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This place sucks. Every year I wonder why I continue to live in this state. When you're not freezing your ### off, you're melting in the 95 degree, 85% humidity. You never see a double hurricane or a double tsunami.
But we do have the College World Series for 10 days in June.
This place sucks. Every year I wonder why I continue to live in this state. When you're not freezing your ### off, you're melting in the 95 degree, 85% humidity. You never see a double hurricane or a double tsunami.
But we do have the College World Series for 10 days in June.
This place sucks. Every year I wonder why I continue to live in this state. When you're not freezing your ### off, you're melting in the 95 degree, 85% humidity. You never see a double hurricane or a double tsunami.
But we do have the College World Series for 10 days in June.
This place sucks. Every year I wonder why I continue to live in this state. When you're not freezing your ### off, you're melting in the 95 degree, 85% humidity. You never see a double hurricane or a double tsunami.
But we do have the College World Series for 10 days in June.
Born, raised and live in Nebraska. I live 10 minutes south of Lincoln and work in Lincoln. Wildcat relates more to my last name. I'm not a K State fan at all. I bleed Husker red. Where do you live/work?
That thing was crazy. It is not uncommon for a large tornado to have smaller satellite tornadoes rotating around it, the same way the moon rotates around the Earth. But to see such a large "satellite" tornado is extremely rare.
I thought this would be a multi-vortex tornado, like the one that wrecked Moore past year. That's a very impressive/ frightening sight, having two large tornadoes laying waste to the landscape like that.
Slow-moving tornadoes loomed over the plains of northeastern Nebraska overnight, touching down just 40 miles from where nearly simultaneous twisters leveled the town of Pilger a day earlier.
I was out of state on vacation for a week and realize this is a late update.
I don't want to say exactly where I live, but I will say this one was way too close to home. My dad's cousin lost 2 homes in Pilger and he has been up there a couple days helping to salvage what they can. It was eerie seeing the reports a national news while we were on vacation.
I may have a chance to drive through the town today with an EMT friend that has been there all week.
If you eat beef, chances are you have eaten beef from the area. This is a big cattle feeding area. Supposedly 5,000 cattle were killed in the storm or had to be put down, some of them with 2x4s driven through them. The rifle shots to put them down could be heard for a day.
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