Parts of 151 from Mt. Horeb down to Platteville. That's magnificent territory. Beautiful, like nowhere else. You're lucky to catch one of these storms in that amazing part of the world. In 1984, we lived about 12 miles from Barneveld, WI. That F5 turned everything into 'sand ' in spots. In 1984, You couldn't hear the tornado sirens from Madison that far out (duh)and it was pitch black dark. Very primitive tech. Best of what we had then but hard to get the word out to the general public. .We've had our share of beasts. . So that road has seen its storms and will be seeing some again. It was terrific to catch some of 151's countryside in the video. Stay safe. Make it better and safer for us all. It's good to keep an eye on the old backyard again.
I live in Fitchburg Wisconsin and despite never getting the bad part of the storm we did get very serious winds that caused some roof damage and knocked over trees. I can't imagine what it was like up there!
@@vincentoconnor5640 it appeared to me as multi vortex , obv i could’ve been wrong . it looked as there were smaller funnels touching down then spinning up around the main rotation , but it could’ve just been the low and fast rotation of the wall cloud
Good observation, noticed that as well since it's not even knee high yet here in Juneau/Monroe County. Tornado Tackler hasn't really advertised it as "today's" storms, though he did upload it today so one may assume it was from today.
I don’t think it was from today. Look how tall the corn is in this video. It appears to be full grown corn. Unless the corn has grown 6 feet in the 3 days since I was last in the area.
This video is not from yesterday, not sure when he shot this....but look at the corn. Corn is not that high this time of the year. Fields knee high at most this time of the year
You got on the more easily visible storm wow not rain wrapped like the one Reed encountered that's just a well defined wall cloud that isn't impeded by rain wow just wow great storm
@@ckuehncnwhsyt No they don't. I worked my share of events and on radar at several different offices (no, I don't work at a Wisconsin office). I know everybody I've ever worked with in almost 3 decades doesn't go and hide, but owns up to a miss (if and when they occur). It's a stressful and tough job that many have no clue about when it all goes down on an event. A lot of pride and a lot of pressure, but our mission is to protect life and property...something we take very seriously.
@@whitenoise546 I know of at least two events here in Eau Claire County in the past decade, where I've personally seen obvious tornado damage. In both cases the damage was confined to a narrow and relatively short corridor of shredded foliage, where the few trees that remained standing were stripped bare to their trunks and larger branches. In one of those cases a funnel cloud was seen by multiple citizens. Yet both times the NWS bent over backwards to to convince us we had been victims of "straight line winds." NWS personnel actually contacted one of the eyewitnesses in an unsuccessful attempt to convince him he hadn't seen what he'd seen. I can think of no motive to deceive apart from potential embarrassment at having missed one.
i saw an EF4 at dane county Wisconsin and I saw hail coming down I saw green skies I had loud thunder I saw heavy rain i saw flash flooding i heard sirens
I'm living in Milwaukee Wisconsin one of the worst place in Wisconsin in I still couldn't see it . It must headed towards Madison in Tomah in green bay
madison is where i live and i saw everything like a green clouud sirens hail lighting and thunder flash flooding heavy rain funnel clouds and I saw a tornado right behind me going fast towards me I was in a car and almost crashed it was shaking I had a tornado warning issued at 7:30 PM
Ah, it's just a mini tornado. Try surviving one a mile wide, rated an f5 with winds over 250mph!! Hit the Air Force base I was stationed at in TX in 61. It pretty much totally destroyed the huge base hospital leaving only the concrete slab, even sucking the pipes out of the concrete. Pieces of the hospital were found even all the way up in OK!! Couldn't go out doors for 3 days because of all the dangerous downed snapping power lines. Scary!!