If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
OT Severe thunderstorm - video
Severe thunderstorm at my house. Needless to say, glad I was wishing
to be up there then wishing to be down here :-) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8XDzUbVT7Y I would have stayed out much longer but the trees were making some ominous cracking noises that you can hear on the video especially before my comments (subtitled throughout the video). I "toned down" the wind noise about 15 percent in the video, it was that loud. Allen |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
OT Severe thunderstorm - video
wrote in message ... Severe thunderstorm at my house. Needless to say, glad I was wishing to be up there then wishing to be down here :-) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8XDzUbVT7Y I would have stayed out much longer but the trees were making some ominous cracking noises that you can hear on the video especially before my comments (subtitled throughout the video). I "toned down" the wind noise about 15 percent in the video, it was that loud. Yep, and if you know what's good for you, you will cut down those tall scraggly yellow pines, before a strong wind blows from the wrong direction, and they end up on top of your house. That cracking sound was them starting to break, and get weak. I'm betting that they used to be in a big forest of like trees, a developer came in and cut lots of them down to put in a bunch of houses. While they were in a tightly bunched forest, they protected each other, by slowing the wind down, and leaning on each other if they got moving too much. Also, with a bunch cut down, they get a whole lot more light, and start growing very fast, and that makes them even weaker. A friend had one land on his roof, only to have some branches break off a few feet long, to spear through to roof plywood, and through the sheetrock. If he had not gotten off the throne when he did, he would have gotten speared. How do I know this? I cut the tree off his roof, and patched the holes! -- Jim in NC |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
OT Severe thunderstorm - video
"Morgans" writes:
wrote Severe thunderstorm at my house. Needless to say, glad I was wishing to be up there then wishing to be down here :-) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8XDzUbVT7Y I would have stayed out much longer but the trees were making some ominous cracking noises that you can hear on the video especially before my comments (subtitled throughout the video). I "toned down" the wind noise about 15 percent in the video, it was that loud. Yep, and if you know what's good for you, you will cut down those tall scraggly yellow pines, before a strong wind blows from the wrong direction, and they end up on top of your house. That cracking sound was them starting to break, and get weak. I'm betting that they used to be in a big forest of like trees, a developer came in and cut lots of them down to put in a bunch of houses. While they were in a tightly bunched forest, they protected each other, by slowing the wind down, and leaning on each other if they got moving too much. Also, with a bunch cut down, they get a whole lot more light, and start growing very fast, and that makes them even weaker. A friend had one land on his roof, only to have some branches break off a few feet long, to spear through to roof plywood, and through the sheetrock. If he had not gotten off the throne when he did, he would have gotten speared. How do I know this? I cut the tree off his roof, and patched the holes! I'll second the motion. My son had very large trees topple on his house on two separate occasions. The first wasn't too bad -- hit the garage end of the house with minor damage other than taking out overhead utility lines and blocking the driveway for quite some time until removed. The second just about took off the opposite end of the house -- most of the roof gone, large portion of the ceilings, and water damage to nearly everything. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
OT Severe thunderstorm - video
On Aug 8, 2:15*am, "Morgans" wrote:
Yep, and if you know what's good for you, you will cut down those tall scraggly yellow pines, before a strong wind blows from the wrong direction, and they end up on top of your house. *That cracking sound was them starting to break, and get weak. I think you are right Jim, but some of those pines unfortunately are not in my yard! I only heard that cracking sound one other time and that was during Katrina so I knew that the winds were a tad strong! |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
OT Severe thunderstorm - video
wrote in message ... On Aug 8, 2:15 am, "Morgans" wrote: Yep, and if you know what's good for you, you will cut down those tall scraggly yellow pines, before a strong wind blows from the wrong direction, and they end up on top of your house. That cracking sound was them starting to break, and get weak. I think you are right Jim, but some of those pines unfortunately are not in my yard! I only heard that cracking sound one other time and that was during Katrina so I knew that the winds were a tad strong! I believe there are laws on the books that will allow you to petition your neighbor to have them taken down. If not that, if you talk to your neighbor, and tell him that if your house gets hit by one of his trees, he is legally liable for your repairs. That might encourage him to split the bill with you for taking them down. -- Jim in NC |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
OT Severe thunderstorm - video
On Aug 10, 8:41*pm, "Morgans" wrote:
If not that, if you talk to your neighbor, and tell him that if your house gets hit by one of his trees, he is legally liable for your repairs. LOL, guess you forget where I live, the land of the "lawless" AKA Mississippi. Where I took the video spans about 3 lots, one being mine. My lot is pie shaped, front of the house being the pointed end. Where I took the video would span 2 other neighbors on the wide part of the pie. Saving grace would be my house is on the west and north side of those trees upwind of the general prevailing winds. I do know learning from experience, the state of the tree determines who is liable. If it's my tree and it's alive (all it needs is one pine cone) then the liability falls on the neighbors insurance should that tree fall on their house. Conversely, if the tree is on my property and dead, then that liability falls on my insurance should that tree fall on their house. Suffice it to say, I have had 5 trees removed in 8 years of living here. 4 of those 5 trees met their maker via a lightning strikes, Katrina took the 5th one. How I know this? One word... Katrina. Give those tree guys credit in removal :-)) I'd get a nose bleed for as high as they shimmy up the trunk. I'm skeeered of heights! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S8tP3pmd6NM |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
OT Severe Thunderstorm - video | [email protected] | Piloting | 0 | August 8th 08 01:05 AM |
Medical and severe allergies | Robert M. Gary | Piloting | 50 | January 25th 08 12:56 AM |
XM reception in severe weather? | Andrew Gideon | Piloting | 4 | April 1st 06 05:06 AM |
Thunderstorm - Ron Knott | Greasy Rider© @invalid.com | Naval Aviation | 0 | June 2nd 05 11:05 PM |
Severe (or more) turbulence... how common? | John Harper | Piloting | 13 | February 5th 04 08:12 AM |