Was it earthquake, tsunami, tornado, storm, flood, or?

  • @[email protected]
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    111 minutes ago

    Tornados are a fact of life where I’m from. You just hunker down and hope it misses you.

    That said, hurricane Ike basically wrecked my Midwestern area when I was a kid. We were prepared for tornadoes with their localized but intense destruction and weren’t ready for a large area to need less extreme but still large reconstruction

  • @[email protected]
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    112 minutes ago

    I’ve been in earthquakes, tornadoes, a hurricane and a few floods. Also, ice and hail storms, many blizzards, thunderstorms and straight line winds. The tornadoes are always the most frightening.

    The bigger of the earthquakes was just enough to move the dishes around in the cupboards so that when I went for a cup, a bunch fell out. The closest tornado hit a few streets over from where I lived and bounced, destroying every other house down one side of a street. The hurricane just blew sand around and covered the car in a sand dune. I lost several cars to floods and had to be rescued once.

    I should probably go check out a tsunami some time to fill out my disaster bingo board.

  • @[email protected]
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    142 minutes ago

    Oklahoma ice storms and tornados.

    Funny enough the ice storms took the power out for a longer amount of time. Id say collectively I’ve lost 3 to 4 weeks worth of power to ice storms. Around 1 to 2 weeks to tornados in my 38 years of living south of Oklahoma city

  • @[email protected]
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    1 hour ago

    Not a disaster but I was on vacation in Cancun during the summer about a decade ago and a small hurricane went through headed north. That’s pretty routine there and it was relatively mild, though my flight was delayed 24h.

    When I got home, which was north TX at the time, that night the same storm went over me again. Though at that point it had reduced significantly to just a thunderstorm.

    Then early that morning I got in my car and headed north to IL where my cousin was getting married. As I was crossing into Missouri, I went through a heavy rainstorm and I realized it was the same storm from before. It was pretty neat to experience it in different parts of the continent over 48 hours.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 hour ago

    I lived next to Plainfield Illinois when the F5 hit. I watched a funnel try to form next our neighborhood. The big one went right past us but spared our neighborhood. The schools were hit, my babysitter’s house was leveled. Never seen destruction on that scale in person since.

  • @[email protected]
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    54 hours ago

    I experienced the edges of hurricanes every summer as a kid. You just deal with it.

    Flooding, power outages, etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 hours ago

      Lol! I was just thinking to myself, “Huh, I guess not” and then I remembered I lived in Fort Worth for a few years and one year it snowed barely even two inches. The city shut down for a week and the roads were littered with debris from car wrecks. Having grown up in the northern Midwest, I was quite amused.

  • @[email protected]
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    86 hours ago
    • you have experienced: you experienced something
    • you have BEEN experienced: something experienced you

    Compare: dropped. “You have dropped it” vs “you have been dropped”

    or?

    You’ve left words out.

      • @[email protected]
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        34 hours ago

        Lol, relax Francis.

        Your English is excellent for a non-native speaker, probably as good as the average native speaker (frankly that’s a criticism of the average speaker as much a compliment to you).

        I can see how you made this mistake, it’s pretty easy to make as you’re thinking of the question, you kind of combined 2 ways of asking it.

        “Have you ever been in a natural disaster”

        “Have you ever experienced a natural disaster”

    • @[email protected]
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      14 hours ago

      Is “you have been experienced” correct in any way (genuine question)?

      I just can’t think of any way that works.

  • @[email protected]
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    24 hours ago

    Hurricane in Florida in the 80s, but I was far enough inland to not be in danger. The eye of the storm is really spooky. Complete and utter silence.

    Also the 1991 snowstorm in Duluth MN. Started snowing on Halloween and didn’t stop for three days. We had four feet of snow in the yard.

    That was a lot of fun, the town was paralyzed for a couple of days until the plows started to get things in order.

  • Zarcher
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    55 hours ago

    Experienced a river flooding due to excessive rainfall. Both on a small scale on a camping where some tents floated away, which was kind of funny because the owners had warned not to pitch the tents to close to the river.

    More recently witnessed a large scale flooding last winter when large parts of the rhine flooded. There were no casualties in my region, but the damage was quite severe. Very sobering to see the death toll in the upstream regions. Also the impact to agriculture and infrastructure, with frequent rain keeping the ground fully saturated for months al the way up to summer.

    Water is so vital for human civilization, and yet also very dangerous.

  • @[email protected]
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    97 hours ago

    Does Ice Storm '98 count? As a kid, it was super wild to wake up to our house being ~10C then realizing that the heat wasn’t gonna be turning back on for a loooooong time.

    Fortunately our neighbor had a gas stove in his basement and invited a bunch of folks from the neighborhood to use his house as a shelter for a while. It was super fun playing outdoors in the ice though. Literally everything was covered with inches of ice. You could put on a pair of skates and go anywhere you wanted for a couple days.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/January_1998_North_American_ice_storm

  • @[email protected]
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    118 hours ago

    Yup, Helene, a few months ago, in Asheville NC.

    You could say I’m still experiencing it, I suppose. We’ve always been a place that’s too far inland for a hurricane. Very climate insulated. That bubble has burst for us here after this storm.

    It was super scary, no cell service for days, no power or water or gas for days. We have a great network of people so we were supported and supporting but it went bad for many others.

    But more than scary right now, it’s sad. Just seeing the devastation

  • Maeve
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    46 hours ago

    Several tornados and multiple hurricanes.

    • y0kai
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      24 hours ago

      Same. Florida’s worst disasters are usually just the people.