watching Max Velcity on TH-cam watching it develop. I have concluded, I don’t understand these storms, this year as last year, nothing is “normal” about them.
@@TexasRose50 I’ve heard this also. I’m a good 200 miles north of Corpus, but Harvey proved to me, no area is immune. Stay safe!
I watched this live on MAX Volacity TH-cam there several large tornadoes that same hours in three states
Aha, home of the epic “Drunknado” and “flying Trampolines. That’s who I watch, great coverage, great education, I’m not feeling better knowing more information though! Just sayin….
I live in Fort worth, Texas. This kind of weather is typical this time of year here.
There are videos of tornadoes picking up whole tractor trailer trucks. They are one of the supreme forces of nature .
The ones that wipe out towns are so horrible. There is one out on youtube that shows it sucking the doors off of a storm shelter.
As I type this it hour 15 with no power, after last night's storm.
Nooo hope you get it soon 🌹
Watch the 1954 Waco Tornado..
And the 1900 Galveston Hurricane
You need underground bunker to save your life
Unfortunately, Not possible in all areas, much less affordable. I’m on solid Rock, in south central Texas, unless you hire a blasting crew (for a suburb area) you can’t dig.
Tornado Alley is Texas,Oklahoma, Kansas.Nebraska
Tornados definitely are an amazing visual force.
Hej! My daughter is a dual citizen of the US and Sweden. She turned me on to you. She knows I'm a tornado fanatic. I survived a pretty nasty one as a kid and have been fascinated ever since. I like these reactions. You have a great channel.
Yes, I would love for you both to react to more!
Worst F5 tornado in history - th-cam.com/video/q3IP4vTGnRY/w-d-xo.html "....suck the copper pipes out of the concrete...."
I lived through the Great Galveston Hurricane of 1900.
Look up the Moore Oklahoma 1999 2013 tornados. EF5
Keeping It Dutch's video yesterday was of them delivering his bunker.
They are mesmerizing
"The finger of God"
Beautiful and terrifying
Storms and tornadoes have been especially crazy and prolific this year.😣
Have you reacted to hurricanes and earthquakes? Both are equally devastating.
Hurricane Katrina, Hurricane Andrew, Hurricane Sandy
1906 San Francisco Earthquake, 1971 Sylmar Earthquake, 1989 San Francisco Earthquake, 1994 Northridge Earthquake
19:37 El Reno, OK tornado chase tragedy.
Look at the Joplin Missouri tornado. Horrible. Horrible. Also, Moore Oklahoma. Both of those are horrific but interesting.
You two should check out some of Reed Timmers tornado chase videos it's EXTREME!!!
Recky and Carol, Together watch: Jarrell Texas F-5 Tornado Dead Man Walking Documentary 59:49 minutes in length.
Highly recommend Pecos Hank's channel for tornado footage. He's the best!
You should watch the video of the May 31st, 2013 El Reno, Oklahoma tornado.
Hey, y'all, just came across your channel yesterday. Weather has always fascinated me, and I've lived most my life in Central Texas and now Florida, both areas where weather can be more than just interesting. My home/property has had a rough year, with Hurricane Idalia, a tornado May 10, and then Hurricane Debby. Finally FEMA came through with funds and my roof was replaced yesterday (woo hoo!). But, you might be interested in the Galveston, Texas Hurricane of 1900, which resulted in the greatest loss of life by natural disaster to date in the USA. Death toll estimates range from 6,000-10,000. There's a book and TV special about it, "Isaac's Storm". The stories of death and survival are heart-rending, esp. that of the orphanage run by nuns on the island. Galveston is one of my favorite places to visit, but even now you can feel the weight of that event in 1900, that changed the course of history for that island.❤