**NOT FOR BROADCAST** Contact Brett Adair with Live Storms Media to license. brett@livestormsmedia.com A large tornado was spotted 1 mile West of Platteville Co. Ems and Fire were responding to possible damage to property. Kory Poggenpohl
Landspout. But it kind of illustrates the way that a mesocyclone tornado forms. The spin up for both begins at the ground and works its way up to the landspout cloud base or rotating mesocyclone. You can see the obvious physical effect when the rotating ground spin up reaches the clouds and actually pulls down the cloud into the classic funnel shape. I have read that in the case of mesocyclone tornadoes that if there is a persistent visible funnel cloud that the tornado has already begun on the ground, even if it is not visible.
Landspout tornados are so fascinating, the way they form from the ground up and rope out for miles. Heard this one was over 10,000 ft long and could be seen 70 miles away!
@@Enjoyer.762 No, I live in northwestern Pennsylvania, and was a member of one of the fire departments that responded to Albion, PA on May 31, 1985 when an F-4 hit that town. We had F-4 and F-5 level tornados here. No, they weren't 2 miles wide. What's your point? Were you even alive back then?
@@Enjoyer.762 Read my original comment. I never mentioned anything about risk statistics. I stated the fact that this tornado looks sinister, and it does.
Not uncommon for CO to get these landspout style tornadoes. Rarely as violent as the ones that happen east of there, KS/OK ect. You can barely see rotation in this one and move pretty slow but they can be pretty photogenic.
Those things are amazing. I’m not saying they’re not dangerous but they’re kind of overgrown dust devils compared to typical Midwestern tornadoes. They sure are not going to sneak up on you with a low cloud bases wrapped in rain and going 60 miles an hour. Very cool
Your more active setups will be in the High Plains/Canada. We have Cane season now, and you can have a tornado anywhere in the U.S. any day of the year.
Yeah, the statistically "normal" occurrence of large, long track violent tornadoes in the classic "tornado alley" of Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma is over for this year. For the USA the focus moves not only to Colorado and Wyoming, but also to Dakotas, Iowa and Minnesota. As for what is referred to as true south "Dixie Alley", Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, there is now little cold air to mix. DA tornadoes occur more around the Dec to Mar timeframe. Having said all of that, a dangerous tornado can occur at any time in any of those places if the conditions are suitable. But I am describing the seasonal norms only.
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