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World's Deadliest Weather Caught on Camera Season 6 Episode 8
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00:00The weather.
00:03The pulse of our planet.
00:05Large tornado in progress.
00:08Capable of catastrophic destruction.
00:11Severe thunderstorm warning.
00:13Leaving landscapes in total ruin.
00:16Total mashup. Everything's flattened.
00:19As global temperatures rise.
00:23The weather is spiraling out of control.
00:26Oh, shoot.
00:28With shocking up-close footage.
00:32We had 24-foot dumpsters rolling by.
00:35Oh, shoot. I'm losing it. My trail's going.
00:38From the front line of fear.
00:40This might be the last time I'm in my house.
00:43Tornado!
00:45I got sucked out feet first.
00:48Felt myself hit the ground.
00:51Our island is in trouble.
00:53We meet the people who have stared death in the face.
00:57Oh, dear God.
00:59All I could hear was run, run, run.
01:01And miraculously survived.
01:04Look at that!
01:05The world's deadliest weather.
01:17Coming up, Hurricane Milton brings terrifying tornadoes that tear through tons in Florida.
01:26Leaving homes and lives in ruins.
01:28If we walk out of this pantry, is a log going to fall on us?
01:32Is there another tornado behind it?
01:34On the island of Maui, hurricane force winds fuel a furious fire that rages relentlessly.
01:41It literally looks like we're in hell.
01:44Forcing residents into the flame-filled ocean.
01:47We're way too on fire.
01:48What are we going to do?
01:50Dunk ourselves in the fuel water?
01:54Flash floods rip through a reservation in Arizona.
01:57Look at that water coming over that side.
02:01Trapping terrified tourists in the canyon.
02:04It starts to feel more and more and more serious.
02:07And a solo sailor's desperate struggle to save his own life after being struck by lightning off the coast of Panama.
02:16It's a sizzling, stark crack.
02:20Like a whiff.
02:20Florida, in the U.S., experiences 60 tornadoes on average every year.
02:36But in October of 2024, as Hurricane Milton rages across the Gulf of Mexico, the Category 5 storm triggers an unprecedented 46 tornadoes to hit Florida in one day alone.
02:53The biggest number in 70 years.
02:57We know that thunderstorms can spawn tornadoes.
03:05When you have so much energy in the atmosphere, one of the ways that the atmosphere attempts to create an equilibrium or balance is manifesting as a tornado.
03:15Getting rid of all that energy downward.
03:18In the United States, they get tornadoes that can rip apart houses in a matter of seconds.
03:25They start spiraling and then eventually will tilt round.
03:29And if they hit the ground, that's when they become a tornado.
03:32Someone who knows exactly how powerful tornadoes can be is 25-year-old storm chaser Morgan Gigan, who lives near Wellington on the east coast of Florida.
03:45I had been tracking Hurricane Milton for a few days.
03:49The threat of tornadoes did appear to be heightened.
03:53I was on my way to work and saw this storm moving north through the Everglades.
04:00So I made my diversion and went straight towards the storm and ended up intercepting it at the Miccosukee Service Plaza.
04:08I was able to see this storm with just violent lower-level motion begin to wrap up and very, very quickly form a tornado.
04:22Large tornado in progress.
04:24Moving north at this time, large wedge tornado in progress.
04:28I was pretty psyched.
04:29You very rarely get tornadoes at 8 a.m. in the morning, and that's even more rare in South Florida.
04:36And the second that that occurred, I knew it was going to be a potentially historic day.
04:41Long track tornado.
04:43We have thought going for about 15 minutes now.
04:45One hundred and twelve kilometers north of Morgan in Fort Pierce, Kobe Taborski and his uncle Eli have seen numerous tornado warnings on social media.
04:58So they head out to try and spot one.
05:02We're traveling north along I-95, and we saw several instances where a tornado had crossed the road.
05:08Everything was just a mess.
05:09People were taking shelter in their vehicles under the overpasses to try to escape the random tornadoes that were everywhere.
05:21We come across this one circulating cloud, and we can tell that it's about to form into a tornado.
05:28Across the horizon, we could see a funnel.
05:33It was moving quite fast, and it was a little erratic.
05:38It was exhilarating.
05:39It was incredible.
05:41But their most shocking sight was still to come.
05:46We took the exit on Okeechobee, and we went west.
05:51And we received an official tornado warning.
05:55So our phones went off again.
06:02There wasn't making a U-turn.
06:04There wasn't any backing up.
06:05There wasn't any flooring in it to try to go through.
06:10We just stayed right there.
06:12It was extremely powerful.
06:14Lahaina, Hawaii, August 2023.
06:39A series of wildfires collide with hurricane force winds to create a near inescapable hell on Earth that rages into the night and forces islanders to choose between a flaming ocean.
06:54We're still way too high.
06:55We're still way too high.
06:56We're still way too high.
06:57Or a deadly, suffocating inferno.
07:03Hurricane Dora was producing wind gusts on Maui from 64 to 128 kilometers an hour.
07:09The fire spread incredibly fast, overtaking communities, and unfortunately, many people could not get out of harm's way.
07:18Lahaina is a picturesque paradise, home to boat captain Chrissy Lovett and her wife Emma, who run a business delivering groceries by boat.
07:28The weather in Lahaina is not always sunshine and rainbows.
07:34We get these winds called the Kau'ulula winds, and they funnel through the valleys.
07:38And so we'll get winds cranking through there, 30 to 80 knots sometimes.
07:43It's the summer of 2023, and local news stations in Lahaina are reporting that Hurricane Dora is on its way.
07:56Chrissy had actually been watching this weather pattern for probably about five days.
08:02The power actually went out at 4.35 a.m.
08:06Emma, she's the one who woke up first, and she was pretty concerned and wanted to go to the boat.
08:12As we headed into Lahaina, we saw just debris everywhere.
08:19Oh, that boat is blowing over, dude.
08:21Look at that boat. It healed over.
08:24The masts of sailboats were almost like touching the water, like being completely blown over.
08:29Wow. I've never seen a boat heal over in strong winds.
08:36We made it to the harbor, and it just was like, wow.
08:42This is nuts.
08:45As the hurricane winds batter the harbor, the couple rush to secure their boat.
08:51Part of being responsible captain is making sure it doesn't break free during the storm, making sure we put extra lines on, we put extra fenders.
08:58But the hurricane is only part of the problem.
09:04Recent hot and dry conditions mean a wildfire has started in the brush on the mountains that surround Lahaina,
09:10and the intense wind is spreading the fire toward the town and the harbor.
09:15We had heard that there was a brush fire earlier, but it was just all of a sudden a massive column of smoke.
09:24And then the smoke, it just grew to this unbelievable size.
09:35It comes this way, we need to, like, run.
09:39We heard, like, these, like, pop, pop, pop, pop, pop.
09:48We thought it was fireworks.
09:51We realized those aren't fireworks. Those are explosions.
09:55As the fire reaches the harbor, the intense heat ignites the fuel tanks in the boats, causing them to explode one by one.
10:06The road out of the harbor is blocked by the flames, and the island's infrastructure continues to collapse in the chaos.
10:13I tried to make a phone call, and the cell phones were all dead.
10:18I think we're going to leave. You can see the flames.
10:21We've got to get out of here.
10:23It was starting to get, like, pretty worrisome.
10:25Like, we were like, okay, maybe, like, driving out was not happening.
10:29It literally looks like we're in hell.
10:31Back in Florida, Hurricane Milton is heading straight for the West Coast, triggering 46 tornadoes across the state.
10:47Kobe and his uncle Eli are trapped in their car, as a furious-looking funnel barrels straight toward them.
11:01The tornado was a unique feeling.
11:23The pressure drops. It gets very dark.
11:27The only thing that you saw was black.
11:31The only light that we had were transformers blowing up away from us.
11:44We both thought that we were going to be airborne at any moment.
11:54You had thousands and thousands of small debris fields just slammed against the side of the car.
12:01The overall roar that that tornado made is unforgettable.
12:10Once I realized that it was safe, I stepped out of the vehicle, went and surveyed the damage.
12:18There was a piece of metal fence, a 48-inch piece of aluminum sticking out of the side of the Jeep that very easily could have came through the windshield.
12:29I think that we both knew immediately how close we came to possibly losing our lives.
12:39This is the number of small
12:44Hurricane Milton is now just hours away, and tornadoes are being reported in several towns and cities across the East Coast.
12:52120 km south of Kobe and Eli, storm chaser Morgan has roped in a friend to help him tail a tornado
13:01in the ordinarily sleepy town of Wellington.
13:06We were aware of the Wellington EF3 tornado because we were watching it on radar for about 20 miles beforehand.
13:14And then we saw this gorgeous, large, destructive cone tornado occurring about five miles south of us.
13:24It was this large, gray, almost mean-looking cone tornado, and you could already see that it was lofting debris high into the air.
13:38Tornadoes generally don't move particularly fast, but they can really switch direction very quickly indeed.
13:47They're being fed by the thunderstorm above them.
13:51So generally, if you see the skies blackening, you should be wary.
13:54And if you do see a tornado, head in the opposite direction.
13:59You either have to get ahead of it or you have to stay back of it and allow it to cross in front of us.
14:04We decide to go ahead of it, and then as it moved closer to populated areas, you could see even more debris,
14:13and it'd take on this even darker, more angry gray color.
14:20And outside the side of our passenger side window, you could see just debris being thrown through the air
14:28and just this large tornado slowly bearing down on us.
14:34This was the closest I've ever allowed myself to get to a tornado, especially one of this intensity.
14:43After being this close, it's given me a whole new respect for Mother Nature and for the fact that she cannot be tamed.
14:50Australian sailor Peter Lukursky spends his life aboard his 42-foot sailboat,
15:09filming his nautical adventures and sharing them online.
15:12I've got to make sure I'm attached to my lifeline.
15:20I've lived on a boat, well, since 2008, and I'm married to the sea.
15:27What do I love about the sea?
15:29Well, there's less people.
15:32And there's a lot of adventure.
15:35You can live this very, very healthy life.
15:39I love it.
15:40Early to bed, early to rise.
15:43Sailing is just a very simple life.
15:47It's 2020, and Peter is exploring the San Blas Islands in the Caribbean Sea.
15:54That whole coastline is absolutely beautiful.
15:58But when it comes to summertime, the wet season, the mountains tend to be lightning magnets.
16:07And so the closer you are, the then you're more likely to get hit.
16:11That was just over there!
16:14I mean, to get hit by lightning, it's pretty rare.
16:19You know, I figured I was quite safe.
16:20Peter is used to riding out extreme weather.
16:25But one night in October of 2020, he gets an unexpected shock.
16:30A bolt of lightning strikes his boat, sending a large spark through the rig, leaving him without power and with no means of communication.
16:47To describe the moment it hit, it's just so quick.
16:52I can't tell you what was going through my mind, but it felt like some percussive force hitting me in the back.
16:59It's so bright as it's, like, completely white.
17:06It's so crisp.
17:08It's a sizzling, stark crack, like a whip.
17:14Lightning is known to be deadly and extremely dangerous, as it's got a lot of electricity and is hotter than the surface of the sun.
17:22If you find yourself getting struck by lightning in water, or even nearby, it could be the equivalent of putting a toaster in a bathtub.
17:29Water is a conductor of electricity, and the end result would be electrocution.
17:36The lightning travelled down the mast and around the body of the aluminum boat, cracking the frame.
17:43I could see molten metal falling around my ears.
17:49I checked all the compartments.
17:52It's just nothing.
17:56Went straight to the hatch, and I lifted it up, and as I lifted up, I just heard this waterfall in the middle of my boat.
18:04Together, people, a river in my boat.
18:08The lightning travelled down the mast and around the body of the boat, cracking the frame.
18:13But with no hole immediately apparent, Peter begins to suspect the damage to his boat might be below the waterline.
18:22So armed with a torch, he dives in.
18:25I went to all the most logical places, and then, of course, I saw this flap hanging down.
18:37The hole really was about that big.
18:39So a hole like that would sink a boat like mine in three minutes.
18:45And so I jumped in the dinghy, I got some plastic bags and this very sticky plastic tape.
18:52And I thought I'd go and find the hole, plug it, and then that should reduce the flow.
18:59This is special tape that sticks to wet surfaces.
19:04It wasn't my finest work of plugging a hole, but I thought, this is great.
19:09I was actually feeling quite chuffed with myself.
19:13But the commotion in the water has attracted another dangerous issue.
19:19A school of bull sharks.
19:22People said, oh, won't you worry?
19:23Well, I didn't want to lose my home.
19:25That's the most important thing.
19:26Luckily, the sharks keep their distance, and Peter's plugging means his boat stays afloat
19:35until he can find help.
19:37Hear that, people?
19:40Nothing.
19:41Silence.
19:42The bilge alarm stopped about five minutes ago.
19:46The problem has been solved.
19:51That'll do it.
19:52Well, there was no more leak.
19:57It was all good.
19:58Done.
19:59I'm still going to take risks.
20:01It's still going to be reckless.
20:03So I don't think it's changed me at all, really.
20:05But I must admit, the awesomeness of lightning, it's amazing.
20:18Volcanoes are Earth's fiery titans.
20:20Highly unpredictable by their very nature.
20:24Where explosive force and deadly beauty collide.
20:28In unstoppable destruction.
20:32This tourist in Iceland is risking his life to shoot the perfect shot.
20:38Standing perilously close to a volatile lake of lava that is burning its way down a mountain in Iceland.
20:44Following the eruption of Fagra Dalsviat, Gelding Gadalir volcano, in August of 2021.
20:53Woo-hoo!
20:55Suddenly, the lava flow increases dramatically, spewing gallons of molten rock into the air,
21:03narrowly missing the foolish photographer as it rages along its flaming path.
21:07But when the majestic Mount Dukono begins to erupt in North Halmahira, Indonesia, in August of 2024,
21:19absolutely no one is stopping for photos.
21:22Instead, the terrified tourists run for their lives, trying to get as far as possible from the mind-blowing mass of rock and dust, billowing from the beast.
21:33The unauthorized climbers were warned that the volcano was on high alert and told to remain within a three-kilometer radius of the peak.
21:44Yet they still ventured in to the highly hazardous area.
21:49Miraculously, there were no reported injuries, and all the climbers escaped with their lives.
21:55But they might think twice before breaking the rules in the future.
21:59Tornado in progress, tornado in progress.
22:29Narrowly missing storm chaser Morgan.
22:33And now, it's hurtling east towards West Palm Beach, the home of Danielle Watson and her husband, Robert.
22:41I remember that I had heard that there were tornadoes happening in South Florida.
22:49Robert had gone outside and was looking at some sort of weird clouds happening outside.
22:55It's so low.
22:57I know, I'm watching it.
23:00We could see the wind shifting, the clouds kind of stirring in a circle, and we saw, as it approached, a lot of debris flying in the air.
23:12And just, you can see it in a circular motion.
23:15And I honestly thought we were relatively safe, being as naive as that is.
23:23Oh, my God.
23:27Oh, my God.
23:29What I remember the most is just all the debris hitting the houses and the noise of the glass breaking and things just flying.
23:51It was just gray, grayish, and you can see the debris twisting in the air.
24:00I didn't realize the magnitude of what was about to happen.
24:03And obviously, if I did, I would have used better judgment and would have gotten into a safe place.
24:10I was in shock.
24:25I had never seen anything like this in my life.
24:28As the tornado passes directly over Danielle and Robert's house, it picks up a garden chair and smashes it into the sliding glass door.
24:37One of the two got picked up and just thrown right against the slider.
24:47It was quite terrifying.
24:50I honestly was fearful that the roof was going to get ripped off.
24:55The intensity and the power of this was so much.
25:00To see that just get picked up like magic and then thrown up against the slider.
25:10I'll never forget that.
25:11That was just very frightening to me.
25:15The 241 kilometer per hour whirlwind was later categorized as an EF3 tornado.
25:22May please get inside.
25:24Meaning it's severe, having caused significant damage to hundreds of homes.
25:30We just walked out front, saw the destruction.
25:38The street was just lined with debris.
25:41We were both stunned.
25:50Our community had been so devastated in five minutes.
25:54Back in Lahaina, on Maui, a wildfire fueled by hurricane-force winds reaches the harbor.
26:14The street is on fire.
26:16Emma and Chrissy are desperately trying to escape the flames.
26:20People came running through and they were like, the fire's here.
26:23It's like, get out.
26:26We have to go.
26:27I think we're going to leave.
26:28We can see the flames.
26:30We got to get out of here.
26:32And there's really only one option.
26:36I grabbed a 10-foot skiff and I started shuttling people out of the harbor.
26:43At a certain point, it was like darkness because there was so much smoke and it's like, you're driving in the dark.
26:56You can't see anything.
27:01It literally looks like we're in hell.
27:03And then we kind of like sat there for a second and like, look back and like, just the town is like, disappearing.
27:15We couldn't do anything.
27:16We couldn't go back in.
27:17And we're just like, what do we do now?
27:21The couple has no choice but to wait in the water and hope the fires die down.
27:30As the hours pass and darkness falls, they watch helplessly as the flames consume their hometown.
27:37We were like, well, we can't just sit here and just like, watch all of this.
27:42You know, like, we have to try to do something.
27:45We were like, let's go see if anyone else is in there.
27:47Let's see if we can find anyone, get them out of the water.
27:50As the waves are on fire, be careful.
27:54As we turned into the harbor, the waves were actually on fire from the amount of fuel and ash and oil that was on the surface of the water.
28:05And it was like this apocalypse that we had just driven the dinghy into.
28:10Be careful right here.
28:12We were getting bombed by, uh, it was like fire debris.
28:20We were really afraid of like our clothes catching on fire, of like anything catching on fire.
28:25And then like, what are we going to do?
28:26Dunk ourselves in the fuel water?
28:28Despite their fears, Emma and Chrissy spend hours helping the Coast Guard rescue exhausted islanders from the water.
28:40Some of them children.
28:42Like having a purpose felt better than sitting there and watching helplessly as like your town disappeared before your eyes.
28:52By morning, most of the fire has burnt itself out.
28:56After 18 hours at sea, watching their town turn to ashes, suffering from smoke inhalation and exhaustion, the couple are able to return to dry land.
29:09But nothing could have prepared them for the devastation to come.
29:13It's so slick with fuel in here.
29:15Yeah.
29:17We went into the harbor and it was gone.
29:22It was like a war zone.
29:29Everything's gray, black, everything's smoky.
29:33You know, there's no green.
29:34The wind had stopped.
29:40There were no more explosions.
29:43Silence.
29:47No birds chirping.
29:50No leaves moving in the wind.
29:52One hundred and two people lost their lives in the Maui fire, making it one of the deadliest wildfires in U.S. history.
30:08Over 2,000 structures were destroyed, and federal officials estimated the cost of the damage to be well over 5 billion dollars.
30:16Emma and Chrissy feel lucky to have escaped with their lives.
30:24Emotions.
30:25They're up, they're down.
30:26There's anger, there's sadness, there's hope.
30:28I'm grateful every single day that I am safe, that Chrissy was safe.
30:38And, you know, the loss is tragic, and so that's ever-present, but I think it's just as present as the gratitude of being alive and being safe.
30:47As those in Maui know, the ocean is a force of relentless power and untamed fury.
31:08It's a typical day at Pierpoint Beach in California in the U.S.
31:15When the waves suddenly turn sinister, speeding towards the seawall.
31:20Oh, shit!
31:25Oh, no!
31:27But the waves are too strong for some, and they get dragged under and pulled along as far as 50 yards, sustaining multiple injuries.
31:41The flooded town is thrown into chaos as traffic comes to a standstill, perfectly demonstrating the pure power of the ocean.
31:50It's late evening in this small village in northwest Greenland, when a tsunami hits the houses along the shoreline.
32:04At first, the rising water level doesn't appear to be too concerning, until some of the houses begin to float by.
32:13As the wave's size rapidly increases, the seriousness of the situation becomes inescapable, as more and more houses are ripped from their foundations and carried away by the water.
32:31The wave continues to push its way inland, causing locals to run in search of higher ground.
32:46The person filming managed to escape the water, but reports later confirmed that four people were tragically killed.
33:01The Havasupai Reservation, bordering the Grand Canyon, Arizona, in the United States, is one of America's most remote settlements, only accessible by helicopter or on foot.
33:17Each year, thousands of tourists make the 16-kilometer hike into the canyon to witness the area's spectacular waterfalls.
33:26But in August 2024, heavy rain triggers major flash flooding.
33:36Look at that water coming over that side.
33:38Cutting off access and leaving nearly 100 hikers trapped in the reservation.
33:46Flash floods are when heavy rain falls from the sky and the ground just can't cope with that volume of water.
33:53Flash floods can occur very rapidly.
33:55Generating a lot of mud as well, exacerbating the flood.
34:01Flash floods can be incredibly dangerous because the speed of the water currents.
34:05People can be taken by surprise at the rising of that water so rapidly.
34:12What we have to remember, it just takes six inches of water to knock someone off their feet.
34:20Particularly if there's currents within that body of water.
34:25Clayton Worthen from Las Vegas and his wife, Shelley, love spending time outdoors.
34:33Avasubai is one of the most beautiful places I think a lot of hikers can go to in the southern United States.
34:42It is one of the top hikes.
34:44So along with ten of their friends, the couple start the trek into the canyon.
34:49On the way down, it's typical like rock paths, but once you get down, there's greenery, it's lush, especially as you get right into the village at the end of the hike.
35:02Then you start seeing those beautiful blue waters that come into play.
35:06The group stop to admire the famous Havasupai Falls, then trek further down to their campsite in the base of the canyon.
35:17We checked the weather before we went down.
35:21It had rained the night before and there was rain in the forecast.
35:25And it was supposed to rain lightly.
35:27Lightly, yeah.
35:28Was the big thing.
35:29For like 20 minutes.
35:30And then it was going to be done.
35:34It sprinkled for probably about 45 minutes.
35:36And then it started coming down heavy-ish.
35:38And we were in our tent.
35:40We had six of us in there.
35:43You don't want everyone to get wet.
35:52It got more serious as we got word from the ranger.
35:54Hey, there's a flash flood coming down.
35:56You guys need to start moving.
36:00Within moments, I was dragged head to toe.
36:03And then as we start moving, waterfalls are forming.
36:05Look at that water coming over that side.
36:08It starts to feel more and more and more serious.
36:13We were kept on being pushed to go just a little bit further and a little bit higher and a little bit past this bridge.
36:19And it says, once you get up above this bridge, you'll be fine.
36:23And there's just kind of this questioning.
36:26Is this it?
36:27Is this the danger we were worried about?
36:29And it felt like everything was fine.
36:31But in the rush to leave camp, the group separates.
36:36With half of the party yet to arrive at the bridge, conditions rapidly start to change.
36:41All of the rain had stopped.
36:43But then we watched the water rise and rise.
36:46The hair on the back of your neck kind of stands up a little bit.
36:50And you say, something's going on.
36:51I need to start moving.
36:53We have to really get to high ground.
36:56So then we ended up walking up this plateau at least like 30, 40 feet above the original ground spot that we were on.
37:02And into that water course over that bank.
37:10All right.
37:11This is intense.
37:12Members of our group that ended up getting separated from their spouse at that point.
37:15And the river had just divided everybody.
37:17Dad.
37:18The trees are going.
37:19In just a few moments, the pathway is entirely engulfed by the flowing rapids, leaving Clayton, Shelley, and the rest of the group stunned and terrified.
37:36And we ended up watching the whole flood come through.
37:44I can't believe that just missed us and just passed us.
37:50And once that kind of died down, we knew that we were safe.
37:55So we were relieved that our group was all back together finally.
37:59As the group start to hike upwards back towards the village, it becomes clear that this isn't an isolated incident.
38:09So further up the canyon, it had come down hard.
38:18The Habasupai Falls went from one of the prettiest things I've ever seen to this just disgusting reddish brown mud.
38:26It's like this is just an impressive amount of power just coming down this canyon.
38:35Eventually, the group managed to hike their way back up to the village, where locals had set up an emergency shelter in a nearby school.
38:44But they are still trapped within the canyon.
38:48We were also told that the whole hike in was completely washed out.
38:56The following day, the group were finally able to get a helicopter out of the canyon.
39:03Like, wow. Like, that was every emotion that you could imagine.
39:10Once you finally got there, it was like touching that ground was like, oh my gosh, I'm safe.
39:15We learned a lot of lessons that weekend. Things can change very quickly.
39:21Mother Nature has its own agenda and we for sure saw it that weekend.
39:25Yeah, absolutely.
39:26Back in Florida, 60 kilometers up the coast from where Danielle and Robert's house was trashed by a tornado.
39:41Another of Hurricane Milton's whirlwinds has hit the city of Stewart.
39:46All right, we'll take you in.
39:49This time destroying the home of Joanne and John Coleus.
39:53This is the TV family type room.
39:57Actually, when we first saw the tornado, we saw it at this window here.
40:01Joanne was in here watching the TV.
40:03And I was actually sitting in a chair by the front door because I had my phones watching the radar and knew it was coming from that direction.
40:15John and I made the decision that the pantry was going to be the safe space.
40:20TV was going off all the time with the weather alerts.
40:25And then I started seeing the debris.
40:27Light debris at first, not anything big and heavy, but it was flying by.
40:34Obviously, it was debris off, like shingles off of buildings and stuff.
40:40Ching, ching, ching, ching, ching, you know, on top of our roof and on the side, ching, ching, ching.
40:46And that's what was, that's what you could hear at first.
40:49And then when Joanne saw the debris, she came running in there.
40:54And by that time, I, my ears started popping.
40:58And I knew that was the, I knew that was big trouble.
41:02And I yelled, tornado, pantry.
41:06We were calling the dog to try to get the dog to come in the pantry and the dog wouldn't come.
41:12I closed the door of the pantry, couldn't get the dog.
41:15Things got worse and worse.
41:18You just felt this pressure in the house moving.
41:20The house just, it was like a person, does a giant sneeze.
41:26It's like when you sneeze, you go, ha-choo, right?
41:30And the house just went up.
41:33You can see the actual ceilings that start to rise.
41:38And then ha-choo!
41:40Ceiling just came down.
41:42It was violent to the ground.
41:44Just didn't know what to expect next.
41:46If we walk out of this pantry, is a wall going to fall on us?
41:51Is there another tornado behind it?
41:53It's intimidating.
41:55You just don't know what's going to happen next.
42:01When it was over, everything was so quiet and still.
42:06Then, you know, the whole thing lasted like 45 seconds or so after that.
42:13We thought the dog was probably gone.
42:16All of a sudden over here, some of this insulation started moving.
42:20I came over and dug it out.
42:22It was only, you know...
42:23She was seven months old at the time.
42:25Yeah.
42:26I think that the roof lifted.
42:28And when it lifted, it popped the drywall and cracked the drywall.
42:36It looked like it was snowing.
42:38It just kind of trickled down like snow.
42:41Big snow piles all over our furniture, all over our dog.
42:48It was just everywhere.
42:52Hundreds of houses in the area were damaged.
42:54And on the couple street, four homes were completely destroyed.
43:00Hours later, Hurricane Milton made landfall,
43:04causing up to $85 billion worth of damage.
43:08And tragically, taking over 30 lives.
43:11I think it's important to make sure...
43:14Never take a storm for granted.
43:17John and I feel we are lucky to survive.
43:19And we're lucky, you know, we didn't lose our dog.
43:23That day in Florida was absolutely historical.
43:28I don't think Florida has ever seen a day like that in their history before.
43:32Mother Nature is extremely powerful.
43:37And nothing that you can do can alter its course.
43:39One thing that I think is you prepare for the weather, you prepare for storms.
43:51Mother Nature is going to do what she wants to do.
43:54This was a, maybe a once in a lifetime event.
43:59Something that, that hopefully we'll never see again.
44:03The weather.
44:17Tornado! Stay low!
44:19The pulse of the earth.
44:21And an uncontrollable force.
44:24Our island is in trouble.
44:25As global temperatures rise.
44:29It's my real last time, I'm in my house.
44:32The weather is getting more extreme.
44:35It's an unspottable force.
44:37And even more catastrophic.
44:40It's the most active I've ever seen it.
44:43With devastating consequence.
44:45You better go! It's coming!
44:48Proving once again...
44:50That we are no match for the world's deadliest weather.
44:58Oh dear God.
45:19That's enough for us, we won rut plato.
45:20Until then.
45:21Now that we'll come.
45:22And what we are with our common.
45:23That's in the world's dead sunset.
45:24Let's go!
45:26The sunset future is organized, appealed...
45:29Everything is overhear...
45:31The sea dogs delivered...
45:32The ocean cuando seman at all results
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