This is why I would never live in Oklahoma. Or Texas.This video is cah-ra-zy.
Right, I hear constant talk about the earthquakes in Cali. We have had two in what, 50 years....the next one will happen, but in the meantime, tornadoes, storms, outages plague the rest of the company. We are OK, over here.This is why I would never live in Oklahoma. Or Texas.
Or Kansas. Iowa. Any of those places that get a lot of tornadoes. They can still happen where I live, but it is pretty rare.
When I was a kid in Texas, I used to get scared shitless everytime we had them.
I have nightmares about them to this day still.
If they ever was a clown tornado, and I saw it...I would just end it all right there.
You need to keep a boat in your yard though for the big one that slides you and the golden state into the Pacific.Right, I hear constant talk about the earthquakes in Cali. We have had two in what, 50 years....the next one will happen, but in the meantime, tornadoes, storms, outages plague the rest of the company. We are OK, over here.
Growing up in Iowa we had tornadoes all the time but honestly none of them were even scary. I mean we would always go in the basement but I can't ever remember them causing mass destruction in Iowa. Only recently in Missouri have I been anywhere close to a truly devastating tornado and that was the one that hit Joplin MO.I lived in Oklahoma City 15 years and it's never been this bad. We had the storms in May 1999 but they weren't followed up by more tornadoes and heavy flooding a week later.
Growing up as a kid in OKC we had some severe thunderstorms but never a tornado. At least not a significant one that caused millions in damages and loss of life.
Booze, the central Texas area is not bad. I'd say it's probably one of the safest areas to live in terms of not being impacted by natural disasters. It's hot as hell but tornadoes are very rare, you're not impacted by hurricanes that have rolled into the Gulf, and quakes are pretty much non-existent.
But Lubbock and the Texas panhandle......feh. Might as well be in Oklahoma or Colorado. Snow, Ice, tornadoes, quakes......the rest of Texas laughs at the panhandle. Wannabe Texans.
~lights fuse and runs
Oh forgot to add. .... the idiot off duty GIs when they get behind the steering wheel.The only thing you get from the Hurricanes is the rain but even thats not bad. Coming from West Texas I had to get used to the humidity and yes the summers can bake you.
~slowly lowers pimp hand and walks away~I lived in Oklahoma City 15 years and it's never been this bad. We had the storms in May 1999 but they weren't followed up by more tornadoes and heavy flooding a week later.
Growing up as a kid in OKC we had some severe thunderstorms but never a tornado. At least not a significant one that caused millions in damages and loss of life.
Booze, the central Texas area is not bad. I'd say it's probably one of the safest areas to live in terms of not being impacted by natural disasters. It's hot as hell but tornadoes are very rare, you're not impacted by hurricanes that have rolled into the Gulf, and quakes are pretty much non-existent.
But Lubbock and the Texas panhandle......feh. Might as well be in Oklahoma or Colorado. Snow, Ice, tornadoes, quakes......the rest of Texas laughs at the panhandle. Wannabe Texans.
~lights fuse and runs
Yeah, I agree with that. Unless it was their jobs to be there, it's hard to feel bad for them.Hard to feel sorry for someone when they choose to do something as idiotic as driving into the path of tornadoes.
The vehicle was tossed 200 feet from what I understand.Article wasn't specific on how they died. I'm curious to that.
You'd think their vehicle was actually picked up and whisked away by a tornado, but I'm wondering if it was more they hit a pole driving.