Models Suggest Major Shift in Tornado Activity... This is Bad
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Models Suggest Major Shift in Tornado Activity... This is Bad
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You were so focused on Tornado Alley and Dixie Alley, that you flat out overlooked the significant increase in tornadoes in the Ohio Valley in 2024.
Yeah this guy totally blew it with forgetting about Ohio especially and Indiana. Those 2 states are well inside the new Tornado Alley. He's referring to old outdated stuff from a few years ago because in the past 5 years or so Ohio and southern great lakes in general have been getting more tornadoes than the Plains states. He clearly needs to do some research
@@thomaspeffer3885and everyone forgets too in Dixie Alley they get the most tornadoes throughout the year as their tornado season starts early and ends late (I've had tornadoes in December in Mississippi). Plus tornadoes that come from rain bands of hurricanes as well. Appalachia has also had plenty these past couple years going into the Ohio valley. If you get cool dry air and warm, moist air together, it generally means supercells capable of producing tornadoes. Would not be surprised if we start to see outbreaks closer to Canada in the coming years. There have been some severe oned that far north, but I think it can become more common soon.
I knew the three who died in the Indian Lake, Adams County, Dayton, and the East Claremont County Tornado Outbreak. The information I am gathering places the Ohio River Valley as ground zero for tornado outbreaks going forward. The Moscow Tornado that jumped the Ohio River off Fort Thomas Ky and destroyed the Village of Moscow in 2014 killed 83 people and did almost a billion dollars in damage. We are all on high alert for the danger ahead. I reiterate, the Ohio River Valley will be the new tornado alley in the next five or so years. Stay alert and stay alive.
The "Buckeye Alley"? "THE Ohio State Sojourn"?
or maybe the "Hoosier Hoover"?
@@Premier-Media-Group Buckeye Alley, hmmm, I’ll adopt it. Thanks for sharing.
If Ohio and Illinois is top 5 in tornados in a season, it is not a "Classic Season"
ikr illinois is in 2nd place as of now- most definitely not normal!
Part of Illinois, part of Ohio, and Indiana are actually in a separate "Tornado Alley," known as "Hoosier Alley." Part of Illinois is in Traditional Tornado Alley. It's not unusual for those states to have a lot of Tornadoes, for example the Tri-state Tornado, the 1974 Super Outbreaks which included the Xenia, OH F5 tornado, the Palm Sunday Outbreak, and many Tornadoes throughout the years.
As far as a "Classic Tornado Season," Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and Iowa are also in the top number of Tornadoes. Iowa is number 2 on the list. Texas is number 1, but it is the largest state in Tornado Alley, and per square mile, it is Actually Iowa that takes the top spot. So, this has the characteristics of a classic Tornado Season, from that perspective.
@@notanemoatallNot anymore, I believe Illinois is in 8th place with Oklahoma, Ohio, Missouri, Texas, Nebraska, Kansas, and Iowa leading ahead
Imo I still consider Oklahoma to be the state capital of tornadoes as it's had the most F5s (with Alabama) and this year again is the only state which has had an EF-4 rated tornado (two in fact!)
Ohio and Illinois have always been pretty active.
Amazing how most of Missouri is left out of Tornado alley when Missouri have a lot of tornados.
Dixie Alley has had a break so far this year but Tornados have hit the original alley! Those guys have had it rough. praying for you.
Thank you for circling the classic Tornado Alley. Almost missed it 😅😂
We had three in Tallahassee Friday our school took a direct hit three EF2s
My friend’s house on St. Augustine was direct hit. Its gone.
I suspect Dixie Alley is more active when there is a drought in the western states, but Tornado Alley is more active when there is moire rain/moisture in the west.
Dixie historically had less Tornado's but they typically fast moving, stronger and more destructive
Definitely switched south. 20 years ago we watched for summer thunderstorms to cool off and of course hurricanes!
Hoosier alley has been very active this year.
Was watching a video earlier in year where they talked about the weakening of El nino and the timing of that weakening. The video said the last time it weakened at the same time it is this year was 1991 and tornado alley was very active that year while Dixie alley was far less active.
I remember that upload, don’t remember who tho🤔 I wanna watch it again and compare to data
Dixie alley was less active tornado season, however, all the right factors are in place this year going straight into La Niña with no break from El Niño we could see more major hurricanes making landfall in the Carribean and the US this year. Last year, we had a very active season with major hurricanes, but very few made landfall due to the natural wind sheer and the jet stream placement. Systems and models are showing there isn't any of that this year to help "steer" away hurricanes back to sea. That's why where I am on the coast in Dixie alley I am more prepared for hurricanes come August and September. I expect an active season.
Ohio gets on average 25 twisters but we have 50 this year
Many tornado have occurred outside of Philly. I remember july 27th 1994 very well . Only one I was actually in the path of
Mississippi has had the most tornadoes per year for a long time. Tornado alley is where the storm chasers go because they can see them better.
I would like to know how it is PA and Ohio had several the other day but yet there was no temperature change.
When you put the convective outlook on the map up at the top there's three black boxes that show tornado wind and hail you could press that too and it'll show what the percent is for hail wind and tornadoes I know you've been showing the convective Outlook but there's more to it it shows percentages of wind tornado and hail keep up the good work 😁
Ty...Appreciated..
South East NC and North East SC seen a few tornados this year already
Tallahassee Florida had 4 tornadoes today
I heard somewhere that Florida has more tornadoes per land area than any other state. Super glad I decided to stay far away from the coast, because for some stupid reason I genuinely believed when I moved south I'd be picking to deal with either hurricanes, tornadoes, or the desert
@@Safran282 facts
@@Safran282Tallahassee almost never has actual tornados like that though. We have them maybe once or twice if one touches down. This was unreal.
I've been saying this for 10 years that tornado ally is slowly shifting to the east. Good to see but concerning that my theory was correct
They may want to add a third zone for Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan. Call it Abraham Alley. Lincoln was from that region, he wore a stovepipe hat, and there are stovepipe tornadoes.
I believe there’s an alley mostly on Indiana called Hoosier Alley
I live in KY & theres seemingly been an unusually high amount of tornadoes here a couple days this year. One day a few weeks ago i think the state had like 19 tornadoes in a day or two 😭
It’s soaking wet in the SE. The ground is now saturated. Rains are causing flooding. Do your research before you decide to come here for any reason.
where the hell else am I gonna go ?
I remember Michigan got an EF2 tornado back in late February this year and it was a couple feet away from damaging my house
Yup it touched down a quarter mile of my sisters house! That was a weird night!!
Where in Michigan I don't remember hearing about a February tornado
@@handheldnintendofan Grand Blanc, just 10-15 minutes southeast of Flint
Midwesterners are crying about a lack of tornado recognition. Give them a gold star for their 1 tornado season.
Someone told me NC and SC was part of Dixie alley, really no big deal. But NC does have history of bad tornados.
The map that I saw was drawn up by the National Geographic magazine. They had it going up a little bit past where the Missouri River valley, to about STL. Just saying.
That warning sign is right above where I’m at rn 💀
I live in bartlesville ok which was hit by a tornado on Monday night, and it was quite literally in my backyard, which isn't a backyard anymore.
Good thing you weren't further south in Barnsdall
@@realixx9375 yup
So sorry you lost your backyard, but happy you're alive!😊
@@nowhining thanks
Bartlesville hasn't had a tornado in over 30 years so to say we were surprised it hit would be an understatement
The Bootheel of MO should probably be included in Dixie, might as well throw in St. Louis too. St. Louis is the major city with the most downtown city tornado hits in the US.
Everyone says Atlanta is in the Dixie alley but I feel after living in Atlanta we don’t see that much severe weather and I haven’t had to take shelter from a tornado for over nine years
Dixie Alley is Eastern Texas to Carolinas. Spent 13yrs in northern Alabama, multiple times every yr we'd have a Warning. Kansas and Alabama have highest number of F5's . Growing up in Michigan we'd have warnings all the time, have spend nite in the Basement along with the whole County for safety. Last 20yrs with better Radar and predictions you can be couple miles from a Tornado and Sirens dont go off as they know its heading away from the area.
It’s not shifting, it’s expanding and intensifying.
If that was the case we would have had an F5 tornado in the past 11 years but we haven’t had one since 2013
Number of storms could be considered intensifying not necessarily a increase in tornado size
@@m3rkrust46 An increase in frequency would be a teller of a higher abundance of CAPE spread across the USA. If you have more CAPE though you should have more explosive storms and therefore stronger tornadoes. The only argument I could understand why there would be less EF5 tornadoes is because we are building houses better now.
@@CFBPSUwe had tornadoes this year (2024) with 200+ MPH. If you guy by winds rather than ground damage we had EF5s this year 🤷♂️
It is intensifying and growing. It is horrifying
Did tornado alley and dixie alley join forces?
apparently so
Will it be called Plains Dixie alley?
Bro completely ignoring Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky lol. Excellent coverage 😂
You spent 2 minutes telling us where tornado ally was & where Dixie ally was , while showing them on screen with the words , RIGHT THERE
How can we help this family for those of us who survived Ian making a direct hit would love to give back to others who came to our rescue ❤
Would El Nino, La Nina & Solar Maximum have any effect on the weather? All 3 are happening around the same time this year if i remember correctly.
Son, as long as I’ve been alive, Arkansas has ALWAYS been in tornado alley. Dixie? Maybe the SE but the rest of this magnificent state IS in tornado alley. Smh
It’s not a shift it’s been there all along everyone was just so concerned about the others they just didn’t notice them
Tornado season is not over, Tornadoes tend to hit the western high plains later than eastern states. May is not even over yet. The 1966 Topeka tornado was in June and lot's of times it takes awhile for the western half of the high plains to heat up. Goodland, McCook, Garden City and the panhandle areas don't get much heat until May anyway. I wold wait until the end of May before you make the prediction of shifts in the Ally.
What is the region called from Missouri to Indiana. Alot of tornadoes happen in this corridor but you focus on just two. Missouri Illinois have significant numbers per year
Part of Illinois is in Hoosier Alley, part of Ohio is in Hoosier Alley, but Indiana is in Hoosier Alley. Depending on what map you look at, part of Illinois is in Traditional Tornado Alley.
Does another country have more tornadoes than the Americas?
No America has over 1000 per year
I so glad not to live in Tornado areas of
the US. 😅
Same
@@charlesNYMets Thanks 😊
Hate to tell you, but everywhere can have tornadoes....just that some places are more likely. You're never 100% safe from them anywhere, especially in the US.
Tornado spirit heard that 🌪 😶🌫️
I hope I didn't but I still love it here even when a tornado just hit my home the other day
It’s seasonal elnino has more tornadoes in central USA …. La Niña more down south east . Jan Feb early March Dixie alley , April May June central to the north .
Most strong tornadoes form in Oklahoma Kansas and Texas .
Kentucky isn't part of Dixie Alley?
I also thought it was... hmm strange
It is
It is: Dixie Alley includes much of the area of the lower Mississippi Valley.[7] It stretches from eastern Texas and Arkansas across Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, and mid to western Kentucky to upstate South Carolina and western North Carolina; the area reaches as far north as southeast Missouri.[8] Another source places all of Arkansas within Dixie Alley
Shifting?? So far the plains been exploding
Will the solar storm magnify this?
He does realize that the classic tornado alley is where the new record tornado outbreak happened this year right? April 2nd 2024.
Only those who use critical thinking realize weather manipulation. The fact No one even questions chemtrails and what it causes to the atmosphere is astounding!
Your Chem trails have been debunked long ago, try something other than fox. I bet you think Trump wanting to nuke a hurricane was a great idea 💡 yeah great critical thinking skills
People will probably blame this on gasoline engines
theres no shift midwest is where that monster has done the most damage tearing up populated towns and decimating them the weather is getting worse and worse🤦 every year
It’s not really shifting it’s expanding
The new tornado alley has moved over into Illinois indiana Ohio or maybe we have a all new alley the National Weather Service is now looking in to it
Ya is it called Hoosier alley because it has been there for a while hope that answered your question
Red-green color blindness might not be able to discern the colors.
How about mentioning geo engineering of weather with . along with high frequency and microwave pulsing to intensify and steer .?
Where are you pulling this crap from? You can't modify the atmosphere on a large scale
SlyRecord - are you deficient in knowledge of technology , and the sheer number of patents of such ?
@@larrylyons-hr7eu nah, I'm not as dumb as the guy that's trying to argue over something that is completely impossible to achieve...... go educate yourself on how the weather works..... then we can talk
@@larrylyons-hr7eu It's amazing to me that you put a few key words together, but 0 explanation as to the mechanism of the so called Haarp. You claim it's real, but can't explain what it is!? That's a red flag that you have bought into a conspiracy theory!!
Patents mean nothing without evidence of the causal relationship between Haarp and tornadoes. Tornadoes have happened long before humans had any technology. Global warming makes much more sense to explain this tornado outbreak.
Haarp at it's finest!
That is exactly where the problem adults are... God doesn't like ugly! He will clean house...
why do all these weather channels use these ominous titles like this.
Reall omg
I’m fucking 💀dead
This Ain't Good
Mother Earth is Punishing us.
Stop weather modification now!
Stop playing god.
Stop spraying us.😢
Do you even realize the sheer scale of industrial machinery needed to control and manufacture weather? It would be completely impossible to hide.
Stop it. Get some help.
The U.S. does not use cloud seeding. We very clearly do not need to. Even if we did, that would only increase rainfall slightly. Pretty much 0 effect on tornado producing conditions
Lol
@@thelouster5815if your talking on a large scale yea, but causing weather changes for a specific area is definitely a thing. They did it back in when of the wars, released stuff into the clouds to cause water to cling to it to then fall as rain, caused it to rain over an area to lead to flooding and stuff.
God's will telling y'all to beware of false prophets!
Where do these crazies come from????? 😅😅😅😅😅