What’s up Everyone! Finally a new tornado video! Halloween is coming up and I feel like few things are scarier than tornadoes. Thanks for watching!
Also If you’re ever injured in an accident, you can check out Morgan & Morgan. You can submit a claim in 8 clicks or less without having to leave your couch. To start your claim, visit:
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Slight Error: I said 1976 Lindberg Kansas tornado when I meant to say 1973 Salina Kansas tornado. My b
References:
COUNTDOWN TO SURVIVAL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeoUYzAaGNM&t=497s
Joplin Tornado Video – RODALCO2007
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CburjPYmSdo&t=222s
Salina, Kansas Tornado, September 25, 1973
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Zjc2lKxpus
Fargo Tornadoes of June 20, 1957
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dIc-PCXormE&t=242s
Parkersburg Graduation Tornado:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oWUdO7YjjoE
Contents:
0:00 Scary Tornado Intro
1:58 Nature’s Monster
3:47 Nocturnal Tornadoes
4:00 1980 Grand Island Night Tornadoes
5:15 1984 Barneveld Wisconsin Tornado
6:14 Rain Wrapped Tornadoes
6:31 Creepy Tornado Photos
7:34 Morgan and Morgan Ad
8:44 Scary Vintage Tornado Videos – Kansas and Fargo
9:36 Dark Tornado Safety Videos
10:25 The Tornado Anticipation Phase
11:30 The Approach Phase
12:38 Creepy Tornado Sirens
13:20 Joplin Tornado Video
15:22 Tornado Safety Guide
#tornado #scary #weather
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Finally a new tornado video! What are some of the scariest tornado events you can think of??
Also If you’re ever injured in an accident, you can check out Morgan & Morgan. You can submit a claim in 8 clicks or less without having to leave your couch. To start your claim, visit: https://ForThePeople.com/sweglestudios
Tf happens if ur asleep
i have dreams sometimes, where their is a tornado and no matter where I go or what I do, it knows my exact location or if it does miss it comes back around
While floods cause more deaths per year than tornadoes, they also happen far more frequently, so tornadoes are actually a more dangerous natural disaster if you take this into account, not to mention you have very limited time to take shelter.
I remember one time in Florida riding home from work with my boss and he said "it looks like a tornado up ahead."
So he floored it.
Yep. We drove through an airborne job site and the van got loose but somehow we made it through.
For some reason I can't remember looking out the window. Maybe I didn't.
Definitely scary.
I had a legitimate phobia of storms and tornadoes when I was a kid. Caught major crap at school for it too. Every time there was a thunderstorm, I would take my prized posessions and move them down to the basement and just be sick with anxiety. Now as an adult I adore thunderstorms and find them atmospheric and soothing. I havent experienced a tornado yet, and I'm not so sure I'd want to though. As a horror fanatic I appreciate your reference to Michael Myers. Never thought of that before. Good work.
Hail yea!
Pun intended 😊
Lets put it this way: people aren't having nightmares about hurricanes and earthquakes..
Also there's another video of the Dallas tornado where the lightening goes off and you see the tornado lit up like in that picture, not just it being lit from behind. Makes it look even creepier.
omg thank you for covering both the Grand Island outbreak and Barneveld, WI. Old tornado photos being creepy – see Siouxie and the Banshees Tinderbox cover! And while you're at it, Nick Cave's Tupulo. Tornadoes in song video? Plus you did a journey map of a tornado warning – nice…
5:41
Terrifying moments of my life. I was sick and was at home, watching over my animals and watching the news when they issued the warning. I was terrified. My mom and dad were on a date, it was their anniversary, I couldn't contact them..absolutely terrifying when you were just 9/10 years old, your sister out somewhere, your parents gone, and living in a mobile home with no shelter. The sound of it still haunts me to this day.
I actually can tell you a story of when I was sitting in the living room with my mom's house in Hamlin it was last summer actually and there's a newspaper my mom's pictures are on that newspaper of the three tornadoes that touched down around our house I was sitting in the living room watching and Adam Sandler movie TV went off with a tornado warning and I figured oh well we always get those here in Kansas so I really didn't struggle all that well few minutes later I kind of heard that low familiar rumble of a tornado I was like oh s*** my ears popped I was like oh it's closed it's really close because when your ears pop after you hear that rumbling sound from the tornado you know it's really close this is 150 year old house by the way on the house checks so I yelled to my mom there's a tornado outside we need to leave we cannot stay here we can't grab anything we got to go and we're all running out to I look up the tornadoes damn near over us and we got out of there our house got hit by it didn't do it didn't actually do any damage to the house it took the back porch off that had the laundry room in it but we just had it rebuiltmy bedroom window got blown out the kitchen windows all got blown out and it was a disaster in the house but luckily none of the roof really got damaged we just had to replace some of the shingles but yeah the house is a little more solid than we thought almost a foot thick walls that place is a beast of a house I was afraid of because how old it was it toppling over on us while we're sitting there trying to ride the tornado out but on our way out of Hamelin when we got outside there was a tornado almost over us and there was two dancing ever so softly in the field and it was eerie because the tornadoes the one above our house was like a pearl and white it was not a normal storm it was very odd I will never forget it but I remember coming back to the house broken glass everywhere the lights were out for a little while the well house got knocked over well they got blown away and the shed is it's literally leaning now it used to be level but it leans now there used to be a bunch of old chicken coops there's even all of it was gone all the leaves on the trees werethere was only a little bit of the screen door left on the enclosed porch 3 it was destroyed that house took a direct hit but we ended up re-roofing it and we still live there after replacing all the windows that got busted out but not very many of them got busted out cuz there's only two in the kitchen for three the back porch when it got taken off there was like two ceiling fans out there it destroyed the wiring for the laundry room so we have to get the outside of the house rewired but otherwise we still live there and I'm just worried that we're going to get hit again because I have a feeling of the house gets hit again it's going to that house is never been the same after that tornado the roof actually has a bow in it now but 150 year old house what is there to expect boss say this I remember sitting in the living room in my ears popping and I thought I was going to die some of the windows we ended up putting in the house or older than the that house still looks completely original other than all the siding being gone there's no signing on it anymore its just the old asbestos sidin the house has an asbestos plaster on the outside originally and they put metal over at metal siding all of it is gone and there is nothing of it left we couldn't even find it no Farmers found it no one found it no one ended up finding it so yeah our house has plywood in some spots cuz that siding is messed up or the plaster stuff is messed up in some but otherwise yeah we still live there and we've lived there for 2 years now and the house is still there but I have a feeling that it's probably going to get hit again because we didn't get no bad storms at the end of the summer like we usually do that means usually at the beginning of the summer we get some really bad weather that involves tornadoes
The 2015 Fairdale, Illinois tornado has that horror film, monster-type effect to me. That footage has all of the ingredients for a nightmare scenario. Thank you for these videos!
This might be kinda obvious to everyone here who’s already fascinated with tornadoes, but I think basic radar or weather spotting knowledge would probably be a good thing to have. For example velocity radar can usually pin point where something is rotating, but most people only look at reflectivity, not even knowing velocity radar exists
I live in Grand island, Nebraska and we have a hill here from the tornado debris from that night, and the name is also called “tornado hill” pretty cool
My town in Newburgh Indiana got hit by a night tornado ef3
The house I lived in got hit by a tornado. It was a late Summer night in 90s. Actually the night before the first day of the new school year.
I was a child at the time. Woke up to thunder & flashes from the lightning. I made my way to my mom's room & woke her up. Around the same time a window fan that was blowing into the house started to slow. Eventually it started to spin the opposite way making a mechanical grinding noise as the motor struggled. We immediately ran for the basement. The basement door was by the kitchen. As we ran past the kitchen window, we saw a giant spark from a transformer explosion. It got really noisy. Like a waterfall of debris. And as soon as it started it was gone & eeriely quiet.
We eventually went outside to see trees down everywhere. Shingles & siding laying around the yard. Changed the look of the neighborhood quite a bit. We never heard the tornado sirens. Not sure if they went off. The tornado was rated low ef2. One person died the day after from electrocution. They came into contact with a live wire while cleaning up.
I was always interested in storms. My mom & I would watch them as they blew through the area. Then the movie Twister came out. That really got me intrigued. Especially about tornadoes. Then a couple years later I was in the path of one.
Later in life I started to chase these storms that can produce tornadoes. Over the years I witnessed many of them. Some of them were strong & highly rated. Something about being close to a twisting Supercell is unlike any other feeling you can get on Earth. It's quite a spectacle. Videos of some of my adventures storm chasing are on my YT channel.
As someone who was born ( In February ) and raised in Boston ( now living in Texas ) , and grew up going through blizzards and Nor'Easters.
It took a few years to adjust to Thunderstorms here.
Compared to the Northeast, I felt it was the end of the world here in Texas.
Afternoon Thunderstorms to people not used to them are on another level.
Pitch black skies, high wind and rain in buckets.
Once you live here though you welcome them since it may be 100° plus 😂
I have EDS and I wanna say that ache some people feel before a storm is So real, whenever the pressure changes my body hurts so much. there's lots of conditions that can be affected by the weather, but I at least know EDS is definitely one of them. as if tornados aren't scary enough already!!
Tornados are my Biggest fear, Once and while i’ll get nightmares about them.
I hate that freight train sound I hate it so much. I was in school one day 1-2 decades ago and heard that sound while we were in the classroom. Someone was talking about tornados at that moment too. Few minutes later we had a tornado drill, or well, it wasn't a drill that time. I never saw the tornado, but ever since I heard that freight train sound, I always knew that that's what it was. I have no idea if I could've seen it had I looked around since the teachers urgently put us in the tornado drill positions in the hallways, but I most definitely heard it. Saying I was terrified at that moment was an understatement. I think I did develop a minor phobia of that sound because I remember that day every time I hear it.
My uncle and his family lost their house during the Grand Island tornadoes in the middle of the night. They lost everything. My dad went to help clean and he said he just saw family pictures everywhere… ruined. Such a scary and eerie event. My uncle and his family left Nebraska for this reason.
I'm from a state that super-rarely sees tornadoes, but I once had a nightmare of a tornado that seemed so real (and this was long after I was traumatized by the movie Twister when I was too young), I had lilapsophobia for many years. The nightmare's tornado was more realistic than the movie, and this was well before I saw any video on the computer. Maybe it's some memory by instinct, passed down from my Oklahoman grandma. Either way, I was afraid of windstorms and funky clouds for a long time.
It didn't help that I later had a strange experience during a road trip around the U.S.: One night, somewhere in or near the tip of Minnesota, in a small, small town, our bus-turned motor home broke down (for the umpteenth time). The town had recently been hit by a small tornado, so there was some damage. The worst of it was a small silo, which was ripped up on one side, and it was eerily still spilling corn from it. Everybody had taken shelter already, so it looked like an abandoned town. No one was in the little grocery store just past the spilling silo, yet the lights were on.
My mom's ex told us to stay in the bus. It took him a little while to return. When he did, he said someone could fix the bus, but they refused to do it tonight. They said they would in the morning. They did offered shelter, but he was… let's say… prideful and unhealthily dark-humored. He told us if he was going down, we'd be going down together, so basically he was going to take us down with him. Anyway, he opened all the windows, and that was all he did.
It was getting late, so I was sent to bed. My sister was already asleep. My mom and her fatalistic ex went outside to sit. Meanwhile, I looked at the horizon and saw the glow of the distant light of late evening's end. It made the perfect silhouette conditions for the dark clouds to pop out in stark contrast. I could see a bunch of… funnel clouds? At least most could have been scud clouds as you mention, but several sure had pretty solid funnel cloud shapes, so I'm not sure how many could have been funnels or scuds. Many funnel clouds, after all, don't fully form, so it is possible? All I know for certain is I lost count at about 32 of the pointy objects, when my vision was obscured by tears and I cried. My mom finally came back in and encouraged me to come outside.
She showed me how the wind was picking up around us, but noted that where we were on the little hill, it wasn't windy. The ex flicked his lighter and showed how the flame was completely still. Then he told me to look up. There, directly above us, was a dark ring in the sky. A perfect, dark circle. Like someone holding up a finger ring in the air and looking at it. That's still the scariest moment of my life, more scary than that one time when the ex turned off the engine to save on gas, and we were flying high speed down a steep hill in thick, tall woods on a narrow gravel road, and we were so close to sliding off, and the drop would have been deadly. …Eh. Well, maybe it's a tie. But it was the most bone-chilling, hair-raising sight, like that moment in some movies where you hear the doom-dreading BOOM of a drum the moment a dreadful moment of realization or hearing or seeing something dangerous or scary. I will never forget it.
I went back to bed crying and praying/begging not to die, because all I could imagine was it forming into a tornado, touching down on us, lifting us high up in a manner not unlike the Wizard of Oz scene of the tornado picking up Dorothy's house, and violently shaking us and smashing up the windows while we're screaming, before throwing us hard like a vicious monster. I cried myself to sleep.
That next morning was the most beautiful morning I have ever seen, still to this day. A beautiful blue sky, with no sign of the nightmarish scene we saw last night. Birds were singing, everything was so bright and clear and so, so beautiful. I cried and thanked God.
We can all agree that Tornadoes are a lot less scary when you live in a house with a basement.
i don't think i would be able to sleep restfully at night if i lived in tornado alley
Yes they are… I watched the entire video and I’m not sure what the point of this video was, you talk weather in most your videos. This was basically you collecting a pay check. Unsubbing.
Yes, they áre scary
There should seriously be an analog horror series about tornadoes tbh. Like this stuff is so scary to me
I think tornados are the closest thing we have to godzilla. Godzilla was in part inspired by the nuclear bombings of horishima and Nagasaki, where Ted fujita first started thinking about the Fujita scale.
Night of the twisters is one of my Fave made for TV movies from when I was growing up.
Rolling Fork was a great example of this
I’m from the Midwest. We have learn to respect and live side by side with these natural disasters.
My town was hit by a tornado in the early fifties. It destroyed a school and that tornado is the reason my town’s records only go to about 1954