@@chrisackerley1842 the ice is melting very fast at the North Pole + Greenland - thats why the weather news don't report much on it ....its World wide climat changes going balistic .
@@BlueHopi144 You're right. What makes it even scarier is that things are happening faster than they predicted and there's no way to reverse what's been done. The best we can hope to do is slow it down some. I'm going to hijack one of those Space X rockets and get the hell off this rock while I can. Are they selling land on Mars yet?
@@The-LongRoad-Home how do you stream to the cloud?… so if you live-stream it from Facebook, It will automatically post when it stops recording or what?
Tsunamis scare me more than any other natural disaster because you simply cannot escape from water. It's so powerful. This video was the one that made me really feel how terrifying it is. I hope the family who filmed this are okay.
I was traumatised. I had to take a minute. There was a family in that house I heard children's voices?? That house in front was washed clean away. They must be safe though as they managed to upload this footage. Why didn't they evacuate???
I'm 60 and I've watched tons of media over the years, including gopro daredevils and fails, but I've never been as scared as with this clip. Thoughts and prayers to the inhabitants.
Phenomenal footage. Thank you for letting us know the family left. I pray they made it to safety. My husband and I, retirees in our 70’s, recently moved to the northern coast of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State, U.S.A. Not far off the western coast of the state, deep in the Pacific Ocean, lies the Cascadian Fault, which is comparable to the huge fault that caused the great tsunami in Japan in March, 2011. We are aware that when (not if, but when! Hopefully, it will not be in our life time!), the Cascadian Fault slips, it will trigger a Mega Tsunami that will impact much of the western coasts of Oregon and Washington states, and Western Canadian coast area, and will push itself into the San Juan de Fuca Strait the abuts this part of the Olympic Peninsula. We know where it is we must get ourselves to in order to be safe. The videos of both the Japanese Tsunami of 3/2011 and the Boxing Day Tsunami in Indonesia of 2004 have served to enlighten people around the world as to the power and devastation of tsunamis. Thank you for this video.
We live in the Olympia area, not near the coast but at the south end of Puget Sound. Still, when heading out 101, it's not long before we start to see tsunami warning signs by the road. It's ironic to me that we moved here from the East Bay Area of California, home of the Hayward Fault, only to learn about the Cascadia Fault out in the Pacific. I hope I shuffle off before it lets loose.
Hello neighbor, my entire close family and I live in Oregon City and the Portland Metro area. Not looking forward to the earthquake and inevitable Tsunami. I pray I am not visiting our coast when the big one hits and that we all fare well. I love Licet Studios footage, always very interesting and educational too! Take good care, neighbor!!
Hey, I know the area. Im from Washington. Google about the "orphan tsunami" that hit Japan long ago...the January in the 1700s that was from that Cascadianfault! It was unknown for years. When it goes....Yikes!
@@doran6913 if by fun you mean being crushed by a collapsing building and subsiquently watching your family die by drowning including what sounded like a little girl... sure bud
@@matthewfurlani8647 bruh that's not what I meant at all y'all are taking shit way too seriously I already said that I agree thatits not fun in real I just said that being in a house while it moves looks fun if you don't think about the damage 🙄
Yes, when I saw Everything floating back I was like ok, it's coming this one week take the shed down. I did not expect that. 😳. I didn't realize that was a dog. I thought someone was whistling! Or a child kinda making noise. Then I could hear the dog, but still thought I heard whistling
Was wondering when the “last largest” wave would come and wondered if it even would (towards the end) since it was so quiet...but then I remembered “the calm before the storm” and just felt DREAD. I can’t even imagine having to go through something like this😓
I had been trying to convince my husband to move us to the beach, but after seeing these tsunami videos along with the rogue wave videos, I have definitely rethought my thinking! Hope these folks were OK.
@@Dobviews Are you talking about the potential destruction from the volcanic eruption and possible collapse of the island? 25m waves reaching all the way to Florida? YES! Very scary!
@@Lunamoon753 there have been previous landslides on that island so it will happen again. The only question is when. It could happen tomorrow or years from now.
This is one terrifying video. When you think off Greenland you do not even consider tsunamis happening there. And this video is just frightening as hell!
Especially when you consider not just the debris in the water if when you fall in, but the temp of the water would probably kill you in under 60 seconds.
That is absolutely terrifying! And you know that water has got to be freezing....and omg that poor dog!! 😢😭 What kind of people leave a poor helpless animal outside to fend for itself during a tsunami???
SEVEN MINUTES from the landslide to the last wave. How in tarnation would anyone even know this was coming? Don’t be so dang quick to judge people experiencing events you never have experienced.
Ditto! 🫡 So please listen to yourself and don’t judge what you think people haven’t or have experienced either. For starters the dog shouldn’t ideally be chained up outside like ‘prey on a rope’ And dang quick? No speed replies here.
That happened for the collapsed krakatau mount resulting to tsunami at night. It's simply nightmare. There's a concert being held at the bay at that time. Only the vocalist survived while others including the vocalist's wife died.
Just when you thought it was safe to go near the shore again. This isn't the first tsunami in that area. There was one in the early or mid part of the 20th century that killed a bunch of people there or near there. Ya just gotta get the hell out of the way.
You know, i don't waste sympathy on people who deliberately put themselves in danger but i feel contempt for those who bring children and pets along for the sick ride with them. So, i don't care what happened to these people.
The write-up on this is excellent. The video is absolutely terrifying. To see the water receding that fast and that far had me involuntarily holding my breath as it is sure sign of worse to come. And it did. How the people ever got out of there alive is nothing short of a miracle. Just an incredible, mind-blowing video.
@@lilithqueenbitch3976 In the write-up/description, it noted the person taking the video survived - I'm assuming he took his family with him. I just watched this video again to see if the stages of the tsunami shocked me as much as it did the first time. The answer is yes and that it was even worse. I watched closer this time, noticed more, noticed I had been holding my breath again without knowing it and was saying, "Ohhhhh noooo" a lot as the water receded. If anyone wants to see how a tsunami evolves up close and personal, this must be almost textbook perfect for the job.
"Don't stay and watch, get to high ground far inland and warn others." (Sounds of guy getting a cup of coffee and buttering his toast in the background)
after i seen the end i had to go back and review every noise they made, I'm hoping they had pets they left behind because it sounds like there's people still there in the end.
The 6th wave was pretty fucking terrifying - the speed and power of that wave and how it was able to knock down the red building was incredible yet scary.
@@julierichens4218 Hey! Why not just worry about yourself?? In the great context of what's going on around the world today. The odd fucking swear word is the least of your and my worry's. So take your little hissssssy and shove it. Oh and welcome to your very own and deeply disturbing extinction. Where you get to see every one and every thing you love cast into the abyss as our planet and all life hurtles into the fucking abyss burning back to bare earth.
@@julierichens4218 Someone is always offended by something. It really doesn't hurt you at all, you just don't like it. Live and let live. It would be nice if everyone would be considerate of everyone else, but that's not the way the world works. Never has been that way and never will be. Just be quiet and move along.
My Dad witnessed a tsunami in Puerto Rico in 1918. There was an earthquake and the sea went back and disappeared in the horizon. He knew it was time to run. When it came back, it entered the whole city that had already been devastated by the shake.
It's frightening to think that in a situation like that life or death is decided by seconds. I'm sure the scene that was left after the water receded must have given him nightmares. I know somebody who volunteered to help after the Indonesian tsunami and he was a different person when he came back. That was about 20 years ago and he still never talked about it. All he has ever said is that he wished he never went. His wife says he cries in his sleep sometimes.
@@larapalma3744 The only thing he ever told me was when I asked him about the dead bodies. He said mainly what he did was help distribute supplies like water and food, but they needed extra help one day loading body bags onto trucks. When they found bodies they would put them in the body bags and lie them next to the road where people in trucks would take them away. They needed extra help and he went out on one of those trucks. Each bag had handles by the head and feet, and the guy he was working with picked up his end first and he felt stuff slosh down toward him by his end. He said they would swing a bag onto the truck and he turn around and throw up after every one. After 2 hours he wasn't able to do it anymore. I never asked him another question and he never brought it up either, but here's a guy who thought he was doing something noble going over to help, but instead he came home with a head full of nightmares that to this day are getting the better of him.
The outflow was pretty impressive for the early waves, but that final waves outflow was terrifying. That was a huge amount of water moving very rapidly out.
yep. 'thought that it was built upon the Council Rock! at first..watching the yard clean up..I sit and watch as tears go by..but that ending says..No Time For Tears..Earthquakes Tsunamis Up Up and Away! >emergency escapes!
I hope everyone got out of this. This is really impressive and scary as hell. Should be considered a teaching video for everyone who lives by the sea or even just goes to the beach.
The first hand visual experience is remarkably immersive and yes, scared the shit out of me. This phenomenon has been easily repeated for at least hundreds of thousands of years - so from THAT perspective, yes, it’s funny as hell.
It’s sick that she had time to know what was coming ahead of time to set up a camera, but not time to unleash the dog tied to that red house In the bottom left corner of 1:03 keep In mind the family left the home, but had time to set up a camera and set It to record, they did that instead of untying the dog…
Please do not judge others so quickly. A lot of people living in such remote locations continually keep cameras running for various reasons. It might not have been set up purely to film this. If you listen at the beginning they are casually washing the dishes in the background, not even bothered with the camera, it's only when they hear the noise of the water outside do they look out the window and run to get the kids. Also just because you can hear a dog after it goes off camera does not necessarily mean it's still tied up. It's not seen being washed away or hurt in any way. There are more videos of the same tsunami from different angles and locations showing different perspectives. Take care and be kind. 🤗💛
Oh my gosh, that was so terrifying. I cant even imagine how horrifying it must have been for the occupants of the house. So glad to read that they survived this. GOD bless and thanks for posting this.
That happens here in the Philippines but not a tsunami but a storm. The river overflows around 1am and most residential nearby perished that time. Some survivors say that they can hear those people crying for help while being drag by the wild waves in total darkness. Its scary to think of it to be honest.
Wow..a bird's eye view to a tsunami! This footage is incredible. You could see the water going in the wrong direction. That last wave will stick with me. Damn.
@@DoubleTroubles729 This is an ignorant comment, 1. you don’t know what financial situation this person is in 2. Climate change is not only this persons fault 3. As one other person said they may live on an island and the island may not be large enough to escape this tsunami
Oh my goodness!! You’re right that last wave was something else. I hope you’re alright and that everyone else too. Wish we could have seen after the water receded but I think you just wanted to survive that last wave. That was unreal. 😳😵💫
I live in Japan on the Kanagawa coast. I look out over the Pacific every day. The waves can get pretty big here, especially if it's windy at high tide. Fortunately the house is some 25 meters above sea level, with a seawall in front of us. But there are 'tsunami evacuation zone' signs and an alarm system in our neighbourhood in case of a big one... I have an escape route planned...
in some places during great Sendai quake the water reached 50 Meters above sea level due to massive nearshore underwater landslides being triggered by the earthquake/tsunami, due to additive wave effect.
They knew it was coming, why do you think they set up the camera? But they may not have had a car to escape , and they certainly would have been dead on foot.
I live on the gulf of Mexico. We all know. What surprises me is the only sirens that blare are for tornadoes. Just because we never had a tsunami doesn't make us immune. I anticipate one. Figure Murphys law will find us one day.
I’ve watched so many tsunami videos, i think i know better than to think everything is ok too early. I found myself praying that you all got away and took your animals with you. Since you posted this i think you must have saved some things. I’m really thankful for that. 👍🏼🤍
@@aryann.0_0 At 1:07 you can see him in the bottom left of the screen. I don’t know how he survived up to 5:50 but he’s crying right to the end when the biggest wave takes the houses away. Poor thing. Makes me cry to hear him.
I live on an Island where there is constant Lava and Tsunami threats. My heart skipped a beat when that red building swept away. I was just praying that was a remote camera and dude didn't seriously stay and film while the water was receding. If you ever see a river run backwards up into itself or the sea receding RUN!!!
@@Mogwai06 I know what I asked doesn't make sense because the original comment of Seanne suggests to run if river flow backwards which makes no sense at all therefore I asked the main comment that question to seek an explanation to what he said, maybe he wanted to say something useful but couldn't put in the right words
@@stevier4964 That's not even the freakin point. There was more than enough time to get the dog and leave, there's no excuse. And no, a dog's life might not be more important than a human nor less important ... All life matters.
@@elizabethstump4077 Trees are easily uprooted, snapped or turned over due to the sheer strength of the waves, and often become hazards themselves for anyone stuck in the water. Orig comment was right, during a tsunami you must absolutely find high ground away from the shore. Not on your roof, but actual tangible tall hills and mountains. Very rarely do those who hide on their roof or up a tree survive due to just how dangerous they are.
It ain't about what you have to deal with. It's what you will deal with if you live, wotk, or play in it's path. EARTH, WIND, FIRE, WATER ... ain't a darn thing man can do put bow to Gaia's power, and run.
The dog whimpering is an ominous warning sign as well. Animals are so instinctual and in tune with nature, humans, and their surroundings. My Dad always told to take heed to the warning signs a dog gives you especially towards humans, they very rarely, if ever will steer you wrong.
@liberty5568 Science is not a sum of knowledge, it's a way of thinking. Unless you pull your smug head out of your arse, you're never gonna figure out how to use it. Science has never disproven the concept that animals can read people, there's more than enough evidence to indicate they can in documented works. What sort of sub-plebian logic are you working with? Honestly some people are worse than worthless, trying to spread their ignorant, belligerent, petty thoughts like they have some established basis in fact and reality. Get wreckt.
@liberty5568 "Science" is when something is reproducible at will giving consistent results. It automatically excludes everything else. It is well documented that some animals seem to be more sensitive to these things than others, and that some are relatively consistent in detecting them ahead of time. It's just not 100% consistent or 100% reliable or 100% of the animals, but that does not mean that it does not occur. It's just the nature of all animals including humans to be inconsistent and not always reliable, and with scientists being humans and not understanding themselves, one can clearly see that they are not as bright as they think they are.
Fantastic upload! This might be one of the most valuable tsunami videos I have seen in regards of analysing the water movements. When you look closely you can see how the directions of the water change a few times during the video always indicating a large wave must come soon. I can hardly imagine what must have been going on below the water surface!
This is clickbait bullshit reposting an event that occurred in 2017 after a landslide. Also, the water "movements" are a combination tidal effect on the undersea topography, and the geography of the location.
Omg... That almost sent me into a full blown panic attack! I lived most my life on the Oregon Coast and that was always my biggest fear. Never the earthquake, but the tsnami to follow. I moved inland about 8 yrs ago & miss the ocean incredibly, the beach is my happy place ❤ Yet don't miss the underlying concern of something like this occuring. Praying this family was safe... When I heard a child, I was thinking RUN now! When the water starts sucking out like that, you know it's back building and something is coming! Terrifying!
It's sad because I can hear her like in the kitchen either washing plates and pots or getting a meal ready. It's like they had no warning that this was coming.
Yeah did you even bother to read the description? It hit them in under 7 minutes from when the landslide hit the water creating the mega tsunami. I’m not trying to be a dick but I wish people would learn to read. Then they wouldn’t look ignorant posting ignorant comments.
@@tytoalba4794 If you are referring to 'Passerby's' (in hangul) comment, you are *100* percent correct!... (My initial comment (in pseudo-kanji [so desu ka], was more meant as an understatement to this comment, more like a 'tell me about it', or: 'you can say _that_ again!' - 見える)?. . . 😉
Its sad to watch someones hardwork and home get destroyed in seconds. That man probably built that shed, fence, deck, and maybe even his home and its all gone.
Not when they leave their dog tied up to the red building that is trying to get away and they choose to film it all instead of untying the dog. They deserved whatever they got.
@@debbieb.8708 Dude. Take a step back and have a long look at yourself. Maybe then you'll start to see your own shortcomings and stop focusing on everybody else's. These are victims who have had everything destroyed, who are you to decide what they deserved? What do you gain from leaving hurtful comments like this? Is it the fact that they seemingly don't have empathy for the animal during a crisis when they're most likely panic-striken? You certainly don't have empathy for them, even in the comfort of your house. See the irony?
@@debbieb.8708 the caneras are left attached to a hard surface. You have no idea what the person in the house was doing, or if the water dropped far enough away to even allow any of them out of the door, let alone anywhere near the dog's line. If the woman had a child with her, should she have abandoned that child / children to risk her life untying the dog? Would you? Take your time answering, karma may be real.
@@DogTog The family had no choices at all. If they’d step foot outside they’d have been washed away by any of those waves. It’s terrible that the dog died but you can hear small children and I’m sure their priority was getting them upstairs or as high up as they could. Most of these small villages were washed away.
Gäa will get us and how we se at time she is very angry. to many people think they're God and can do what ever they want... it will hit us hart. Remember my words. 🙏
@@Terri330 It wouldn't help, those currents are so strong they'd probably drag you under or more likely the debris that is mixed in would crush you to death. .... .... happy thoughts.
This is horrifying because you realize if you hadn't run as fast as you could at the first wave, it was already too late. I hope these poor people survived. Thank you so much for educating the public by sharing this video.
@@rubrawolf Absolutely horrible. I always worry about the animals first and foremost. Left to die like in Hurricane Katrina, in which 15,000 pets died.
Well considering they were already hit by the first wave, one would if thought they would of hauled out of there while they had a chance with tge do side still standing.
@@scottw.3258 the dog was tied up outside, they were more interested in filming the wave than saving it. They were 10 feet away from it. They watched it drown, it's on another video...