Brit Reacts to Tornadoes are Scary…



Tornadoes are Scary Reaction!
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18 thoughts on “Brit Reacts to Tornadoes are Scary…”

  1. When the Joplin Tornado hit i was in a hospital in Wichita. I had been there a month. Got that years Kansas flesh eating bacteria, ya fun…no not really. I had been in a coma for 10 days and out for about a week. They had just done their 4th surgery on my leg. It was a skin graft of my thigh skin put over my calf. Any way… they had so many casualties coming from Joplin rhey worked out with my family and home health sending me home a week early to make room for the ppl coming in from there. They had called in extra staff and were running all over as we were trying to leave. It was a HUGE emergency! Ambulances and lifeflights coming in ever few minutes. It was scary.. like what you see in disaster films.

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  2. It is illegal to play the sound from our tornado warning system. It is also our national emergency alert sound. Other than the occasional test of the system, in which they announce the schedule ahead of time, you only hear that sound during a national or weather emergency. It is a long beeping sound with a long buzzer sound. It will most definitely get your attention.

    Edit: I'm sure you can find that sound online if you want to hear it. "United States emergency alert sound"

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  3. I live in southern Indiana. We've had several tornados. One of my friends went to her basement, and the tornado drove a car down into the basement on top of her. She was badly injured but survived. She has scares all over her body. Another friend was blown up into a tree. She also survived with injuries.

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  4. He mentions these areas of tornados but never mentions Oklahoma especially Oklahoma city metro area because the OKC metro has been hit with more tornados then any other city on the planet..in fact the 2 largest tornados ever recorded in world history hit Moore Oklahoma within 14 years apart both had the highest wind speeds ever recorded and largest width the may 3rd 1999 was the largest ever with a width 0f 1.5 miles or 2.4 kilometers wide. The 2nd one called the Moore Bridge creek tornado hit 2 elementary schools killing 7 kids…combined those 2 tornados caused $3.4 billion dollars in damages..in fact Oklahoma gets hit with more tornadoes then anywhere else that The Nation's Weather Service is headquartered just 18 miles south of Oklahoma city in Norman Oklahoma and Oklahoma University is the #1 university for those getting a degree in meteorology and r the leading partner with the NWS.

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  5. I live in Texas, out in the country. We don't even have sirens. Unless the tornado passes close to us, we usually find out the next day when we see the damage out and about. Thankfully, we live a few hundred yards from one of the biggest man made lakes in the country, so the tornadoes jump all around us and cause little damage here.

    When I was young, there was a nocturnal tornado that took almost the exact same path every 7 years. Close enough that after the second one, people rebuilt on a different corner of their properties and never got hit by it again. It was the creepiest thing in the world.

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  6. I was in a house directly hit by an EF3 it tore the roof up from the wall half way but luckily it didnt take it entirely off.

    I remember getting into a closet under the stair case, about 30 seconds before it hit… you could just feel the air change when it did hit… loud doesnt describe it, you could hear the wood snapping litteral trees being torn apart every window shattering at once the glass turning into projectiles. The drop in pressure makes your ears pop and you can feel the air in your lungs try to escape.

    Then it's all quiet our house was badly damaged but standing some neighbors were not as lucky… but the neighborjoods felt different it's hard to explain how strange it is to stop out of your house and not recognize your own neighborhood street and home.

    Luckily no one was killed just a few injuries. I will say the support the community gives is amazing we had thousands of people unaffected them self's show up… combing the grass for shards of glass, cutting apart fallen trees, cooking food on grills donating chainsaws gloves food and water. It was honestly extremely heart warming and we met some amazing people.

    If you live in america and you hear someplace an hour away was hit by a tornado seriously grab some drinks gloves or even just a day of your time to come out and help its work but you might make a new friend helping those in need.

    Anyways stay safe happy Halloween.

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  7. Tornadoes are no joke!
    on May 30th 2019, there 21 tornadoes in Ohio in a 40-60 mile area. I was at my weekend home an hour north of where I live in SW Ohio. I had to move into my storage closet for almost an hour before the tornado siren stopped.
    At home a tornado passed over my house without setting down, but homes barely a mile from my neighborhood were heavily damaged.
    The overall damage was widespread and really scary.

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  8. I live in Alabama, aka "Dixie Alley," where we actually have a tornado season every year beginning in March and ending in May. It can be a very stressful few months seeing Alabama is one of the highest ranking states for tornado activity.
    On April 27th, 2011, our State was ravaged by 62 tornadoes in an 18 hr period, taking the lives of 253 people total. 3-EF5 tornadoes, 8-EF4, 7-EF3, 9-EF2, 29-EF1, 6-EF0. One of the EF5 tornadoes hit my hometown killing 25 people. Fortunately for me, the long tracked tornado had briefly lifted while my son and I were driving to take shelter at my dad's home. The rotation was over top of us carrying debris in the circulation. Roofs, trees, sticks, shingles, wood, sheet rock, etc. An empty gallon jug fell from the air onto my son's head as we ran to the house. Your ears begin to pop uncontrollably because of the pressure and the roar of the wind is freakishly chilling. It's a dreadful, yet humbling experience to say the least. Tornadoes demand respect and here in the South we like to oblige. We stay prepared. We know our Weather and how to read a Radar system. Everyone has a weather app on their phone and a weather radio in their house to get alerts well ahead of time. We heed the warnings and move quickly. The sirens are scary, but so very necessary. They're honestly lifesavers. We have Public and Community Tornado/Storm shelters EVERYWHERE in Tornado/Dixie Alley and everyone knows where they're located. Matter of fact, I have 2 different storm shelters I can go to within a mile radius of my home (they're always open). As a non-local I can see how it would be hard to imagine how so many people can survive such destructive beasts, but here in the States we had to adapt and learn. We didn't have much choice in the matter. Because, ya know, mother nature and all. 🌪😅

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  9. The freaky thing about tornadoes is that, as destructive as they are, they jump and change their path. So every house on a street will be leveled – except for one… why?? WHY?? Everyone has stories of people who have survived tornadoes that sound like fantasy – "oh my uncle and aunt were on the front porch, they dove off the porch and landed face down on the front yard, the tornado lifted their house off the foundation and destroyed it, but not a petal of the flowers in the yard was disturbed," or "one house was hit by a tornado and the baby in the house was found 2 miles down the road in a dresser drawer completely unharmed." This makes it feel like tornadoes are sentient beings of some nature.

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