The Deadliest Tornado in the Pacific Northwest - April 5, 1972

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 ก.ย. 2024
  • Today we look at the infamous F3 tornado that struck Vancouver, Washington in 1972. It is the deadliest tornado to ever strike the Pacific Northwest, killing 6 and injuring 300.
    NWS Service Assessment: www.weather.go...
    Weatherbox is on TikTok!
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    *The tornado in the thumbnail is of a different F3 that hit Washington in 1969. There are no known photos of the Vancouver F3.
    The Deadliest Tornado in the Pacific Northwest - April 5, 1972

ความคิดเห็น • 252

  • @jacer864
    @jacer864 ปีที่แล้ว +144

    Your meteorological insights into how these storms form down to the details are so amazing, I could watch your videos for hours and never get tired of hearing you explain the weather!

  • @hollymccormack4081
    @hollymccormack4081 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I've been in the Seattle area almost 20 years now and I learned something about our weather here today, thanks to you. It's funny, after moving here from Chicago where there are plenty of thunderstorms I've now grown so accustomed to the lack of severe weather here that even just hearing thunder is a surprise. Thanks for the coverage of a noteworthy weather day out here!

  • @kiffy2634
    @kiffy2634 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Good to see you weatherbox

  • @just_kos99
    @just_kos99 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was just visiting Washington state from October 4-18. Sometime during then, apparently a tornado WARNING was issued in the greater Vancouver (WA) area, based on radar data. It was cancelled five minutes later, but still.... any type of tornado warning in the PNW is remarkable.
    Suggestion: do a video on the Inaugural Day Storm as mentioned in this video, or the great Columbus Day windstorm that killed 40+ people. It was essentially an extra-tropical hurricane from northern CA to BC.

  • @rainesbobo
    @rainesbobo ปีที่แล้ว +93

    I am from Oklahoma and was a storm chaser in Texas for 2 years but moved to Washington state in 2006. Very interesting video. I understand why the weather happens in tornado alley but this helped me understand our weather up here more which I got more into after we had an EF2 hit the state back in 2018. Thanks!

    • @rainesbobo
      @rainesbobo ปีที่แล้ว

      @Marcus Plays where were you?

    • @tapesone2
      @tapesone2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@Marcus Plays My dad is rarely in port orchard and saw that tornado happen. Crazy day.

    • @RW-rt5nd
      @RW-rt5nd 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I'm originally from Port Orchard but have lived in Oklahoma for over a decade. Imagine my shock when my mother told me they had a tornado in her town for a change.

  • @Jarekthegamingdragon
    @Jarekthegamingdragon ปีที่แล้ว +180

    As a Portland resident, I'd hope people would be smart if we got a tornado warning but likely people wouldn't take it seriously since we never get them. Our position right on the columbia river gorge and a few hours from the coast means strong winds are nothing unusual either. I imagine people would have to see the tornado itself before taking it seriously.
    Also thank you for covering the PNW! We're often times forgotten given how secluded we are. If we do come up in these kinds of videos, it's usually about st helens rather than the long history of strong wind storms we have or something else.

    • @weatherboxstudios
      @weatherboxstudios  ปีที่แล้ว +39

      Hey I was hoping you'd see this one! I've been reading a lot on past west coast windstorms and am going to cover a few more soon

    • @Jarekthegamingdragon
      @Jarekthegamingdragon ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@weatherboxstudios Just happened to check my sub box the moment you uploaded. Glad to hear we'll get some more PNW content soon! I imagine the columbus day storm and the 2021 PNW heat wave are probably the obvious things to look at? Really can't stress enough how much the heat wave and recent wild fires have changed life up up here.

    • @Gutterrat69
      @Gutterrat69 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Agreed! Even growing up we arent taught much about this history

    • @mattkowal90
      @mattkowal90 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Aside from literally no warning, many areas outside of Tornado Alley did not have tornado sirens. That became evident 2 years later, because areas to the West of Huntsville, Brandenburg, and Xenia didn't even have warning sirens. Within a year by 1975, Xenia had 10 sirens erected.

    • @Jarekthegamingdragon
      @Jarekthegamingdragon ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@mattkowal90 I don't think a single city on the west coast has tornado sirens. They do have tsunami sirens though. Earthquakes are just more of a threat here.

  • @poohssmartbrother1146
    @poohssmartbrother1146 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    You've covered events from the classic alley, dixie alley, the ohio valley, the northeast, and now the pacific northwest. I'd love to hear about an outbreak in Carolina alley. 1998, & 2011 spring to mind, but I am sure there are others. Love the music you make to start each video, it keeps it unique. Rock On

    • @amandaellis9821
      @amandaellis9821 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      The 1984 Carolinas outbreak would be a great one to cover!

    • @Thicc_Cheese_Dip
      @Thicc_Cheese_Dip ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The Enigma Outbreak is fascinating as it differs quite a lot from the other super outbreaks; but it is an enigma, after all.

    • @ItalianCountryball11
      @ItalianCountryball11 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@amandaellis9821agree

  • @alexprime9055
    @alexprime9055 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    As someone who lives in WA state, this video is super fascinating to me! I'm in Spokane, so we get far less rain than the coastal cities, but we still get some massive windstorms. Last year in May, two EF0 tornadoes touched down on the same day, which is absolutely wild since there had previously only been 13 confirmed tornadoes in Spokane since the 1950s. Having two in the same day was absolutely insane! One even touched down a few blocks from my house. As a huge weather fan, I saw what looked like small rotation in the clouds, but thought I was losing it since we never get any tornadoes here. I figured my habit of watching storm chasing and unique weather videos had caught up to me, and so I went and took a nap (and missed the whole damn thing). Super interesting day, especially because it's nearly unheard of in the area! Thank you for covering the PNW!

    • @polarisnorth
      @polarisnorth ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I'm a Seattle native, and the PNW really doesn't rain all year the way some people think it does! For the past decade or so (thanks climate change!) summers have actually been quite dry and there have been a lot of problems with droughts and wildfires. (Not to the same degree as California, obviously, but more than people would think.) However, the wet seasons are VERY wet, and it is overcast a good percentage of the time even if it doesn't actually rain.

    • @tpbforlife3323
      @tpbforlife3323 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ohh great the fucking coastie is going to tell us what the weather has been 😂 thanks now please quit fucking up my life with your crazy politics

    • @Winterfur1
      @Winterfur1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I remembered when that happened, if the storm developed sooner it could have taken out the homeless camp and that could have been very deadly. I remembered the 2004 tornado that hit Fairchild AFB located few miles west of Spokane. I lived on base at the time so I was very aware of it. Funny is that I have been through more tornadoes in the state of Washington than the state of Texas near the city of San Antonio.

    • @jaredvillhelm2002
      @jaredvillhelm2002 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Grew up in WA, living here in ND, we get far more tornadoes and it’s terrifying lol I love the weather but the storms out here on the plains are fkn terrifying.

    • @SlothFetuss
      @SlothFetuss 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I grew up about 45 north of seattle. Yeah we've had some dry summers, but the atmospheric rivers have been dumping the last few years. I moved back to WA in 21 to 22 and we almost had a constant river that whole time. It is definitely overcast a majority of the time lol

  • @M167A1
    @M167A1 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    A tornado in Portland would probably be an improvement.. :-p. Jokes aside F1 and f0 storms east of the mountains are not unheard of.

  • @pavan5272
    @pavan5272 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    It's mind blowing to me when people don't know what's happening but immediately start helping because that's just who they are as people

    • @swamprat2818
      @swamprat2818 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The teachers at the high school tried to get their students to stay put but they knew the kids at PSO needed help, I'm sure glad they came.

  • @superhealthkyle
    @superhealthkyle ปีที่แล้ว +30

    Your graphs/animations for the meteorology of these setups is always amazing!

  • @user-yw9fm7kb1s
    @user-yw9fm7kb1s ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Ah my hometown. It does rain a lot here, but I didn't know why all the rain "disappeared" in the summer. Learned something today. I really enjoy your channel. Whatever you do don't change the 80s VCR vibe you got going on, I really like it.

  • @sylvieshuu
    @sylvieshuu ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Super excited to see my state being talked about on here! Tornadoes have been a bit more of a topic than usual here recently because of a few recent, strange winter tornadic events. I know a few people that got displaced a few years back due to a freak tornado that hit a set of apartments and small homes in a developed area.

  • @paulmccrackney6440
    @paulmccrackney6440 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    never been so early to one of ur vids!!

    • @dragonsword7370
      @dragonsword7370 ปีที่แล้ว

      I'm just 19 minutes away from preview. I never get this early.

  • @ripwednesdayadams
    @ripwednesdayadams ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I don’t understand why this channel doesn’t have at least a hundred thousand followers. it’s one of the best storm/weather channels that i’ve seen.

    • @SlothFetuss
      @SlothFetuss 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Still doesn't! Nuts!

    • @aloedg3191
      @aloedg3191 หลายเดือนก่อน

      On skibidi

  • @jamesstemmler7620
    @jamesstemmler7620 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Truck driver by trade but weather enthusiast all my life, study a lot in my spare time simply for the enjoyment of the knowledge, and gotten into storm chasing the last few years in my spare time. Just discovered your channel and have been loving it man! Keep up the awesome work! Perfect complement to a lot of the chasing channels I follow. You are very well spoken and explain things extremely well! Keep it up!

  • @nowapproachingyt
    @nowapproachingyt ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Love the focus on these older, more obscure tornado outbreaks rather than just focusing on something we all already know about, like El Reno or Tuscaloosa. Also the editing style just suits the topic most of the time, with the synth wave music at the beginning. *chef’s kiss*

  • @TheCriminalViolin
    @TheCriminalViolin ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The one in 2016 you cited was actually super unique and interesting, as it started about 3 miles off the coastline from the mouth of Tillamook Bay as a Waterspout, and managed to continue to progress east-northeast until it made landfall and wrecked through Rockaway Beach and Manzanita. This wasn't the only one of the cluster though, as apparently there was a few others, one being also in Oregon, though it didn't last much more than a couple minutes before dissipating, and then a few along the Washington coastline, with the main one happening just after Rockaway's completed its tenure, going through the towns along Willapa Bay. Though it was of similar strength and length, it caused less overall damage than its sibling to the south.
    Outside of those, I recall the tornado that happened in Stayton and Aumsville, with Aumsville being the main epicenter of its power and destruction, which lead to it being forever dubbed as the "Aumsville Tornado". That one happened a few years before the one in Rockaway Beach. Can't quite recall the year, but 2008 for some reason sounds about right to me. That was also in a couple of years where the east side of the Salem region wound up experiencing a surprising amount of funnel clouds and proper tornado touchdowns. Two years in a row. So the Aumsville and the Rockaway beach ones are the ones that will live on in my memory for the rest of my life with genuine excitement and pride. (I love severe storms)

  • @ajgnexus
    @ajgnexus ปีที่แล้ว +9

    this is seriously one of the most underappreciated channels ever

  • @jerrycote659
    @jerrycote659 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Very fascinating and adds proof to the point that a tornado can occur anywhere and no place is 💯 immune from the possibility of a tornado.

  • @alexspicer6043
    @alexspicer6043 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    He needs to have his own show on TWC! I will say this again your content is amazing! The way you break everything down is awesome

  • @elijahwinter6855
    @elijahwinter6855 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I like this series you have going about out-of-place tornado outbreaks! These sorts of small "tornado alleys" really intrigue me. I had a video suggestion regarding a somewhat similar topic. You might have seen the EF3 Deer Park tornado in the news a couple weeks ago. What's interesting, though, is that out of the violent tornadoes like that one that have struck the Houston area in the past 50 years (4 in total), all of them have been in the wintertime relatively close to the coast on the east side of town, following a general SE-NW path, similar to the Deer Park storm. The most famous of these was the 1992 Channelview tornado. Maybe you could do a video either on that tornado, or maybe investigate and see if this pattern is just coincidence or if there is something else going on.
    P.S. You're probably one of my favorite weather TH-camrs out there! Keep on doing what you are doing!

  • @fernandocast435
    @fernandocast435 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    after watching your videos i finally understood how roughly tornadoes form, how hurricanes take place and why the easterlies and westerlies even exist, you're amazing

  • @HurricaneHomer9
    @HurricaneHomer9 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Interesting tornado. Great video as usual!

  • @eh7322
    @eh7322 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I've lived on the PNW coast all my life, and have lived in the Portland metro area for a decade and have never heard of this tornado. It's so interesting because we had a tornado hit the I5 bridge a few years ago now, and people thought it was the end of the world. Great work, you explained weather patterns better than most of my college professors!

  • @BERT.MCCR6
    @BERT.MCCR6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Nice work! another fun, informative, and entertaining content as always! Quick question, what collar microphone do you use?

  • @vincentoconnor5640
    @vincentoconnor5640 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I live on the Oregon coast, and in 2016 a nearby town named Manzanita got hit by a high end EF-2 tornado. I drove through there a few weeks later, and nearly a third of the trees in the town were destroyed. There was even another weak waterspout that touched down on the bay in front my house on the same day.
    Edit: didn't see the end of the video lol

  • @southwestxnorthwest
    @southwestxnorthwest ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Steve you should do one on the Pacific Northwest December 2006 windstorm

  • @safespacebear
    @safespacebear ปีที่แล้ว +2

    All the legendary weather in our region arrived before I did. Gosh I would have loved to see the Columbus Day storm

  • @mikeysan01
    @mikeysan01 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    At 6:29....did you mean feet instead of miles???

  • @ShalK423
    @ShalK423 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I love your videos and you do such a great job of explaining meteorological ideas that make it understandable for a hobbyist.

  • @MysticOfTheNorth
    @MysticOfTheNorth ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Your videos pull off The early 90's TWC aesthetic perfectly. And your delivery of these events is spot on! Keep up the good work!

  • @Dan-l5y
    @Dan-l5y ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you for this. The 4-5 -72 tornado in Vancouver is not widely known. I was in the 6th grade at Peter S.Ogden and we were just getting done with lunch recess. It started to hail (about the size of shooter marbles) and the few stragglers like me took cover under the eves of the 6th grade building. The clouds looked like they were in a duel hand mixer. I was on the west side of the building and one of our teachers, Mr. Kennedy grabbed me by the scruff of the neck and dragged me to the north side of the 6th grade building where we watched the school flying over our heads with about a dozen other kuds. We then ran over downed live wires across a farmers field and took cover in some business across from the Renfro Drive In theater where the screen had blown down. Eventually we walked to Fort Vancover High and after awhile just walked home.

    • @Dan-l5y
      @Dan-l5y ปีที่แล้ว +1

      My mom had to pick some splinters and other debris out of my scalp with tweezers but I was pretty much unscathed. My friend Randy (who was in my class) mom was killed at the bowling alley. She was a hero getting the kids out before the wall fell on her. The bowling alley owner broke his back trying to get her out.

    • @swamprat2818
      @swamprat2818 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I was watching the ball game and saw you guys on the west side lining up at the west door right before I ran to my 5th grade classroom as it started dumping rain.

  • @michaelimbesi2314
    @michaelimbesi2314 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Can you do the tornado that hit Washington DC during the War of 1812?

  • @danielcondon6591
    @danielcondon6591 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    PLEASE. please. Could you research or even make a video on the 53' F4 from Worcester to Southboro MA, the great Barrington MA F4 from 94 or 95' (3 casualties) or the most unknown but NECESSARY, F1 from Needham MA to Brookline MA from 72' from my knowledge, the closest fatal tornado to Boston

    • @Eibarwoman
      @Eibarwoman ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The Great Barrington tornado is a particularly interesting topography driven tornado as I question if it would have reached F-4 without the mountains aiding it.

  • @vitreus0359
    @vitreus0359 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    6:25 "Blazing fast winds thousands of... MILES... above the surface of the Earth"
    I think he means, feet.

  • @Ashjolins18
    @Ashjolins18 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    We used to live in Battleground before moving to Tri-Cities. When that EF0 hit Battleground we had already moved but it destroyed the shed of our old neighbors. I’ve always been fascinated with tornadoes but when that happened I thought it was so cool! (Also made it cool cause it didn’t cause too much damage or harm anyone)

  • @cynthiasimpson931
    @cynthiasimpson931 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I live outside of Portland OR, but I lived for three years in Topeka, Kansas so I know to take the weather seriously.

  • @XcRunner1031
    @XcRunner1031 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    WA State averages 2.5 tornadoes per year. There are hypotheses about the number of tornadoes being higher than reported, especially on the Olympic Peninsula. It's sparsely populated, so there is a much lower chance someone will see them. I think the increase in personal weather stations/webcams on the coast will give us more insight.

  • @andrewstewart8615
    @andrewstewart8615 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    everyone in the PNW needs to watch this video at .5x speed and comprehend every bit of it before we can start to prepare ourselves for climate change and the increased risk of more tornadoes here.
    Thanks so much for this incredibly vid. You're an entrepreneur on this.

  • @TheDogs789
    @TheDogs789 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    We also had one in the 2000s that I live through. It was on a direct path to my school, but luckily lifted, and then re-came down in battleground it was scary.

  • @Eibarwoman
    @Eibarwoman ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This tornado sounds disturbingly like the Gaylord, MI EF-3 that hit in May 2022 right to intensity and poor visibility of the condensation funnel until the tornado had already flattened a Valvoline oil change business (of questionable building quality hence why it wasn't EF-4) and killing two in a trailer park.

  • @ianmurray2340
    @ianmurray2340 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    So awesome, Seeing those dewpoints in C made so much more sense lol. You are amazing for adding C for us metric users! Great video like always.

  • @sabrinaleedance
    @sabrinaleedance ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Love seeing videos on rare tornadoes and storms. Really neat. How they didn't see a tornado really reminds me of my only personal encounter with a tornado. I live in Northeastern Pennsylvania, where tornadoes are rare, but definitely not unheard of. We received the tornado warning about 30-45 minutes before it actually happened. There already was a thunderstorm that came through with a lot of lightning and hail, and when that passed we assumed that was it, just another warned storm that didn't drop a tornado. I was at work at the time. My manager thought it was safe so she left for her shift but like minutes later she came running back in pretty spooked bc she said "something was not right" , like literally right after she said that I heard those noise like never before during a storm...almost like maybe God turned on his vacuum cleaner upstairs 😂 loud but muffled. I tried to see anything but there was nothing but dark gray after a few feet Infront of the building and debris flying everywhere. So then me and my manager took shelter in the supply closet while all the clueless customers looked out the windows 😂 lucky for them (and me I guess) the tornado just missed us passing about a quarter mile to the east in most wooded areas. It was later assessed to be an ef2 after hitting a few houses and uprooting some trees.

  • @StillRunningWithPointedSticks
    @StillRunningWithPointedSticks ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Electricity plays a role. And the airflow inside of a tornado resembles coaxial behavior flipping every other spinning layer of air following ions moving at high speeds.

  • @omgaclownmonkey1122
    @omgaclownmonkey1122 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Can you do a deep dive into the atmospheric conditions of the April 27th 2011 outbreak?

  • @kiffy2634
    @kiffy2634 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You should still add pre existing short videos on tiktok and TH-cam shorts to gain viewers

    • @weatherboxstudios
      @weatherboxstudios  ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah I might have to soon. I don't want to bombard people with stuff they've already seen but it's what the algorithm wants right now

  • @davidbuddy
    @davidbuddy ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Why don't you also upload your TikTok/short form content onto TH-cam shorts for those who do want to see the short form content but don't want to watch it on TikTok?

  • @marshallsweatherhiking1820
    @marshallsweatherhiking1820 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Severe storms are so rare in Western Washington. From living there, the main thunderstorm season is in late summer, August or September, when dewpoints can get up into the upper 50s ahead of some kind of cutoff upper low coming in from the southwest after a warm stretch. The storms usually have a very high base though as the fueling airmass comes from an inland source to the south. The oceanic wet season systems have showers with much lower cloud bases, but the instability is barely enough for thunder. It takes a very special hybrid setup to get severe weather.

  • @Evan34922
    @Evan34922 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Can you do a video on the November 17 2013 Washington Illinois tornado

  • @ARW93
    @ARW93 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is such a great channel. Amazing content. Also dig the retro music vibes

  • @reignofcrimson
    @reignofcrimson ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Please do a video on the 2020 dorecho, I was caught in the middle of it and as a Coloradan it was the worst wind weather I've seen in 40 years alive

  • @ALIMAN-fr5kp
    @ALIMAN-fr5kp ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Love your content! I’m finding that I’ve already watched most, but I enjoy them so much and feel like you pack every video with valuable information that I don’t mind setting them multiple times. 😄 Thanks for all of your efforts!

  • @Dahn.Baern.
    @Dahn.Baern. ปีที่แล้ว +1

    There’s a lot of great weather channels on TH-cam, yours is right up there with any of them. Please do a video on the Moore tornados. I live in Moore and I think I’ve seen every analysis video ever on the 2 F5’s that tore through here. Please do that next!

  • @b0rnc0nfused47
    @b0rnc0nfused47 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You should post your tik toks as TH-cam shorts for those who don’t use that app

  • @scoobydoo7169
    @scoobydoo7169 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I was in the school that day. My name is Duane Quinby. I was in 4th grade. Mr beltchers class. I lived there most of my life. I would like to make some corrections. Portland and vancouver, wa gets about 40 inches of rain per year not 100 come on dude. Also we were not a recess. it was 12:50 or 12:51 when it hit And lunch was over. I remember the time becouse when it hit and knoked the power out and the electric clocks stopped. Days later they still said the same time. Also it never crossed I - 205 As 205 was built latter. I am not sure if the girl in the hospital was Marjory wheeler or not. It looked alot like her. Marjory and I were speacel freinds she was also in Mr belchers class. And i know she was in a wheel chair for a while after. I very much would like to talk with her agian some day. If anyone could help me with that. not sure I spelled it right. they moved away that summer becouse her step dad was in the military. We continued to wright for a few years The beatiful hero in this video that died at the bowling ally was The mother of my long time class mate russ and his older brother rick. I remember seeing rick in school. I never talked to him And only knew him as the older brother of russ. I saw him in a interveiw in 2022. It sounds like weather is still a issue with him. It was for me till 1977 when I temperaraly moved to the south were voilent storms were more common. Oddly I was cured of my fear of bad weather the first southern storm I saw. And would not mind talking to rick.

    • @swamprat2818
      @swamprat2818 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hi Duane, we were friends in 3rd grade I believe, I lived down the street from you. I'm in that class pic this vid showed. 😎😎

  • @lawson8678
    @lawson8678 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    could you do the same idea, except in california?

  • @MrPezdispencer
    @MrPezdispencer ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm only 29 but I love hearing about these older storms.

  • @tHebUm18
    @tHebUm18 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    6:26 Thousands of miles? Whoa, far out man! 😏

  • @Josh3B
    @Josh3B ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Very well done- your videos are nicely put together, and very informative.

  • @tornadostories
    @tornadostories ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Simply incredible knowledge and explanation of the conditions which created this event. What a video 🙂

  • @TheCornerSuns
    @TheCornerSuns ปีที่แล้ว +1

    seriously feel lucky to have been recommended this channel, can't wait to see you grow bro!!!

  • @CODENAMEDERPY
    @CODENAMEDERPY ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This was a great video, thank you! Any more videos about PNW weather would be super cool.

  • @novethegreat
    @novethegreat 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I love how many PNWers are here saying "thank you for covering the PNW!!" because we just get so little coverage in general, let alone on our weather ahahah
    On that note, thank you for covering the PNW! It's great to see an interesting and lesser-known story about our weather up here!

  • @Midnight24435
    @Midnight24435 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Finally got notice this video was posted. 6-7 hours ago. Love me some Weatherbox!

  • @newsyouchoose
    @newsyouchoose ปีที่แล้ว +1

    your channel is a great example of work hard, make good content, gain viewership

  • @57thCircleAllDay
    @57thCircleAllDay 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    In 1997 an EF-0 tornado went through my neighborhood in Vancouver which is along the path of the 1972 tornado between highway 500 and I-205. There was also an EF-1 in Vancouver in 2008

  • @EvilApple567
    @EvilApple567 ปีที่แล้ว

    6:25 The good ol' Lunar Jet Stream
    All jokes aside neat topic. World sure is cruel though, some areas' perfect ingredient, semi-century setup yields a single strong tornado and other areas get April 27th.

  • @PJKvas
    @PJKvas 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I’m a native of Lakewood, OH, but I’ve lived outside of Seattle for about a decade. People still talk about this tornado in southern WA. My current town experienced a December EF2 in 2018 but I was downtown Seattle when it happened. Since I’ve lived in western WA I’ve experienced 2 thunderstorms and that’s all so when we get tornadoes it’s extremely shocking.

  • @jameshaxby5434
    @jameshaxby5434 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Only a few places, on the coast, get 100 inches, the population centers in the Willamette Valley and Puget Sound get more like 45 inches. And the towns East of the Cascades mountains get only about 20 inches a year.

  • @yaksak2706
    @yaksak2706 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The fun thing about an ingredients-based approach to forecasting is that for about 9 months out of the year (not Summer), there's world-class deep layer shear sufficiently strong to make even the Oklahoma-based sever wx enthusiast salivate. Unfortunately, that's only 1 ingredient. All else being equal, the #1 difference between the Pac Nw and Oklahoma is the sfc dew point temp. And a good threshold is about 60f... a value most locations in the Pac Nw have trouble reaching. It most likely will occur west of the Cascades in the "marine" air mass. But since its a marine air mass, sfc temps are cooler, screwing you out of much beloved unapped CAPE. East of the Cascades its the opposite. It'll be 85-90f, but the dew point will be 45f. You're screwed out of CAPE yet again. There are always exceptions. These are generalizations of course. Often coming to the rescue are the elevated heat and moisture sources we all know and love. Most people call these places "mountains." A great example is the Columbia Basin. The Tri-Cities would dry up and blow away, never to be heard from again, if it wasn't for the mtns across Central and northeast Oregon. It is these locations that we typically see thunderstorms develop. These storms then move north from their source and give those poor souls who live in towns throughout the Columbia Basin the 3 raindrops they see all year. West of the Cascades its typically the post cold front air mass that produces the most widespread, generally shallow, convection. Some people like to call this "cold core." Whatever. For anybody bold enough to even think about storm chasing in the Pac Nw, here's my advice. Just stay in bed if you don't have a 60f dew point, an approaching vort max, AND a hodograph that doesn't look like a dot. Just be thankful that you live in a place that has so much beauty, mountains, volcanoes, the beach and cities with real character. Unlike the midwest.

  • @jfs983
    @jfs983 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a kid living in BC who was mildly obsessed with tornadoes, I remember one instance in - I think 2003 - where an EF0 was reported in my hometown, just about 20 minutes from Creston. The only casualities were a few roof shingles, but just goes to show, even the most unlikely things can happen. Apparently another EF0 touched down in 2022.

  • @stephenphillip5656
    @stephenphillip5656 ปีที่แล้ว

    Here in 🇬🇧 we get the occasional 🌪️ but they are generally EF0 or EF1s. Birmingham got hit by a EF2 in July 2005 but that was a truly rare event. I would hope that if I *did* get a tornado warning, I would know what to do (my "fraidy hole" is my under-stairs cupboard!) but the chances of an EF3 or EF4 in this country are vanishingly low....I hope!

  • @sharistrazz3313
    @sharistrazz3313 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have lived in Vancouver, WA most of my life. In 1972 I was living just 3 houses away from the END of that tornado. We moved shortly after that day. My father would tell me the story of that day.
    In 1980, when Mt. St. Helens ERUPTED, our front room window had an unobstructed view of the mountain AND the eruption. My mother, father, and my 3siters and I sat with our knees on the couch watching it the whole day/ night UNTIL ASH was so thick we couldn't see our car in the driveway. 😲🤭😁

  • @tarstarkusz
    @tarstarkusz ปีที่แล้ว

    6:25 "...they ride the flow of the jet stream's blazing fast winds thousands of miles above the surface..." Did you misspeak? Is there wind at an elevation of thousands of miles?
    According to Google, there is zero pressure (0.00mb) at 250,000 feet, which is 49 miles. But .003 millibars at 200,000 feet, about 38 miles above sea level.

  • @scootermom1791
    @scootermom1791 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love that the football team members rushed to the elementary school to help the younger kids. So sad about Sharon Gracer, but I'm glad she was able to save several young children before she passed away. 😢
    So, the part where the lady says there was wind but no clouds...how can there be a tornado without clouds? That's so confusing! 🤔

  • @EveryDooDarnDiddlyDay
    @EveryDooDarnDiddlyDay ปีที่แล้ว

    6:26 Uh, what? "Thousands of miles above the surface of the earth" - I don't think you meant to say miles there, buddy.

  • @Wyzerwizardness79
    @Wyzerwizardness79 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There was a tornado warning here in Vancouver Washington this ladt week😮Luckly, nothing happened but high precipitation. A few days before that, there was an EF0 just a little north of Vancouver. Caught twin funnel clouds on camera in 2019 in Vancouver. There was also a warning a day earlier too. An EFO also touched down in St. Johns Oregon. Some years are more active than others around here. This happens to be an active season.😮

  • @ifiycubing7357
    @ifiycubing7357 ปีที่แล้ว

    Moistening to science class where they talk about weather: boring! Not useful! +0IQ gained!
    Legit after 5 minutes of weatherbox: fun,useful, +20iq

  • @BobatBG
    @BobatBG 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I was near the tornado when that happened back in 1972, in a community called Hazel Dell (to the north and west of the area shown in the video). I was in school, and remember how dark it got. It was shocking to learn just a few miles away, a half dozen folks lost their lives. I will never forget that. And then, a few years ago, now living in Battle Ground (actually in a neighborhood called Meadow Glade), the other tornado mentioned in the video was a half mile from where I was at the time (and am at right now writing this note). In that one, trees got knocked over, and I think a local store lost its roof.

  • @ScoobySnacks2264
    @ScoobySnacks2264 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    i lived in portland when this happened, and i very much remember it. still such an odd thing to have a tornado in the region. ice storms, yes; tornadoes, not so much.
    one minor nit to pick: the tornado could not have crossed interstate 205 because i-205 did not exist, except in its very early construction stages. the washington portion would not open until 1975 and 1976.

  • @spenceisthebest1
    @spenceisthebest1 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    In another video I mentioned you should do a video on the 49-50 winter that caused the greatest arctic outbreak in the PNW ever. Another great one would be the Columbus Day storm. Either way so glad I found your channel I’m a huge weather fan that has always lived in the PNW.

  • @Gutterrat69
    @Gutterrat69 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thankyou so much for covering the PNW, there's not a lot of content on it!

  • @StarTrekCode17075
    @StarTrekCode17075 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Cover the 2004 Spokane, Washington tornado! Took place inland past the cascades

  • @unitgamex2972
    @unitgamex2972 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    6:27 *meters

  • @knockeledup
    @knockeledup ปีที่แล้ว

    When you mention how many dollars in damage were caused, it’d be really helpful if you could specify what year that amount is from or that it “caused $___ in damage at that time” so we know if you’re referring to say $25 million in 1975 or today. It’d also be interesting, but not necessary, if you could then convert those amounts to the current year. Your videos are enjoyable, that’s just a suggestion of something that would make them even better for me!

  • @willd1790
    @willd1790 ปีที่แล้ว

    An EF0 struck basically in my backyard in Vancouver BC about a year and a half ago. It’s rare but it can happen! Luckily the damage was confined to a few unfortunate trees.

  • @Asdayasman
    @Asdayasman ปีที่แล้ว

    > If you watched my video on May 31st 1998-
    I didn't actually have TH-cam in my bookmarks back then, my b.

  • @nickwhite2569
    @nickwhite2569 ปีที่แล้ว

    I grew up in Yakima Washington. Yakima is in the Central WA desert basin, nestled into a mountain-surrounded valley.
    I was in first grade, sitting in class, when i looked out the window and saw groups of kids and teachers standing outside looking up at the sky. My teacher let us go outside to see what was happening. There was a rope-like funnel cloud descending down near the Yakima Reservation. We all stood in awe watching the funnel reach closer and closer to the ground taking on more of a defined tornado shape. We couldnt believe it. Tornados arent supposed to happen in Yakima valley! All my life we were taught what to do in case of an earthquake or volcanic eruption, never had we practiced what to do during a tornado! The funnel cloud never did touch down, and eventually dissapated.
    I live in Indiana now, and in the last 4 months i have seen no less than three EF3 tornadoes touch down within 5 miles of me. The amount of preparedness, awareness, and fear that is felt throughout the midwest during a tornado watch is truly eye opening. Had that tornado touched down in Yakima WA, absolutely nobody would have been appropriately concerned enough to take shelter. All of us were only concerned about seeing how cool it was. My parents have lived in the area since the 60's and its still the closest theyve ever come to actually seeing a tornado.

  • @moonfire41
    @moonfire41 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I was 6 walking home from Harney Elementary in 1972 in that crazy wind. I was hanging onto every lampoost and anything grounded to the cement on the way. It was only 4 blocks but seemed more like 4 miles. Im thankful I wasnt in that other school that got destroyed. My dad was working near there and his building and our house was spared. I applaud the high school students that helped those kids.

  • @funnyperson4027
    @funnyperson4027 ปีที่แล้ว

    Speaking of the Pacific Northwest, in Vancouver British Columbia I want to say 2 years ago a small tornado formed and went through the city, didn’t do much damage but seeing a tornado In van of all places was wild

  • @rhymereason3449
    @rhymereason3449 ปีที่แล้ว

    I remember that day quite vividly. I was in 8th grade at school just North of Sea-Tac airport. The sky turned an eerie green. Being a transplant from the South - I knew what that sky likely meant. A small tornado went through the Sea-Tac and Kent area and flipped over a couple of cars in a Boeing parking lot.

  • @MerryBallweber
    @MerryBallweber ปีที่แล้ว

    I was a Junior at Silverton HIgh School in Oregon when this hit. A group of us always left campus to eat lunch at one of the girl's homes and we took turns cleaning up. It was on that day that I cleaned up and was running two blocks back to the school. At the first stop sign, I had to hold on as the wind had suddenly picked up. I remember looking at the sky and this low swirling cloud was so low that it seemed like I could practically touch it. And it looked like it was bubbling-- what I now know as mammatus clouds. The wind died down slightly and I can remember running and almost being picked up in the air. I was so glad to make ti back to the school Then about an hour later, it touched down in Vancouver. Considered myself very lucky and have never forgotten it!

  • @FoxDragon
    @FoxDragon ปีที่แล้ว

    Funny. I live pretty close to Seatac airport and just last night we had a very sudden, short, and intense thunder/lightning storm with heavy hail that lasted just a few minutes, sent all the lights flickering like crazy, and even shook the house. My husband didn't see the first flash of lightning, just heard the roll of thunder and wondered at first if a jet had crashed, until the next round of lightning & thunder came rolling through. Approximately 20 minutes of pretty crazy weather, then it all just settled down as quickly as it started.
    We woke up this morning to everything coated in a thin veneer of snow and ice.

  • @jeroldcrawford3431
    @jeroldcrawford3431 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video as usual. One comment that I would like to mention. You have a tendency to use acronyms that are understandable to someone who may be familiar with the weather but are lost to the rest of us. I had to stop the video and look up an acronym, "QLCS", to see what it was. Also, the use of the word "occluded front". A quick definition would have helped. Anyway, thanks for the great videos. I have subscribed.

  • @MrHobbs2022
    @MrHobbs2022 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm still hoping someone will make a video about the 2007 Northwood North Dakota EF4. I remember hearing about it in school when people were talking about how the city was destroyed and we had kids from there coming to our school while they rebuilt.

  • @Wolf_Ghost
    @Wolf_Ghost ปีที่แล้ว

    God, I wanna make music with you. I have this Nintendo game cartridge that has a port sticking out on the 'outside' end, and it plugs into the input jack of your synth or keyboard. It plays the square waves of the Nintendo. If you really wanna get crunchy, you can randomize a switch on your keyboard and based on what numbers you put into the switch, you get crazy sounds. I should send you a link for these things.

  • @aaronrider4051
    @aaronrider4051 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'd love to see something on the La Plata tornado of 2002. That tornado crossed 4-5 Maryland counties and even went over the Chesapeake Bay.

  • @Wod193
    @Wod193 ปีที่แล้ว

    13:08 no mention of the Port Orchard tornado of 2018 :( Hell you could probably just cover the entire windstorm event in its own video, it was a big and damaging storm, i dont know if this is correct but there was a 111mph wind gust reported in Olympia i think? Other than that awesome video as I myself am a PNW resident :)

  • @darksu6947
    @darksu6947 ปีที่แล้ว

    I like the guy in the thumbnail. He's like "This nader is number 1 and if you don't like it, you can piss off!" "Whoooooo"