Its probably that the area didnt flood before so it wasnt in a floodplain map. But it just so happens that things arent going so great with expectations of maps not expecting changes in climate.
My wife and I were looking at new houses. She kept picking these houses that were near streams. When I pointed out that there was no WAY I was going to buy a house in a flood zone, she would always say, "There's no way a flood dould reach there from that tiny stream." I work with a veteran's disaster relief organization. On one flood-op, I took a video of this little stream; it wasn't very wide, nor very deep. Then I panned up to an empty field that was about 20 feet/6.1 m above the creek. I showed her a street-view of the area before the flood, then showed her the video I'd taken. We don't look at houses anywhere near streams anymore.
It's hard to understand at first but streams are where water flows TO. Compare the amount of land that is not a stream to the area a stream takes up, it took a minute for it to click for me too till I spent a couple years in deep Appalachia. The little stream I had to straddle with my car 200+ feet going to my house got real complicated sometimes and my husband and I would have to pack up our stuff before storms and stay at a relative's house, or not leave the house for a few days. Like 2-3 weeks out of the year in total it was impossibly impassable with our vehicles. Awesome life experience to have lived there.
@KekeeBlack i come from a desert and the amount of water that goes through what used to be a slight dip in the land when it does rain is something to behold
Actually they should be ashamed of themselves because number nine. That same footage was used during Hurricane Helene except for that time they didn't say it was in a basement because you don't have basements in Florida the water table is too shallow
Utah resident here. Flash flooding happens a lot **because** it's desert country. The dry ground can't absorb the water fast enough, so every year during the rainy season (and when the snow pack melts) the state gets flash flood warnings in areas most prone to it.
This channel does a really good job at taking an informative stance on the events. There's geography and news to it, and I learn a ton about weather and the world.
To be fair, they didn’t know it would cause those deaths. They just thought it was cool to see what they did. Easy to judge on the internet after the fact, isn’t it?
In 1990, when I was only 30 yrs old, my small town of 1000 people had a flash flood after receiving 7 inches of rain in just over an hour. We lost a lot of property and many animals, but fortunately, only 1 human life. I never imagined the force of water when it's suddenly 18 feet deeper than normal.
@Die-Angst the person was found. Lots of cleanup but unknown numbers of animals and buildings were buried in the mud. Ranchers along the rivers lost countless livestock. Fortunately, we have fewer people here than farm animals. That poor man who drowned was from somewhere else staying in a camper while he worked construction. Dang. The memories are still vivid.
People living in the desert are generally aware of arroyo dangers but that far north people forget that's still a desert and flash floods come with the territory. Those guys knew exactly what was happening but it really is surprising there was that much deadfall which makes the unfortunate losses understandable.
So excited to see the Hunter River featured So bitterly disappointed to see no ACTUAL footage of it, the little flood shown was not even a slight example of its power( I don’t think that footage WAS of the Hunter River btw, looks way too small)
Biggest reason why its my fave channel that post similar contents. Its so calming & nice to listen his voice & the way he pronounce clearly without overdoing like some others.
The sheer terror of seeing water pouring into their home was visceral. I can't imagine...even seeing it with my own eyes doesn't convey the devastation they experienced. I hope that they're safe and dry now... Seeing an entire village wiped out in seconds...they must be traumatized. 😞
Many, many years ago, I lived in Sioux Falls, SD and flooding along the Big Sioux river wasn’t anything new. But it was the only place that I lived that could have a tornado warning, followed up by a flash flood warning.
2:31 Just for your info, Utah is in the Western US, not the Midwest. The Midwest is the area east of the Rocky Mountains. Colorado and everything west of it is the Western US. 👍
If you just spent "X" amount of dollars refinishing your basement because it just flooded and you *know* it flooded because of the slope of your driveway, then that's on YOU for not having a drain installed close to your house! Hopefully now they'll do it right
Absolutely terrifying! The sheer force of these flash floods is hard to comprehend. Nature’s power is on full display, and it’s a stark reminder of how quickly disaster can strike
this was an incredible video, really well done! the footage is chilling, and it’s hard to believe how quickly the water can rise. however, i have to wonder if the media sometimes sensationalizes these events to get more views. natural disasters are terrifying enough without adding extra drama, don’t you think?
I don't recall ever watching a video of flooding where I would have been ok if the water and debris flow taught a camerman a bit of a lesson, at least not before hearing the narrator at 6:02. I wasn't hoping for any inuries of course, just a little debris small enough to fit in his mouth.
what an incredible video! the footage is absolutely mind-blowing. however, i can't help but wonder if it's really fair to call it the "most horrific." there have been so many other devastating events that seem to get less attention. just a thought!
Nature’s power is terrifying! Incredible footage but truly a reminder to stay safe and respect the forces around us. Thanks for sharing this intense video.
Suggestion: My state in Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul) suffered major floods this year in May, forcing more than 2 million people out of their houses, and leaving 500 thousand people homeless. 180 deaths, 27 still missing. There are a lot of videos about it if you want to use in your channel. 😉
great job capturing such a wild event! it’s fascinating to see the power of nature, but honestly, i wonder if the footage glorifies something that’s truly devastating for the people affected. maybe we should focus more on the impact and recovery instead of just the spectacle?
There is a flash flood coming so let’s stand where it’s coming too. Sounds very smart. One day his luck will run out because Mother Nature usually wins.
2024 is a year of flooding, but many of these are not from 2024. After the cold drop in Spain, I noticed Wikipedia had a series of articles on flooding in many countries of Europe for 2024. To say nothing of the flooding as a result of hurricane Helene. Also the flooding of Pakistan of 2022 must be mentioned anywhere discussions of flooding occurs. Those barges in Manila that smashed into that bridge is due to failures on the part of the crews who did not adequately secure them to their docks. I have questions about the Utah house with the twice flooded basement. Something isn't quite right. How old is the house? Did it always have a finished basement? What is the layout -is it on sloping ground? What about that window? They need to investigate the contractor. Plenty of people have finished basements that don't flood even with egress windows which are often required of basements if there is a bedroom or an apartment in the basement. Edit, I looked them up. The first flood was a sewage back up (Lord Have Mercy) and the second was considered a 100 year flood.
In the UK I have noticed a trend in the last 40 (or so) decades - of building housing estates on flood plains. Or even one development I saw called "water meadow". A flood plain holds that name for a reason, it is the lovely, level area where the river regularly floods, taking away soil, and depositing new. A water meadow is an area that is fairly low lying, and each winter gets covered in water, causing a temporary lake. Knowing this I question the wisdom of those people who a. Think, this is a perfect place to build homes or industry b. Approve the building of housing or industry in these locations c. People who buy property in these areas without researching the area first.
@roowyrm9576 indeed, there's one near me. It's a garden centre, technically "brownfield" but of course it isn't. 300 houses going on it leading to an already conjested road.
I would have never guessed that was a basement with how low the window sits. That's more like a half basement. I feel like that's a design flaw in general; to have windows sitting so low to the ground. Oof.
It really hits the heart to hear this idiot laughing and carrying on... when down stream many people lost their lives.... much like many tornado chasers who are filming tornadoes and hooting and hollering at how "beautiful and cool the storm is.... while people are losing everything they own and worked for and some even losing family and friends.... shameful...
This year in North Carolina we lost many lives and some towns to flooding. In this "2024 floods" retrospective there is literally no mention of North Carolina. Call this video instead "2015 - 2024". Note also that there is no mention whatsoever of the floods this year in Valencia Spain. Some two hundred lives were lost there. This year is very poorly represented in the video.
Never buy a house lower than the general elevation of the nearest railroad tracks. The railroad spent a lot of time and money on surveying the land and figuring flood levels before they built their right of way, and they meant for the rails to survive the highest of floods with the minimum repairs required
The recent [October 29, 2024] 'Riada' [ = gushing flash flood] in Valencia region [Spain] came with only 10 minutes warning and washed before it and destroyed 10,000 automobiles and vans, and the death toll of missing people is unknown.....
Wow, this video is absolutely chilling! The intensity of that flash flood is hard to believe. honestly, though, I can't help but think that some of these extreme weather events are a wake-up call about climate change. It feels like we’re just scratching the surface of the real dangers ahead. What do you guys think?
I was surprised at how effective plugging the dam breech with large trucks worked. I thought they'd just float down stream. They didn't plug so much, they maintained the edges to prevent further erosion.
Super Doku, sehr gut und mit klarer Sprache kommentiert, meistens schalte ich die Übersetzung ein aber bei dir brauchte ich das nicht, ich verstand jedes Wort!
Just a kind suggestion: I think assorted events is much more exciting, because it is more surprising and not knowing what to expect, rather than 10 floods or 10 earthquake where we know what is coming through the video. Thanks for all your hard work.
great video! the footage is truly alarming and captures the power of nature. but to be honest, do we really need to label it as "horrific"? isn't that a bit sensationalist? some might argue it detracts from the real impact of climate change we're facing. just a thought!
great video, really intense footage! but honestly, do you think the media sometimes overhypes these situations? I mean, while it's important to raise awareness about climate issues, the sensationalism can make it hard to separate real dangers from just dramatic content. what do you all think?
They should just leave the basement unfixed to avoid problems of fixing it more after each flood and leave it like that forever and never put anything in the basement
Well I didn't expect to see Armley on here. Used to live up that way and sometimes the floods on the river Aire were pretty insane. All the graffiti is why I don't live there anymore, it's a horrible violent and depressing place.
Video of floodwaters breaking into the basement well there's a reason why we don't put things that are valuable in the basement or able to be destroyed by water in the basement especially in flood-prone areas
Wow, this video is really intense and captures the power of nature in a way that's both fascinating and terrifying. But honestly, I wonder if all the hype around "horrific" events like this fuels more fear than necessary? Sometimes it seems like these extreme situations can overshadow the important discussions about climate change and preparedness. What do you all think?
That was some insane footage of natures fury. Well done and I really like how you talk at the end of the footage while there's still new scenes to see, instead of making us sit through it all again just so you can tell us what we already can see. SO MUCH BETTER!!!
TIME INDEX 3;20 some perspex glass sheeting would on the outside would have stopped this water from getting in.. but your not very bright so on you go, CARRY ON AS YOU WERE.
What is it with flash flood in Utah having so many huge tree branches and huge chunks of the trunks of trees do they just stack it all in flood plains and go its someone else's problem now
If your basement floods twice in a row I think that is nature telling you that you built your house in the wrong spot
Or there's irregular weather caused by climate change
I feel bad for them. Must think they're cursed
If your basement has a window it's not really a basement. The basement should be under ground level and you don't need windows there.
Yep
Its probably that the area didnt flood before so it wasnt in a floodplain map. But it just so happens that things arent going so great with expectations of maps not expecting changes in climate.
My wife and I were looking at new houses. She kept picking these houses that were near streams. When I pointed out that there was no WAY I was going to buy a house in a flood zone, she would always say, "There's no way a flood dould reach there from that tiny stream."
I work with a veteran's disaster relief organization. On one flood-op, I took a video of this little stream; it wasn't very wide, nor very deep. Then I panned up to an empty field that was about 20 feet/6.1 m above the creek. I showed her a street-view of the area before the flood, then showed her the video I'd taken. We don't look at houses anywhere near streams anymore.
"My WiiiFah" 😂. Jkjk...over here stoned man. First thing I saw..😅
It's hard to understand at first but streams are where water flows TO. Compare the amount of land that is not a stream to the area a stream takes up, it took a minute for it to click for me too till I spent a couple years in deep Appalachia. The little stream I had to straddle with my car 200+ feet going to my house got real complicated sometimes and my husband and I would have to pack up our stuff before storms and stay at a relative's house, or not leave the house for a few days. Like 2-3 weeks out of the year in total it was impossibly impassable with our vehicles. Awesome life experience to have lived there.
@KekeeBlack i come from a desert and the amount of water that goes through what used to be a slight dip in the land when it does rain is something to behold
Actually they should be ashamed of themselves because number nine. That same footage was used during Hurricane Helene except for that time they didn't say it was in a basement because you don't have basements in Florida the water table is too shallow
This is why women NEED men in their lives. They're not pragmatic.....
Utah resident here. Flash flooding happens a lot **because** it's desert country. The dry ground can't absorb the water fast enough, so every year during the rainy season (and when the snow pack melts) the state gets flash flood warnings in areas most prone to it.
Peeps might not believe it, but the same happens in Egypt too, for the same reason.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
@@surreyscouse2873don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
& we know this, yet still build.
@@jelsig6783don't put cement on grave not allowed ect
This channel does a really good job at taking an informative stance on the events. There's geography and news to it, and I learn a ton about weather and the world.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
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I just couldn't see the hilarious side of the Utah flash flood that claimed the lives of people.
nnörrnönnce ^?^
That guys laugh was really annoying!
To be fair, they didn’t know it would cause those deaths. They just thought it was cool to see what they did. Easy to judge on the internet after the fact, isn’t it?
@@ghostscript2044 That's the go to answer. A different answer if any of the victims was someone close to you.
@@colinparmanand3162I agree with you!
In 1990, when I was only 30 yrs old, my small town of 1000 people had a flash flood after receiving 7 inches of rain in just over an hour. We lost a lot of property and many animals, but fortunately, only 1 human life. I never imagined the force of water when it's suddenly 18 feet deeper than normal.
@Die-Angst the person was found. Lots of cleanup but unknown numbers of animals and buildings were buried in the mud. Ranchers along the rivers lost countless livestock. Fortunately, we have fewer people here than farm animals. That poor man who drowned was from somewhere else staying in a camper while he worked construction. Dang. The memories are still vivid.
@@mikebritton8798don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Do note that standing infront of a flash flood is a very stupid idea. Do not attempt.
FhörrceFilL€D v??v
Just Darwinism in action.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
@@Katzenjammerz67don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
People living in the desert are generally aware of arroyo dangers but that far north people forget that's still a desert and flash floods come with the territory.
Those guys knew exactly what was happening but it really is surprising there was that much deadfall which makes the unfortunate losses understandable.
What about the flooding in North Carolina from hurricane Helene
So excited to see the Hunter River featured
So bitterly disappointed to see no ACTUAL footage of it, the little flood shown was not even a slight example of its power( I don’t think that footage WAS of the Hunter River btw, looks way too small)
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
love your mini documentaries, I have learned more about geography watching your videos, then in school.
Loving the narration! Spot-on voice, diction, and timing are key to this video’s success.
Biggest reason why its my fave channel that post similar contents. Its so calming & nice to listen his voice & the way he pronounce clearly without overdoing like some others.
@@sebnemkarbuz9589don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
The sheer terror of seeing water pouring into their home was visceral. I can't imagine...even seeing it with my own eyes doesn't convey the devastation they experienced. I hope that they're safe and dry now...
Seeing an entire village wiped out in seconds...they must be traumatized. 😞
Many, many years ago, I lived in Sioux Falls, SD and flooding along the Big Sioux river wasn’t anything new. But it was the only place that I lived that could have a tornado warning, followed up by a flash flood warning.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
2:31 Just for your info, Utah is in the Western US, not the Midwest. The Midwest is the area east of the Rocky Mountains. Colorado and everything west of it is the Western US. 👍
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
If you just spent "X" amount of dollars refinishing your basement because it just flooded and you *know* it flooded because of the slope of your driveway, then that's on YOU for not having a drain installed close to your house! Hopefully now they'll do it right
Imagine going into the city to watch a movie & go to dinner with your family... You drive home & you entire house is 2 miles down the street
Can u imagine if landslide takes y'all and your house down stream to the river alot of people didn't make it.alot more then they are saying
@@matildamarmaduke1096don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Absolutely terrifying! The sheer force of these flash floods is hard to comprehend. Nature’s power is on full display, and it’s a stark reminder of how quickly disaster can strike
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Nature ALWAYS wins.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Still can't get over how awesome this turned out!
Correction: Utah isn't in MidWestern US, It's in SW US..
this was an incredible video, really well done! the footage is chilling, and it’s hard to believe how quickly the water can rise. however, i have to wonder if the media sometimes sensationalizes these events to get more views. natural disasters are terrifying enough without adding extra drama, don’t you think?
Every time you post, I'm excited!
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
I don't recall ever watching a video of flooding where I would have been ok if the water and debris flow taught a camerman a bit of a lesson, at least not before hearing the narrator at 6:02. I wasn't hoping for any inuries of course, just a little debris small enough to fit in his mouth.
what an incredible video! the footage is absolutely mind-blowing. however, i can't help but wonder if it's really fair to call it the "most horrific." there have been so many other devastating events that seem to get less attention. just a thought!
Nature’s power is terrifying! Incredible footage but truly a reminder to stay safe and respect the forces around us. Thanks for sharing this intense video.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Suggestion: My state in Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul) suffered major floods this year in May, forcing more than 2 million people out of their houses, and leaving 500 thousand people homeless. 180 deaths, 27 still missing. There are a lot of videos about it if you want to use in your channel. 😉
great job capturing such a wild event! it’s fascinating to see the power of nature, but honestly, i wonder if the footage glorifies something that’s truly devastating for the people affected. maybe we should focus more on the impact and recovery instead of just the spectacle?
Thanks camera for the real footage. Thanks
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
6:30 -ish. Dudes laugh is so annoyingly irritating. 🤡💀 Dude is out there risking his life. Could have drowned and hes laughing like a *hyena.* 🥴
There is a flash flood coming so let’s stand where it’s coming too. Sounds very smart. One day his luck will run out because Mother Nature usually wins.
This collection of natural disasters caught on camera serves as a powerful lesson for humanity.
Utah is not in the Midwest!
2024 is a year of flooding, but many of these are not from 2024. After the cold drop in Spain, I noticed Wikipedia had a series of articles on flooding in many countries of Europe for 2024. To say nothing of the flooding as a result of hurricane Helene. Also the flooding of Pakistan of 2022 must be mentioned anywhere discussions of flooding occurs.
Those barges in Manila that smashed into that bridge is due to failures on the part of the crews who did not adequately secure them to their docks. I have questions about the Utah house with the twice flooded basement. Something isn't quite right. How old is the house? Did it always have a finished basement? What is the layout -is it on sloping ground? What about that window? They need to investigate the contractor. Plenty of people have finished basements that don't flood even with egress windows which are often required of basements if there is a bedroom or an apartment in the basement. Edit, I looked them up. The first flood was a sewage back up (Lord Have Mercy) and the second was considered a 100 year flood.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Very interesting video
In the UK I have noticed a trend in the last 40 (or so) decades - of building housing estates on flood plains. Or even one development I saw called "water meadow".
A flood plain holds that name for a reason, it is the lovely, level area where the river regularly floods, taking away soil, and depositing new. A water meadow is an area that is fairly low lying, and each winter gets covered in water, causing a temporary lake.
Knowing this I question the wisdom of those people who a. Think, this is a perfect place to build homes or industry
b. Approve the building of housing or industry in these locations
c. People who buy property in these areas without researching the area first.
Problem is, we're so densely populated, there's not a lot of places to build on now.
@surreyscouse2873 There are plenty of "brown field" sites that could be rehabilitated into safe use for housing.
@roowyrm9576 indeed, there's one near me. It's a garden centre, technically "brownfield" but of course it isn't. 300 houses going on it leading to an already conjested road.
The Utah family needs to fix their yard area..... the water likes their driveway and basement.
I would have never guessed that was a basement with how low the window sits. That's more like a half basement. I feel like that's a design flaw in general; to have windows sitting so low to the ground. Oof.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
It really hits the heart to hear this idiot laughing and carrying on... when down stream many people lost their lives.... much like many tornado chasers who are filming tornadoes and hooting and hollering at how "beautiful and cool the storm is.... while people are losing everything they own and worked for and some even losing family and friends.... shameful...
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
they want us their viewers to laugh also like them as they there on site filming and we Watching from far far away like they seem to love it
so we just laugh ga because we all the same cyclone prone lattitudes and flood prone storm surge and whatever whatever
you should have fixed the water flow problem before redoing the basement fix the problem before fixing anything else
If part of your daily routine calls for you to free dive for your car keys in your living room, you could be in the wrong line of work.😎😎😎
Hey thankyou....Yet you did not mention flood in 17.....no rain......then flood in 22 Lismore NSW.......I am terrified of rain now xxx
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
This year in North Carolina we lost many lives and some towns to flooding. In this "2024 floods" retrospective there is literally no mention of North Carolina. Call this video instead "2015 - 2024". Note also that there is no mention whatsoever of the floods this year in Valencia Spain. Some two hundred lives were lost there. This year is very poorly represented in the video.
The video is caught on camera 2024 . Maybe they didn't have footage for the ones you mentioned.
Never buy a house lower than the general elevation of the nearest railroad tracks. The railroad spent a lot of time and money on surveying the land and figuring flood levels before they built their right of way, and they meant for the rails to survive the highest of floods with the minimum repairs required
The recent [October 29, 2024] 'Riada' [ = gushing flash flood] in Valencia region [Spain] came with only 10 minutes warning and washed before it and destroyed 10,000 automobiles and vans, and the death toll of missing people is unknown.....
Yes it looks horrific, those poor people. Someone said many dams had been taken down sometimes before ?
@@anjou6497don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
@@LisaHack-hq3dvit’s etc.
Wow, this video is absolutely chilling! The intensity of that flash flood is hard to believe. honestly, though, I can't help but think that some of these extreme weather events are a wake-up call about climate change. It feels like we’re just scratching the surface of the real dangers ahead. What do you guys think?
I was surprised at how effective plugging the dam breech with large trucks worked. I thought they'd just float down stream. They didn't plug so much, they maintained the edges to prevent further erosion.
Unbelievable footage! Nature’s power is terrifying and awe-inspiring at the same time. Hope everyone stayed safe-thanks for sharing this intense video
Super Doku, sehr gut und mit klarer Sprache kommentiert, meistens schalte ich die Übersetzung ein aber bei dir brauchte ich das nicht, ich verstand jedes Wort!
You know the damage is extensive when it changes the geography of an entire town.
WoW!
Natural disasters are truly harsh.☹☹☹☹☹☹☹☹
The Hunter River, that is near me. Small world to see a video from my own home town.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
@@LisaHack-hq3dv wft you on about? what has flowers on grave got to do about living near the hunter river?
@@LisaHack-hq3dv WTF are you talking about. You a Bot?... account created 2nd November 24. Def a bot...
@@LisaHack-hq3dvit’s etc.
I live in Utah and if there's anything non controversial our state is known for, it's wacky weather.
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
@LisaHack-hq3dv I've never heard that
3:30 running upstairs? ❌ Filming? ✅
Just a kind suggestion: I think assorted events is much more exciting, because it is more surprising and not knowing what to expect, rather than 10 floods or 10 earthquake where we know what is coming through the video. Thanks for all your hard work.
You must do something when your unpaid promotion ads last longer than your video 27 minutes long are ridiculous.
incredible construction on that bridge "
great video! the footage is truly alarming and captures the power of nature. but to be honest, do we really need to label it as "horrific"? isn't that a bit sensationalist? some might argue it detracts from the real impact of climate change we're facing. just a thought!
4:22 y’all see that Mary statue she didn’t fall down with the water because Mary and god is with them
God will flood your basement if she loves you?
Evil
@@IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII-q1bdon't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
@@josephastier7421don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
I wonder if the cameraman even thought of the damage of the flood while he was laughing???...or the loss of lives???
@ 13:00 it's tom thumb trucking to the rescue lol
ManMade! Planned!
7:50 its a landside actually
Utah is NOT in the Midwest
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
@@LisaHack-hq3dvit’s etc.
Some common sense is needed with the basement situation
The worst part is none of 'em could swim. They vowed to live on the second floor
A local photographer? Photographers take pictures. They don't record video.
14:09 geoengineering
😱😱😱
😊 good mutation from human 🦧darwin to marmaid 🧜
great video, really intense footage! but honestly, do you think the media sometimes overhypes these situations? I mean, while it's important to raise awareness about climate issues, the sensationalism can make it hard to separate real dangers from just dramatic content. what do you all think?
That China Bridge used stronger steel than the FRancis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore that got wipped out last yr by tanker
Abandoned ships? You can clearly see people running all over those boats. They weren't abandoned.
11:26 This woman is up to her upper chest in water but continues to hold onto her folded umbrella.
whatever that car is at 11:00 i want one. how the f is it still running??
How did the bridge in the 1st clip did not collapse ??
Filming vertical made it impossible to see what was happening. Too bad to miss so much with bad filming.
They should just leave the basement unfixed to avoid problems of fixing it more after each flood and leave it like that forever and never put anything in the basement
Fill in the basement and build an attic! 😅
Well I didn't expect to see Armley on here. Used to live up that way and sometimes the floods on the river Aire were pretty insane. All the graffiti is why I don't live there anymore, it's a horrible violent and depressing place.
Video of floodwaters breaking into the basement well there's a reason why we don't put things that are valuable in the basement or able to be destroyed by water in the basement especially in flood-prone areas
People need to stop living and building by rivers, streams, floodplains, valleys, low lying land in tropical storm areas & tsunami prone coasts.
We got massive flas hfloods in France recently too
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
House for sale.Light water damage.
TY geoengineers…
7:26 PORTO RICO🎉🎉🎉🎉
"Hey..I've a great idea..why don't we use YOUR semi-truck to plug that massive hole in the river bank ?? "
Wow, this video is really intense and captures the power of nature in a way that's both fascinating and terrifying. But honestly, I wonder if all the hype around "horrific" events like this fuels more fear than necessary? Sometimes it seems like these extreme situations can overshadow the important discussions about climate change and preparedness. What do you all think?
cant believe you still havent included the Ahrtal in germany.
How did people - on the one hand - get killed in Utah, meanwhile other locals knew where to position themselves to watch the flood arrive...?
Bruh. In Quezon City, Philippines Heavy Rain called typhoon kristine it almost flood. It go in my area
The title image apparently doesn't belong to any of the clips in this video.
You'll soon be able to add the USA hurricane damage of 2024 to your clips😮
Puts things into perspective…
That was some insane footage of natures fury. Well done and I really like how you talk at the end of the footage while there's still new scenes to see, instead of making us sit through it all again just so you can tell us what we already can see. SO MUCH BETTER!!!
Don't put flowers on grave not allowed ect
TIME INDEX 3;20 some perspex glass sheeting would on the outside would have stopped this water from getting in.. but your not very bright so on you go, CARRY ON AS YOU WERE.
Those so-called pontoons aren't pontoons they're called barges not pontoons
What is it with flash flood in Utah having so many huge tree branches and huge chunks of the trunks of trees do they just stack it all in flood plains and go its someone else's problem now