I survived Californias earthquake when I was there, but from Tornado tantrums with fire tornados to Dark Day, Ireland has NEVER seen extreme weather like the USA and I’ve never even HEARD of most of these extreme weather conditions!
This is the 10 Strangest Weather Events In US History! | Irish Girl Reacts
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46 comments
Carr fire was the name of the country/area where the fire started. Not related to a vehicle at all
"Did people eat them later?" – well, it's Louisiana, so yeah, I'm sure some did. A good size fire, even a bonfire, will generate wind as it sucks in oxygen to consume the fuel (wood, etc.). A monster fire will generate a monster wind – as any forest service firefighter will attest. Fire is a Living, Breathing Organism and will kill if not kept under strict control.
check out the "storm of the century" on the 1949 blizzard. it's terrifying.
Diane, when are you visiting America again?
Large forest fires are capable of creating their own weather, hence the fire tornado forming in the middle of the forest fire.
I live in California, so I've never seen a real fire tornado.
Seen lots of dust devils though.
Diane looks great in a hoodie.
I experienced the Tropical Storm Erin event. It had been an extraordinarily wet summer. As it reached Oklahoma, Erin suddenly intensified almost to hurricane strength with a sharply defined eye and gusts measured near the eye of close to 70 mph. We got 8 inches of rain where I was.
No tornado has reached 5 miles wide the widest tornado ever recorded was the el Reno tornado at 2.5 miles wide
I have family that live in Alabama and they close down everything with just a dusting of snow. I mean a literally dusting. And everything can stays shut down for days even though the snow melts in less than an hour. So Ireland shutting down for 3 in. really isn't that bad.
First half of 6 is wrong. Largest tornado ever recorded happened in 2013 and it was 2.6 miles wide. No possible way was there ever a 5-mile wide tornado. There might have been those back before humans when dinosaurs still roamed around
We get hot and we get cold , the hottest temp ever recorded was in death valley California if was 134.1 degrees Fahrenheit , and the coldest temp recorded in the United States was -80 degrees below 0 Fahrenheit
Fire tornados are pretty intense, it's a gigantic fire swirl like what you can see in miniature in a campfire, at least in principle. Volcano-tornados are another intense, non thunderstorm driven phenomena only this time it's hot swirling dust with intense lightning!
Hello Diane thanks for this video it was things I had never heard of before but there are all kinds of weird weather in the United States and the world for all that matters. Now I live in what is considered tornado Alley that is Northern Texas Oklahoma Kansas a little bit of Northeast corrections Southeast Nebraska half of Missouri half the lower half Iowa on up into Southern Illinois and Indiana and Ohio now this is called tornado Alley because tornadoes are more frequent in this area because the conditions are conducively set to cause tornadoes. I've had people tell me oh you live in Kansas you have a lot of tornadoes well yeah Kansas averages like 90 tornadoes a year but 89 of them are out in the middle of nowhere and last less than a minute and then you have the one that is bigger and hits towns and hurts or kills people
So I was thinking you need to come to Wichita Kansas and stay here with me and I will make sure that you experience safely your own tornado I used to be a storm spotter until I just got tired of doing it although severe weather still excites me as much as you do
Just remember, the USA doesn't use Celsius.
The US has had a lot of extreme weather.
2:27 That'd be Texas
Jennings is a very common name here in the states
During the black rain event in 1934, the blown soil actually reached Washington DC and New York City, dumping almost 2 inches of soil there.
With tornados we had an event a few years back that gave North Carolina 63 tornado's in ONE DAY.
It was the Carr Fire, one of the biggest wildfires in California history. Most of our wildfires are named for towns, counties, or other geographical features near where they started.
how is it possible that in the year 2018 no footage of that fire tornado was taken
Be careful about reviewing click-bait videos. They are mostly BS.
The tornadoes in 2011 were terrifying. One of them passed over several counties before touching down and decimating a long stretch into yet another county. It passed over our house, and thankfully hadn’t touched down yet. A tree in a yard still tried twisting. Tornadoes are no joke. All you can do to prep is go to the bottommost inner room of the house and pray. If you are out in the open and it’s getting bigger but not moving, it’s coming at you take a left or right pronto and look for shelter
We literally just had a freak wind storm yesterday being april 12th winds up to about 100mph.
The CARR fire is named after the region. Like the castle fire or the Mcnally fire. It's not because it was a car.
two things in your namesake must be those curses????? ha ha
there's a place in Wisconsin named "Editor Diane"
a tornado created by fire
People who haven't been here don't truly understand how big the Great Lakes are – so big that they generate their own weather patterns. There have been rare occasions when winds even reach hurricane strength. The worst on record was in 1913, combined with a blizzard. Many ships sank with all on board dying:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2aiKRXlU3cY
You won my sub with that intro!
There is a city named Jennings in Florida, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, and Wisconsin. There are almost 20,000 incorporated cities in the United States with another 15,000 or so that are not incorporated. By contrast, Ireland has less than 100 cities. I live in Missouri and or state had over 1200 cities. Naming them all is bound to cause duplications. In fact, there are 30 cities named Franklin, the most common name of all our cities.
On May 3, 1999, my parents house in Moore, Oklahoma was hit by the most powerful tornado in history. It was over a mile wide with speeds over 315 mph/500 kph. Quite a sight to see.
The 1815 Eruption of Tambora remains the largest eruption in recent history. Measuring a 7 out of 8 on the Volcanic Explosivity Index.
Thats a sign!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Diane JENNINGSSSSSSSSSSS Dont get scared. Dave from Ohio
Add down south everyone loves the name Jennings.
https://youtu.be/3EKHUA1aBLA
The US has had a lot of the strangest weather events.
Not to be too picky, but earthquakes have nothing to do with the weather. From Michigan here, we like to say we have all four seasons,,,, every week.
we name our wildfires in the US. the Carr fire was a wildfire in California. it got its name from Carr Powerhouse Road, which it started near. the extreme heat from wildfire causes "firenadoes" they're usually relatively small and are coming directly out of the fire, so they don't have the same results as a regular tornado. definitely a little unsettling, though.
Gosh you watch some weird videos Diane Jennings, just sayin'
High wind speeds that are dangerous to be out in is rather regular over here in Oregon. If you want to see a crazy weather event I would suggest looking into coverage of the September 2020 fires in Oregon and California. It appears the video you reacted to was about one year too early to see the insane weather to start.
In October 2017, I took a vacation in England and Hurricane Ophelia struck. It's interesting you mentioned African dust, because the sky on October 16th in London looked like the Apocalypse. VIDEO OF TRIP: https://youtu.be/DK1VmtmQprQ
Sounds like Irelands weather is like Tennessees weather during the winter and spring. During the winter, we actually have days that are spring like. 2020 on thanksgiving, it was in the 70’s Fahrenheit when it should have been in the 40’s. Just the last few months, in the same week we had tornado warnings and freeze warnings in the same week! Now summer we know what to expect, HOT! We have 90’s temperatures with 50+ humidity and heat indexes in the 100’s. Try being in an attic trying to hunt down a cable line that the customer just has to have hooked up and it’s well over 100 degrees up there. Welcome to Tennessee, if you don’t like the weather, give it 5 minutes, it will change.
You're right about certain areas of the US having the infrastructure to deal with cold weather, and other areas being paralyzed. A dusting of half an inch of snow where I live (just outside of New York City) doesn't get any attention at all. But that same amount of snow falling in some place like Tennessee or South Carolina would make people stay indoors.
I have lived in Alaska and yes they handle cold really well
No it's and area of California forestry ?
Hurricane not cyclone.
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