Most Horrific Monster Flash Flood Caught on Camera 2024

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Most Horrific Monster Flash Flood Caught on Camera 2024

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My wife and I were looking at new houses. She kept picking these houses that were near streams. When I pointed out that there was no WAY I was going to buy a house in a flood zone, she would always say, "There's no way a flood dould reach there from that tiny stream."

I work with a veteran's disaster relief organization. On one flood-op, I took a video of this little stream; it wasn't very wide, nor very deep. Then I panned up to an empty field that was about 20 feet/6.1 m above the creek. I showed her a street-view of the area before the flood, then showed her the video I'd taken. We don't look at houses anywhere near streams anymore.

ex-navyspook
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Utah resident here. Flash flooding happens a lot **because** it's desert country. The dry ground can't absorb the water fast enough, so every year during the rainy season (and when the snow pack melts) the state gets flash flood warnings in areas most prone to it.

AlyssaDragonrider
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If you just spent "X" amount of dollars refinishing your basement because it just flooded and you *know* it flooded because of the slope of your driveway, then that's on YOU for not having a drain installed close to your house! Hopefully now they'll do it right

duke_drums
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In 1990, when I was only 30 yrs old, my small town of 1000 people had a flash flood after receiving 7 inches of rain in just over an hour. We lost a lot of property and many animals, but fortunately, only 1 human life. I never imagined the force of water when it's suddenly 18 feet deeper than normal.

mikebritton
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This channel does a really good job at taking an informative stance on the events. There's geography and news to it, and I learn a ton about weather and the world.

kimward
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Do note that standing infront of a flash flood is a very stupid idea. Do not attempt.

witchy
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Never buy a house lower than the general elevation of the nearest railroad tracks. The railroad spent a lot of time and money on surveying the land and figuring flood levels before they built their right of way, and they meant for the rails to survive the highest of floods with the minimum repairs required

rowerwet
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you should have fixed the water flow problem before redoing the basement fix the problem before fixing anything else

cdnrednck
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I just couldn't see the hilarious side of the Utah flash flood that claimed the lives of people.

colinparmanand
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People living in the desert are generally aware of arroyo dangers but that far north people forget that's still a desert and flash floods come with the territory.
Those guys knew exactly what was happening but it really is surprising there was that much deadfall which makes the unfortunate losses understandable.

UlshaRS
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love your mini documentaries, I have learned more about geography watching your videos, then in school.

bostonho
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Those boats weren't abandoned; look carefully at 01:20. Three crewmen were scrambling for their lives! It doesnt look as if they survived.

swampyankee
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The sheer terror of seeing water pouring into their home was visceral. I can't imagine...even seeing it with my own eyes doesn't convey the devastation they experienced. I hope that they're safe and dry now...
Seeing an entire village wiped out in seconds...they must be traumatized. 😞

miapdx
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Standing in front of a flash flood and then retreating backwards as it gets very close for a good vid, is a very special kind of special.

freebird
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2:31 Just for your info, Utah is in the Western US, not the Midwest. The Midwest is the area east of the Rocky Mountains. Colorado and everything west of it is the Western US. 👍

MaxZomboni
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What about the flooding in North Carolina from hurricane Helene

athanmeade
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So excited to see the Hunter River featured
So bitterly disappointed to see no ACTUAL footage of it, the little flood shown was not even a slight example of its power( I don’t think that footage WAS of the Hunter River btw, looks way too small)

suegreen
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Absolutely terrifying! The sheer force of these flash floods is hard to comprehend. Nature’s power is on full display, and it’s a stark reminder of how quickly disaster can strike

AraGlobe
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Many, many years ago, I lived in Sioux Falls, SD and flooding along the Big Sioux river wasn’t anything new. But it was the only place that I lived that could have a tornado warning, followed up by a flash flood warning.

susanwahl
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My dad told me never buy a house anywhere near a stream. Then when I lived in Pennsylvania I bought a house near a stream I looked where the stream was and I looked where my house was and I said this stream is going to have to turn into the Missouri River before it floods my house. The stream would have had to fill up a channel that was maybe 75 times bigger than the tiny stream that was there. Sure enough within 10 years I arrived one day to see water flowing across the road. I couldn't believe it at the time I walked down behind the house is across the street from me and there was right there 75 times the little stream that was once there. Luckily my house did not get flooded except for a few inches in the basement that summer I sold the house and moved out. Move high and dry and not anywhere else thanks Dad

Beemer
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