In this video, we have a look at some incredible clips of storm moments from all over Europe. Be sure to like and subscribe if you enjoyed this content. Thanks for watching and I'll see you again in the next one!
With regards to the dust devil/tornado debate, I look at it this way. For the purposes of warning people of danger headed their way, any dust devil that is large enough to get a rating on the Fujita scale has earned the name tornado. About 15 years ago we had a dust devil that reached solid F1 status and triggered tornado alerts. It lasted 20 minutes and did 3 million dollars damage in a farming area. So, sometimes the technical description of an event doesn't really do the job.
Thank you for putting these videos together! I appreciate the work going into the editing and voice overs, which I don't feel like they are too over the top like a lot of channels on YT. No crazy music, just letting the videos speak for themselves. Thanks again 😁 Your work is very much appreciated!
@@gagsdoublej4254 excuse ME, but i believe in Gods i can see, like the old Viking gods in Marvel movies, ty, May you have a glorious death & enter Valhalla
@@TheBjartulf Blessings and thank you Trust Lord Jesus, and your house will be saved You are a person born to be loved Jesus loves everyone even Jesus loves your enemies Heaven is real and hell is real
I have to say that snow storm in Austria looks like the good old days. There hasn’t been any considerable snow in lowlands in that part of Europe in a decade.
Wow, great job piecing these regions together. Just about every nation, in Europe and South Europe like Slovenia, hit by storms and fire. I understand that some regions (countries) are having a severe Heatwave, and the temperatures are well over 43 C (105 F). When hot air hits cool storms come and they are severe. The skies are magnificent, the different shapes of the clouds. More people will be seeing sights like these and worse. Let's just hope that by piecing together your video footage will make them think twice of trying to leave their windows and doors wide open so that the tree limbs, or someone's sofa (that was funny) flying around can just come inside and hurt someone. Let me hope that the fools out there will pay heed and not endanger themselves, their loved ones, and any family pets.
In Slovakia that's called a Dust devil. They are relatively harmless other than throwing dirt around. Again, in London, it's a dirt devil. Depending on how far it's traveled, depends on how high the funnel gets. It can look like it's reaching the sky but it's really not.
Very well done. Letting the videos speak for themselves with only minimal introductory narratives. A refreshing change from the typical, overdone ‘talking head’ contents usually shown here.
@2:12 - 2.21, this was in my City Kiel in North-Germany last year. I was nearby, 4 people got serious injured. They were lifted up and thrown into the Baltic Sea.
As a french, I got my own N°1 scariest storm moment : it was in 1999, when happened a storm we later called "the storm of the century". No need to add, I think. There was two storms in a row, one in the northern part of France and neighboring countries, and one in the southern part. Violent and widespread. It was apocalyptic, entire forests were destroyed in two hours, entire regions were paralyzed, and there was 140 deaths in Europe because of it. It was so devastating the european alert system was updated after it. I was 5 and we had to quit our house in the storm because we lived in a a weak house and we were afraid it would collapse, so we fled for my grand parents house. I saw all sort of thing flying all around me, cars were moving alone, things were falling everywhere, and the noise... What a view and a feel for a child, guess it's why it seems so traumatizing for me. So, I'm afraid of storms and thunderstorms, and I just can't comprehend the fact some people actually love to be in a storm or even actually filming it and not being curled under a blanket with hands on the ears praying for mercy 😅
Cool footage of the "dirt-devil." Also, I've been stuck in some wind-whipped sand and it SUCKS. Doesn't feel good at all. That stuff can even blow through the fabric of your clothes...
The editing. Minimal narration. The videos are telling us what we need to know while the narrator gives a worthwhile synopsis. I love this and I just subscribed.
Excerpt....... According to the American Meteorological Society (AMS), a dust devil is defined as, “a well-developed dust whirl; a small but vigorous whirlwind, usually of short duration, rendered visible by dust, sand, and debris picked up from the ground.” A tornado, in turn, is defined as, “a rotating column of air, in contact with the surface, pendant from a cloud, and often visible as and/or circulating debris/dust at the ground.” The key factor is deciphering between the two is where the twister originates from. A tornado must originate from clouds. If the vortex extends from the ground to the funnel at the base of the cloud, it is then classified at a tornado. In comparison, dust devils originate from a whirlwind on the ground and typically do not grow very big. Although dust devils and tornadoes have apparent differences, is it still possible for a dust devil to become a tornado? If a storm’s updraft moves over the the existing ground circulation, the updraft from the storm can draw the dust devil toward the base of the cloud.
„If a storm’s updraft moves over the existing ground circulation, the updraft from the storm can draw the dust devil toward the base of the cloud.” And thus, a landspout is born!
@@majoroldladyakamom6948 the hurricanes coz we don't have that in our country🥴 so I should put a timestamp for u to know which clip i'm pointing out? Duuuh🥴
You sound like your Australian, you should do one of these but all in Australia 🇦🇺. If your an aussie and im guessing you are then you would know how bad our weather can get especially the recent floods. Cheers mate, hope to see that vid some. Well done by the way as I've only just come across your channel. Take care mate. Brad 😀
When as a child I asked my family in Germany about tornadoes and they say never happens. Now as an adult , when on vacation in Germany, there are more tornadoes there. The wind got up to 60 miles an hour. That is a sign of a possibility of a tornado.
@@evmcevil6669 tornado are not man made. I live in a town that one destroyed it. Those are not man made. Yes I can even make a small tornado in my kitchen sink but that doesn’t mean that the 300 mile an hour, classifying it as a category 5 that went into Alabama and started in my town is home made. So are the ones that are in Europe. They are not man made.
@@lianefehrle9921 You ever heard of Geoengineering if not you might want to check out the documentary I mentioned in a previous post it's had plenty of fact checkers try to disprove it with no success!
seen a whirlwind form once as a kid in front of my parents house. was weird to see the few clouds circling on a near clear sky. 1 moment you could still see a big building in the distance and the next moment it was gone behind a column of a whirlwind. beside a very few roof tiles in the street there was no damage in our street. a friend of a friend made the news by trying to cycle through a whirlwind and he got tossed in a ditch by it (was a sort of hold my beer thing). witnessed quite some extreme weather events in almost 36 years so far. the whirlwind and the evening with a crazy amount of non stop lightnings lightning up the sky (no thunder etc) followed by hailstones of 2~3 cm are the most impressive ones so far. (the lightning/hail thing was the same storm a friend got hit by in France where the hailstones ended up going through the roof of the caravan, ours on the driveway was "only" turned into a puff pancake plate)
Hallo, sahabat saya menyimak Vidio anda tentang badai yang menimpa dunia kalavitu. Sangat mengerikan sekali Alam yang mengamuk menyadarkan kita untuk selalu dkat KPD Sang Pencipta 🙏👍👍❤️
Plant Trees with TAP ROOTS they grow straight down and will stand much longer, they'll break-off before toppling like the other trees whose roots spread out across & just beneath the soil, their roots grow out in feet from tree trunk to what is called the Umbrella formed by the Branches above on the tree, OAK Trees are an example. If the lower branch grows out 30' then your roots will grow out 30' from the trees trunk, tap roots keep growing deeper into the ground as it grows taller.
Water spouts, dust nadoes (way bigger than your fun dust devil), tornadoes. Dust devils in my area are the ones you don’t see until they pick up dust and leaves. I used to follow them around on my grandmother’s farm, feeding them twigs and leaves. Sometimes I would step in the middle of them.
People like me can never live in a coastal area because i am so much water-phobic.....I am scared of the sea and all these raging, ravaging waters, though its fun to watch but dangerous