Footage of the 1980 Mount St. Helens Eruption

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  • čas přidán 28. 09. 2017
  • On May 18, 1980, the Mount St. Helens became the largest and most destructive volcanic eruption in U.S. history. By the end of its cycle of fire and fury, 57 people had died.
    From the Series: Make It Out Alive: Mount St. Helens
    bit.ly/MtStHelensAlive
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Komentáře • 4,7K

  • @allbirdsareedible
    @allbirdsareedible Před 3 lety +10694

    My grandma, (We live in WA) when she heard the boom of the eruption, said, as a joke, "Mount Saint Helens probably finally blew up." And it had.

    • @joaomachado5395
      @joaomachado5395 Před 3 lety +504

      BRUH

    • @urabouttoloseurjob842
      @urabouttoloseurjob842 Před 3 lety +518

      Omfg that’s iconic

    • @pikangules
      @pikangules Před 3 lety +669

      my grandpa collected dozens of jars of ash thinking they would get rich

    • @zilksie9902
      @zilksie9902 Před 3 lety +336

      @@pikangules we have a few jars too haha. my mom lived about 2 hours away from the mountain when it erupted, and she said it was almost as dark as night for days

    • @elijahheyes9061
      @elijahheyes9061 Před 3 lety +145

      @@zilksie9902 Yeah it was...I was 12 and living in Eugene, Oregon and the streets, cars, buildings got covered in a layer of ash.

  • @freeravenadventures6925
    @freeravenadventures6925 Před 4 lety +6255

    Note to self: Never buy property anywhere near a volcano

    • @kensulewski9322
      @kensulewski9322 Před 4 lety +363

      Note to self buy property on a volcano that has been inactive forever but is still warm
      (Free heat in the winter)

    • @awesomedino590
      @awesomedino590 Před 4 lety +6

      How do you change your icon

    • @nicolaslabonte460
      @nicolaslabonte460 Před 4 lety +45

      Location, location, location

    • @doge8153
      @doge8153 Před 4 lety +116

      You need volcano insurance

    • @EvilEnsembleStars
      @EvilEnsembleStars Před 4 lety +87

      Buy a house in Hawaii there are no volcanos there!

  • @frankbummiii146
    @frankbummiii146 Před 3 lety +9569

    A guy gave his life to get sequential photos as the mountain side collapsed. His camera was dug out of the ash along with his body and they are sensational photos that, pieced together, give an incredible view of the mountain side sliding away. And you Smithsonian, didn't use them. Well done.

  • @jacknewman9256
    @jacknewman9256 Před 3 lety +1999

    200 miles away from our home in Seattle, classmates and I on a field trip were trapped for three days in a small town gymnasium. The National Guard rescued us, but not before a local woman walked through the ash storm to bring us food. We called her Volcano Mary, RIP

    • @moisesm9602
      @moisesm9602 Před 2 lety +68

      Jeez imagine schools taking you on a field trip 200 miles away.

    • @camrivera5735
      @camrivera5735 Před 2 lety +39

      What a great woman, rest her soul ❤

    • @historicalaccuracy15
      @historicalaccuracy15 Před 2 lety +11

      Wait she didn't die getting you food did she?

    • @historicalaccuracy15
      @historicalaccuracy15 Před 2 lety +24

      @@moisesm9602 Mind you this was in college but I once road a bus for 24 hours straight for a quiz bowl tournament in Minneapolis, coming from Northern Alabama. We also went to Chicago when I was in highschool on the highschools team which wasn't exactly much closer.

    • @jacknewman9256
      @jacknewman9256 Před 2 lety +130

      @@historicalaccuracy15 No, she pushed a cart about 2 blocks from the little grocery store. She was elderly, it was 40 years ago, I can only presume she's passed on.

  • @dfwprodriver2752
    @dfwprodriver2752 Před 5 lety +6781

    My dad was the Sgt. In charge with the Washington State Patrol and personally closed the park on May 17. He spoke to 39 of the 57 people who lost their lives, trying to get them away from the volcano but they were outside of the mandatory evacuation zone. My Dad's Lt. told him to have breakfast with the family and then report for duty. We had waffles and a huge breakfast because we hadn't eaten or spent much time with him due to the volcanic activity. If he had gone into work at his normal time he would have been on the volcano when it erupted. My Dad is and forever will be, my hero.

    • @parkersloan5442
      @parkersloan5442 Před 5 lety +356

      That's so sweet. I feel very sorry for all the lives lost. Your father is a very lucky man

    • @SharkInTheWoods
      @SharkInTheWoods Před 4 lety +73

      Oh yeah did he count and remember all 39 lol

    • @zachattack5742
      @zachattack5742 Před 4 lety +129

      I salute to your dad.

    • @siegerverlierer8353
      @siegerverlierer8353 Před 4 lety +57

      @Infernrage Only a Liar beliving that all Peoples lie !

    • @daiIyclipz
      @daiIyclipz Před 4 lety +8

      patrick elder yolo

  • @baker8981
    @baker8981 Před 3 lety +2661

    My mom was born in Washington in the 70s. She said that she remembers her dad having to shovel ash off of the roof all day to stop their house from collapsing

  • @albertowen1025
    @albertowen1025 Před rokem +494

    My late wife was growing up in 1980 in Montana and she told me a lot about MSH and the eruption. As she put it, "it was dark for days" as a result of the ash floating in the air. I personally had heard about the eruption down here in Florida, and before she died, she told me to watch all the videos about MSH here in her memory. I'm happy I did. Thank you, Sarah. I love you always.

    • @Praise___YaH
      @Praise___YaH Před rokem

      HERE is Our TRUE Savior
      YaH The Heavenly FATHER HIMSELF was Who they Crucified for our sins and “HERE IS THE PROOF”
      From the Ancient Egyptian Semitic:
      "Yad He Vav He" is what Moshe (Moses) wrote, when Moses asked YaH His Name (Exodus 3)
      Ancient Egyptian Semitic Direct Translation
      Yad - "Behold The Hand"
      He - "Behold the Breath"
      Vav - "Behold The NAIL"

    • @Homelandervtech
      @Homelandervtech Před rokem +10

      😭😭😭😭🥰

    • @user-of2kb3nw6k
      @user-of2kb3nw6k Před rokem +7

      Do you think that being near that could’ve had any negative impacts on her health that may have cause her untimely passing? Just curious.

    • @K.Spade7902
      @K.Spade7902 Před rokem +6

      @@user-of2kb3nw6k
      I think it's likely. The ash was really toxic.
      I remember seeing this on TV. The mowed down trees are still there to this day. Cars were burned out and stuck in the ash. There was an elderly man
      named Harry Truman who absolutely refused to leave his home that was in the explosion zone. The geologists think his home fell about 80 feet into the ground with him in it. He was killed, of course.

    • @Gmoney00718
      @Gmoney00718 Před rokem +2

      Proud to be the 100th like

  • @MrSaturn012
    @MrSaturn012 Před 3 lety +602

    Title: Footage of famous Mt. St. Helens Eruption
    Video: three and a half minutes of computer models and ten seconds of cropped video footage

    • @asia1174
      @asia1174 Před 3 lety +3

      lol I thought that too!!!

    • @michaellautermilch9185
      @michaellautermilch9185 Před 3 měsíci

      Agreed, top comment stuff here.

    • @michaellautermilch9185
      @michaellautermilch9185 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Total clickbait.

    • @ELFanatic
      @ELFanatic Před měsícem +1

      People in the 80's didn't have smart phones like we do today. All you're going to get are small clips.

    • @goodguyguan3412
      @goodguyguan3412 Před měsícem +1

      ​@@ELFanaticStop pretending old is an excuse just because you want to sound cool, there was multiple shots of the eruption because they read that the seismic activity was increasing weeks in advance and knew it was getting close. They just didn't want to put in the leg work clipping it from the cable special and muting the dialogue that wouldn't make sense in this short

  • @whitehonda2874
    @whitehonda2874 Před 3 lety +3705

    Scientists: it will likely erupt in a vertical eruption
    Mt. St. Helens: *you fools, you fell for one of the classic blunders*

    • @Cam-ej1cu
      @Cam-ej1cu Před 3 lety +73

      IMA FIRIN MAH LASER

    • @Aric_EPU
      @Aric_EPU Před 3 lety +31

      @@Cam-ej1cu That’s a classic.

    • @brookhouse3041
      @brookhouse3041 Před 3 lety +33

      Inconceivable!

    • @abrahamlincoln9758
      @abrahamlincoln9758 Před 3 lety +37

      Never get involved in a land war in Asia?

    • @brookhouse3041
      @brookhouse3041 Před 3 lety +36

      @@abrahamlincoln9758 A classic blunder for sure but only slightly less known is: never go in against a Sicilian when death is on the line!

  • @survivalstyle9228
    @survivalstyle9228 Před 4 lety +6451

    The kid in the back of the class with the modded vape

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo Před rokem +908

    Over 40 years after the event and much of the devastation area still has no trees growing.

    • @battistoberhoel8839
      @battistoberhoel8839 Před rokem +88

      That’s weird because volcanic land is usually extremely fertile isn’t it?

    • @richardlee5412
      @richardlee5412 Před rokem +237

      @@battistoberhoel8839 In a longer period of the time those areas will grow back far more lush than they were before the explosion. Nature is very resilient, it just needs non-human time scales to bounce back sometimes

    • @xxxBradTxxx
      @xxxBradTxxx Před rokem +11

      @@battistoberhoel8839 Around the base of MSH is a bunch of ash and no forest.

    • @nancyharman4795
      @nancyharman4795 Před rokem +8

      So hard to believe over four decades has passed. It seems like just a handful of years... 😺💕🐾

    • @calicocritterscrafts886
      @calicocritterscrafts886 Před rokem +22

      I was there a few years back and we could see elk and some smaller vegetation starting to grow in some of the more distant areas. Gave me some hope.

  • @baletzzie9345
    @baletzzie9345 Před 3 lety +686

    seven year old me: Mom, look there's a white broccoli in the sky

    • @schalkeno1
      @schalkeno1 Před 3 lety +37

      Cauliflower*

    • @JCypher206
      @JCypher206 Před 3 lety +75

      @@schalkeno1 he was 7, he probably did call it white broccoli

    • @metallicarocker89
      @metallicarocker89 Před 3 lety +3

      @@schalkeno1 mashed potato’s

    • @schalkeno1
      @schalkeno1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@JCypher206 thanks for making that assumption for him

    • @schalkeno1
      @schalkeno1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@metallicarocker89 what about mashed potatoes

  • @matthewmaddox2915
    @matthewmaddox2915 Před 3 lety +4118

    For how deadly and large the eruption actually is, 57 deaths isn’t bad. Edit: I’m not saying 57 deaths isn’t bad but it could’ve been much more.

    • @RDog4484
      @RDog4484 Před 3 lety +276

      Matthew Maddox If it had happened the next day, the death toll would have been in the hundreds.

    • @Eternal999Wrld
      @Eternal999Wrld Před 3 lety +31

      I just sayed that in my head before I seen your post

    • @R3al3yesRealizeRealLies
      @R3al3yesRealizeRealLies Před 3 lety +141

      There was a lot of warning, of the 57 some wanted to stay and not leave their homes and believed they would be fine.

    • @cheasepad2521
      @cheasepad2521 Před 3 lety +34

      People still died

    • @jojoe3247
      @jojoe3247 Před 3 lety +53

      Still 57 to many

  • @imjinhwanssexymoleandp.osl3164

    How can nature be so fearsome and majestically beautiful at the same time?

  • @dougridgway7570
    @dougridgway7570 Před 3 lety +348

    I live in a prairie Canadian city 2900 miles away from the blast. I was absolutely amazed as a kid when ash from Mt. St. Hellen’s landed on my street at night. I asked my dad if it was snowing and he told me it was from the valcano that we were watching on the news.

    • @13_cmi
      @13_cmi Před 2 lety +2

      Did snow blowers work on the ash or would it just clump up? People further north probably used them

    • @roronoazorro7052
      @roronoazorro7052 Před 2 lety

      Incredible

    • @CedroneTravels
      @CedroneTravels Před rokem

      Same in Boston

    • @familyvideos5403
      @familyvideos5403 Před rokem +1

      @13_cmi the eruption was in May.

    • @Praise___YaH
      @Praise___YaH Před rokem

      Guys, HERE is Our TRUE Savior
      YaH The Heavenly FATHER HIMSELF was Who they Crucified for our sins and “HERE IS THE PROOF”
      From the Ancient Egyptian Semitic:
      "Yad He Vav He" is what Moshe (Moses) wrote, when Moses asked YaH His Name (Exodus 3)
      Ancient Egyptian Semitic Direct Translation
      Yad - "Behold The Hand"
      He - "Behold the Breath"
      Vav - "Behold The NAIL"

  • @wutguycreations
    @wutguycreations Před 3 lety +631

    nobody:
    2020: "Wanna see me do it again?"

    • @sydneyp3357
      @sydneyp3357 Před 3 lety +6

      NO x'D

    • @wutguycreations
      @wutguycreations Před 3 lety +3

      @@nuclearcockatiels3973 yup

    • @junehanabi1756
      @junehanabi1756 Před 3 lety +6

      @@saberiandream316 To add to this, a "Super Volcano" just means a regular volcano or patch of land was in a right place at a right time to form an off the scale eruption. It does not mean that the volcano will only form super eruptions.

    • @junehanabi1756
      @junehanabi1756 Před 3 lety +8

      @@saberiandream316 latest theories are yellowstone was just a thin patch of land, nothing more. But a very large pocket of pressurized magma was moving across land, trying to escape over thousands of years. Eventually when it slid under yellowstone the ground fell in and one of the world's greatest super volcanoes was unleashed. However it's over and done with, obviously there's a lot still active and going on but volcanologists say if it does errupt again it'll probably just destroy the park. Most of the pressure was gone a long time ago and the plates are still moving meaning in a few thousand years it won't even be under the park anymore.

    • @jacobsamorodin9937
      @jacobsamorodin9937 Před 3 lety +2

      Mt Hood is NOW stirring, shaking today, just like Mt St Helens did between March - May, 1980.

  • @MarkSmith-js2pu
    @MarkSmith-js2pu Před 3 lety +753

    I distinctly remember all the ash that fell on my car in Kansas City, incredible

    • @frankenfurter58
      @frankenfurter58 Před 3 lety +41

      Same here in central Canada. Everything was covered in ash. Our lungs/sinuses were filled with it, too.

    • @lifeofabronovich7792
      @lifeofabronovich7792 Před 3 lety +9

      Kansas City? That far east?

    • @daptt
      @daptt Před 3 lety +39

      @@lifeofabronovich7792 the wind blew it across the whole country

    • @bishopmack4557
      @bishopmack4557 Před 3 lety +2

      @parallel blocks blocky uh, this happened in 1980

    • @mistresstrian1927
      @mistresstrian1927 Před 3 lety +18

      There was ash from it in Russia, too.

  • @bean3243
    @bean3243 Před 5 lety +2905

    Damn mother nature, you scary.

    • @bfyrth
      @bfyrth Před 5 lety +51

      Thanks for the in depth analysis there

    • @andradericky
      @andradericky Před 5 lety +38

      Dont piss her off

    • @nicksttrs
      @nicksttrs Před 5 lety +26

      Tell the government that.. If you look at Yellowstone you can see oil pumping operations damn near right next to Yellowstone.. them fracking and causing them 2.2 magnitude earthquakes. One day they gunna trigger a big earthquake then point finger at us. Kinda like how they can test drop radioactive bombs and say we are the reason for global warming. When they are destroying the ozone.

    • @derpscoutlololololol9454
      @derpscoutlololololol9454 Před 5 lety +8

      Earth to mother earth: Why are you scaring them and killing them?🌎🌍😢?
      Mother earth to earth:BECAUSE THEY'RE DESTROYING YOU DON'T YOU SEE THAT??!!???

    • @hakeentv9476
      @hakeentv9476 Před 5 lety

      Sure Why no

  • @TheNightWatcher1385
    @TheNightWatcher1385 Před 3 lety +68

    “Vancouver! Vancouver! This is it!”
    RIP David Johnston

  • @cellogirl11rw55
    @cellogirl11rw55 Před 3 lety +54

    You forgot to mention David Johnston, for whom Johnston Ridge Observatory was named. That was exactly where he stood on that fateful morning, recording his observations. What a sight that must have been to behold. In his last call to Vancouver to announce the eruption, you can hear the excitement in his voice, even as he is overcome by the pyroclastic flow. He died doing what he loved.

    • @srosenow98
      @srosenow98 Před 2 lety +14

      Johnston Ridge Observatory was not built where Johnston stood. His family opposed any construction where that site was, so they built it 1,700 feet further up the ridge.

    • @RyanSmith-dd6ot
      @RyanSmith-dd6ot Před 2 měsíci

      His last words were Vancouver Vancouver this is it.Johnston view is up near windy Ridge.

    • @joefranks4235
      @joefranks4235 Před 2 měsíci

      Have you ever been to the observatory for the film? It's really great, especially when they open the curtains to reveal the mountain. Pretty impressive.

    • @jonnickerson8459
      @jonnickerson8459 Před 20 dny

      "Vancouver! Vancouver! This is it!"

  • @id8207
    @id8207 Před 5 lety +8659

    (Yellowstone) *Hold my beer*

    • @knightwind5967
      @knightwind5967 Před 5 lety +75

      ツwhy u bullie me 🤣🤣🤣

    • @briansivley2001
      @briansivley2001 Před 5 lety +73

      @@drboone357 actually Yellowstone Hotspot is entirely different from what the Hawaiian Hotspot. Yellowstone Hotspot will be explosive like Mt St Helens.

    • @ernestogastelum9123
      @ernestogastelum9123 Před 5 lety +224

      @Andrew Li well Yellowstone is a Super Volcano and when it erupts it may affect most of the world. if you live in the US it will affect you either way

    • @hr0727
      @hr0727 Před 5 lety +58

      Instantly kills millions

    • @davidinawe791
      @davidinawe791 Před 5 lety +55

      @Andrew Li im no expert, but im pretty sure you would be gone

  • @Taijifufu
    @Taijifufu Před 5 lety +1886

    Pretty amazing only 57 people died from _that._

    • @jonathansykes4986
      @jonathansykes4986 Před 5 lety +470

      yeah amazing how many deaths are prevented when people listen to experts.

    • @xbjrrtc
      @xbjrrtc Před 4 lety +48

      David Johnston is a hero

    • @TheAdditionalPylons
      @TheAdditionalPylons Před 4 lety +129

      Mt St Helens is not in a populated area

    • @sonoftheway3528
      @sonoftheway3528 Před 4 lety +95

      probably because barely anyone lives near it

    • @Eminence.
      @Eminence. Před 4 lety +17

      Lol you clearly did not see Pompeii's history

  • @mattalley4330
    @mattalley4330 Před rokem +60

    I was three years old when this happened. One of my early childhood memories. We lived near Portland, Oregon at the time and I remember sitting in my families back yard, watching the eruption column going into the sky, and casually eating cereal. I think it was golden grahams. 😊

    • @MaxAppeal_
      @MaxAppeal_ Před 8 měsíci

      It was fun yeah?😂

    • @leeannasloan2292
      @leeannasloan2292 Před 7 měsíci

      I have a clear memory from 1987 when I was seven years old eating golden grahams for the first time. It was the first time I had ever had any kind of sugar cereal.
      Im 43 and I still buy golden grahams if Im going to buy a sugar cereal. For some reason it doesn't taste the same though as it did when I was a kid.

  • @steveharveyhd5289
    @steveharveyhd5289 Před 3 lety +182

    Scientist: “Yeah it’s gonna go straight up”
    Earthquake: blows the side of the mountain off
    Scientist: “Yeah it’s gonna go straight to the side

  • @setsu_dubs
    @setsu_dubs Před 6 lety +5792

    We all know that earth just popped a pimple.

  • @theprfesssor
    @theprfesssor Před 6 lety +454

    The scary part
    When Yellowstone goes if full eruption, it's going to make Mount Saint Helens event look like a firecracker
    And this eruption destroyed a side of a mountain

    • @jill_temple1111
      @jill_temple1111 Před 4 lety +2

      Theprfesssor 😱

    • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
      @PremierCCGuyMMXVI Před 4 lety +75

      Theprfesssor if Yellowstone erupts forget about destroying side of a mountain your destroying the whole western US.

    • @legacyends3685
      @legacyends3685 Před 4 lety +37

      CCJ Guy it’s said it would plunge the world into a 80 year winter.

    • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
      @PremierCCGuyMMXVI Před 4 lety +24

      LegacyEnds yup it would block out the sun. Hey at least it would stop Global Warming lol

    • @onesaltyboi6575
      @onesaltyboi6575 Před 4 lety +13

      LegacyEnds more like 20 at most

  • @kurtancheta2907
    @kurtancheta2907 Před 3 lety +68

    I can imagine bill Wurtz playing jazz as the lava slowly destroys the city

  • @g59tothegrave
    @g59tothegrave Před 3 lety +342

    Yellowstone reading this: “hehe y’all want a bigger one I see”

  • @starryeyedgirls
    @starryeyedgirls Před 3 lety +533

    Me: *lives literally so close to Yellowstone National Park: “WERE GONNA DIE”*
    Parents: cool

  • @mawage666
    @mawage666 Před 5 lety +708

    I was 1 year old that year. I remember it like it was 39 years ago lol.

    • @gamma21285
      @gamma21285 Před 5 lety +38

      How the hell do you even remember?

    • @ysccl
      @ysccl Před 5 lety +36

      That's rare, remembering a memory at 1 year of age...
      Highly doubt it though

    • @mawage666
      @mawage666 Před 5 lety +86

      I don't remember it. I was 1 and now I'm 40. That's why I said I remember it like it was 39 years ago. If I remembered it, I would have said I remember it like it was yesterday.

    • @ysccl
      @ysccl Před 5 lety +6

      Oh ok, sorry for the confusion

    • @kkilozz
      @kkilozz Před 5 lety +1

      Lukeamania lol

  • @daviddavis-vanatta1017
    @daviddavis-vanatta1017 Před 3 lety +65

    I lived in Ohio when this happened, but originally had gone there from Washington. Professionally, at this time, I reported to a college provost who was a professional Ph.D. geologist, in fact, a vulcanologist. I recall going to the parking lot with him a few days after the eruption, armed with scotch tape, and picking up some of the exceedingly fine, but visible, ash from the eruption that had made it to Ohio. Seeing it highly magnified under polarizing light was beautiful and striking. These tiny particles were gnarly, rough, jagged, looked like they went through a war. Which they did. Very impressive.

  • @watchpointoh3354
    @watchpointoh3354 Před 2 lety +35

    I visited Mount St. Helens a few weeks ago. Me and my dad hiked across the wasteland below the north face. It was amazing finally experiencing something I'd only heard about or seen in videos.
    We also saw smoke coming from the mountain, which proves its still volcanically active. If it erupts again, it will likely form a second smaller cone inside the first, similar to mountains like Vesuvius.

    • @13_cmi
      @13_cmi Před 2 lety

      There’s already a lava dome inside it

  • @goeckedude
    @goeckedude Před 5 lety +421

    Mt. Saint Helens is 'bout to blow up and its gonna be a fine, swell day

    • @bigal9044
      @bigal9044 Před 5 lety

      Ben Goecke lmao 😂

    • @ryanclarke5621
      @ryanclarke5621 Před 3 lety +43

      Everything's gonna fall to the ground and turn grey

    • @rohaller
      @rohaller Před 3 lety +42

      All of my friends, family and animals are going to run away, but me, I'm feeling curious, and I think I just might stay

    • @--.._
      @--.._ Před 3 lety +20

      and i wonder if it's gonna be as good a day as YESTERDAY

    • @eetswa9039
      @eetswa9039 Před 3 lety +22

      Lu Valour all these business suits I just purchased gonna have to throw them all away then slip into something more responsible and dance the night away

  • @lobetec314
    @lobetec314 Před 6 lety +671

    So why are people complaining about people who call this video clickbait when i cant find anyone?

  • @Purplefreak18100
    @Purplefreak18100 Před 3 lety +107

    My dad was 10 years old when it erupted. He's a historian born and raised in Vancouver, WA... He had been in the blast zone the day before with his family. Despite evacuations, access restrictions, and road closures, my unorthodox, reckless grandparents took their kids anyway. Whilst up there, my dad actually asked if it would ever erupt. My grandmother chuckled and said "Not in this century." It erupted the next day. They were actually on their way back to the same spot early in the morning when it erupted (day trips, didn't camp). My grandparents never believed Mt. St Helens would have a massive eruption; all tremors and signs of an eruption were false alarms for minor activity. Yes, they didn't care they were endangering their own lives and their children's lives, because they didn't believe there was anything dangerous, despite the warnings and restrictions. It shouldn't be a surprise my dad to this day still struggles with my grandparents about childhood trauma.
    This is a repost of the same story with additional clarification I didn't originally include clarification, because it didn't dawn upon me that some people would accuse me of fabricating this interesting story of my dad's childhood, probably because of my grandparents... If you want more of an idea of what kind of people my grandparents were, mostly my grandpa, he'd drag his kids along whilst he fished all day in the woods... They'd be there close to midnight, and they'd have to build a fire and huddle together for warmth, also hungry and thirsty because my grandpa wouldn't pack anything for them. Sometimes my grandma would come and occasionally pack hotdogs, but only bring her thermo with coffee and nothing to drink... Lol my dad says they had good Christmases, but they hardly got baths, because my grandpa has a weird thing about saving water. Kids would avoid my dad when he was a kid because apparently he smelled.

    • @severetiredamage6754
      @severetiredamage6754 Před 2 lety +9

      TMI

    • @jesicamedina228
      @jesicamedina228 Před 2 lety +14

      @@severetiredamage6754 i disagree

    • @youwot2430
      @youwot2430 Před 2 lety +1

      how much adderall have you taken today?

    • @seankingwell3692
      @seankingwell3692 Před 2 lety +4

      My grandmother always kept extra food and taught my dad how to dress do laundry make food etc in the dark at night with no lights on, so that they could survive another war without major disruptions to their lives. Anyone who had a sense of intelligence after WW2 knew another one was coming sooner then later. Many people don't understand habits of desperation while others sadly its all they know. The world wars were triggered by a drought and a great famine, water costs money so many reasons for many families to have built up mental trauma about these things. Our problems don't go away because we blame the older generations or leave it up to the new ones to deal with. We must be the change we wish to see in the world. Sometimes, it means watering the trees when everyone else believes in letting it all burn because they have "insurance" if a fire happens. The main herds are quite insane...survivors never forget.

    • @notcharlie7107
      @notcharlie7107 Před rokem

      What I thought Vancouver was in Canada

  • @elconquistadorism
    @elconquistadorism Před 2 lety +25

    I lived north of Spokane WA about 30 miles. I will always remember that day. It sounded like a sonic boom, and shook the house. We were over 200 miles away. By afternoon the blackest dark cloud came over and dropped more the a inch of ash on us . It was every where, in everything! It was very crazy. I will never forget may 18 1980.

  • @unseelie63
    @unseelie63 Před 4 lety +101

    I visited years after the eruption.The sight of all the leveled trees,the fallen timber still covering a good part of Spirit Lake's surface,the sight of the crater...it's chilling.

  • @ColleenSmithWhoLovesGod
    @ColleenSmithWhoLovesGod Před 6 lety +912

    My youngest son was born the day before this happened.

    • @CM-ho5ic
      @CM-ho5ic Před 6 lety +57

      Colleen Smith so was our oldest daughter

    • @CM-ho5ic
      @CM-ho5ic Před 6 lety +89

      Colleen Smith The nurses suggested we name our daughter Helen, we had other plans 😉

    • @allewis4008
      @allewis4008 Před 6 lety +24

      I was born 20 days before it, St. Helens has always been part of my life.

    • @n0body550
      @n0body550 Před 6 lety +84

      It was that lil pricks fault

    • @champagnedadi7464
      @champagnedadi7464 Před 6 lety +21

      tell your son i said hi

  • @anonimai
    @anonimai Před rokem +16

    Crazy to think that earth was once covered in constantly erupting volcanos and how violent it must've been

    • @roserocks1979
      @roserocks1979 Před rokem +3

      What's crazy is how many people live close to active ones today.

    • @timwinterhalter5233
      @timwinterhalter5233 Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@@roserocks1979people always have. Volcanic soil is obscenely overpowered

  • @simplywonderful449
    @simplywonderful449 Před 2 lety +75

    My late uncle went to Mt. St. Helens to retrieve ash from the event after the area was re-opened, bringing back several baby-food jars of ash for family members. I still have that jar after all these years.
    Many of the lives it claimed were of those who were nearby residents who had refused to evacuate when it was "suggested" to them; perhaps the most notable was an old codger named "Harry Truman" who lived on the mountain (yes, that was his name).

    • @GregGumbel
      @GregGumbel Před rokem +2

      I heard about Harry as a kid and thought for years he was THAT Harry Truman.

    • @BobbySmith-xd6sp
      @BobbySmith-xd6sp Před rokem

      My great grandparents were great friends with Harry Truman

    • @jasono2139
      @jasono2139 Před 4 měsíci

      I was pretty sure he lived by Spirit Lake at the base of the mountain. His lodge was completely buried by the landslide.

  • @davidjuergens7722
    @davidjuergens7722 Před 4 lety +91

    One of the most memorable events of my life. I was traveling down I-5 about two months after this happened. You couldn't really tell much from the west so I decided to take a drive to the mountain, went past all the roadblocks and warnings (hey, I was in my teens), came out on the other side and was absolutely blown away (no pun intended). Coming in from the west it was nice and green, but on the other side it was literally miles and miles of rock and mud (a swath of grey). Glad I got to see it but knowing 57 people died made this a solemn moment.

    • @johnnoe9682
      @johnnoe9682 Před rokem +3

      Liar! Pun was totally intended!! lol!

  • @HoV326
    @HoV326 Před 6 lety +1625

    When you eat chipotle and taco bell back-to-back

    • @quinnkids177
      @quinnkids177 Před 5 lety +7

      Lmao 😂

    • @ejcleopard9843
      @ejcleopard9843 Před 5 lety +14

      Why do most non-Mexicans believe those restaurants are Mexican. AUTHENTIC IS BETTER. Search Fung Bros:Tacos by the Border. That authentic food tastes better and won't make your bathroom Mt. St. Helens 2.0.

    • @Taijifufu
      @Taijifufu Před 5 lety +56

      EJC Leopard kind of off topic since no one said anything about authenticity​; just fiery hot magma butt.

    • @ejcleopard9843
      @ejcleopard9843 Před 5 lety +4

      @@Taijifufu had to say👍👍

    • @jjstratford
      @jjstratford Před 5 lety +10

      There’s no need to follow Chipotle with ANYTHING...it is sufficient on its own to produce an eruption dwarfing this

  • @sanjayvasudevan1509
    @sanjayvasudevan1509 Před 3 lety +126

    Mt Helens: I am a deadly volcanic explosion.
    Krakatoa: ameature
    Yellowstone: allow me to introduce myself

  • @suzandouglass5241
    @suzandouglass5241 Před 4 lety +100

    Watching 40 years later during corona virus pandemic.

  • @andrewtucker5170
    @andrewtucker5170 Před 3 lety +48

    I keep hearing “icy milk water”

  • @ramsera
    @ramsera Před 2 lety +5

    I'll never forget the first time I visited Mount St. Helens back in 1995. I was born nine years after the eruption; my family took us to Washington to visit some relatives that live in Seattle. During our trip we went to see the volcano, and let me tell you, it was astonishing. All around us we could see nothing but barren land, it showed us just how powerful mother nature could be. I'm 32 years old now, and this video got me thinking of that wonderful trip I had all those years ago. I looked at some current photos, and made me happy to see the greenery starting to come back. To this day I often wished I could've seen Mount St. Helens before the eruption. I remember my mother told me that she and her family once took a trip there back in the early 70's; they went swimming where the old lake once sat. She told me it was one of the most beautiful places she had ever been to.

  • @andrewamende3338
    @andrewamende3338 Před 2 lety +14

    I'm from Washington but I was born long after the eruption, and for years I didn't know much about it until the Pacific Science Center visited my elementary school, they showed the video of the eruption and I was so fascinated that I just watched it over and over, probably annoying all the other kids that wanted to see other cool stuff on the screen

    • @christmashake8968
      @christmashake8968 Před rokem +1

      Had a similar experience in my youth (born in '93). Whenever my classes took field trips to the Tacoma History Museum, there was always one machine in particular that had a "watch-and-answer"-type pop quiz about famous state events, with narrated video footage included. Thing about it was, you watched the original clip with narration, the question popped up, and you could either answer it or check back on the footage (with no audio) if you weren't sure--and you could play it forwards OR backwards! As you might imagine, I was fascinated by the footage of both Mt. St. Helens' eruption and the demolition of the Kingdome in 2000, and I may or may not have single-handedly worn that machine out with all the times I played the footage of those two events back and forth. XD I'm sure many a kid, parent, and/or museum worker were mildly annoyed by someone like me being glued to that thing for so long.

    • @Evil_kanye
      @Evil_kanye Před rokem

      I didn’t even get to see them they just cancelled the field trip and made us walk to a different place

  • @Elongated_Muskrat
    @Elongated_Muskrat Před 5 lety +200

    Too bad they don't show what it looked like right after and what it looks like now.
    I remember going there on a field trip as a kid and its pretty amazing that that mountain basically exploded minus one mount wall side.
    Now there is a baby volcano slowly building up again in the middle of a giant hole where the mountain used to be.

    • @Eevee141
      @Eevee141 Před 4 lety +9

      I live about 40 minutes from mt st Helens. I was born in 92 so I only know the new look of the volcano. While rummaging through old photos I saw a picture of my dad standing in front of it before 1980 and didn’t believe that was what it looked like before the eruption. I don’t know why my little kid brain thought it could explode and not completely change the look of it 😂

    • @SylvivaX
      @SylvivaX Před 4 lety +1

      Im gonna go this sunday
      I think

    • @warfam_clan6933
      @warfam_clan6933 Před 4 lety +14

      That is correct. Also, it has a glacier forming next to the small fumarole that is gaining size every year due to being shielded from the elements because of the remaining half of the original peak. If that ever goes off, the resulting lahar will be way worse than 1980.

    • @Eevee141
      @Eevee141 Před 4 lety +1

      WaRFaM_ClaN interesting. I didn’t know that. Is that why around 2005 they were so worried about another eruption?

    • @Sinc3r3ly
      @Sinc3r3ly Před 3 lety +1

      It’s very fascinating

  • @EmanASMR
    @EmanASMR Před 6 lety +340

    Imagine being able to use all that energy

    • @whitebeano6139
      @whitebeano6139 Před 5 lety +14

      Eman ASMR you would be able to punch someone to mars

    • @alexsmith1207
      @alexsmith1207 Před 5 lety +8

      @@whitebeano6139 wrong this powerful energy might gave everyone free energy power for a week. Going to mars doesn't require that much energy.

    • @michaelmartin9022
      @michaelmartin9022 Před 5 lety +21

      You can use that energy, in geothermal plants. You just spread the usage of it out over many years to heat and light a city.

    • @petergriff7624
      @petergriff7624 Před 5 lety +37

      I can charge my phone for 2 days

    • @NKRcometDB
      @NKRcometDB Před 4 lety +3

      You can send a perfect being who has nearly no weaknesses into space, which will freeze him and he will drift in space for eternity.

  • @wyattschwartz472
    @wyattschwartz472 Před 8 měsíci +5

    My grandpa in boulder CO had ash on his porch from this eruption. It blows my mind how intense this eruption was. I feel like it’s exactly how Vesuvius was back in ancient Pompeii. I’m obsessed with these types of volcanos

  • @RG-pr5xx
    @RG-pr5xx Před 2 lety +10

    Who's here after the La Palma Canary Island eruption?

  • @tylerkeller8869
    @tylerkeller8869 Před 4 lety +71

    Events like this are the reason we have folktales and mythology.

  • @lethrbear32
    @lethrbear32 Před 5 lety +50

    I'll never forget this day. I remember going up the mountain to innertibe down the north slope at the turnaround. Seeing it now is like being in a different place. Those forests were so pristine, unspoiled, and the clearest waters you'll ever swim in. Now it's an ashen wasteland that is a far cry of what it once was. It's pretty hard for me to go up there now with my favorite places gone, and knowing that many people lost up there are just now part of the landscape. My Aunt knew two people that were killed in the eruption, Terry Crawl and Karen Varner were her classmates, and she hasn't been back since before it erupted. I also still carry some scars.....39 years later.

  • @carlschnackel3051
    @carlschnackel3051 Před 2 lety +11

    I remember Mount St. Helens well. I lived about 400 miles away, in Montana, and within a few days we had about 4 inches of light gray volcanic ash covering everything. I wouldn't wash away with water, since it just floated on top and wouldn't mix in. The whole summer was cold that year because of all the ash in the air. It's the first time in my life that I had to wear a coat all summer long when the temperature was normally in the 90's during the summer.. I guess that's a taste of a nuclear winter.

  • @asthenx7922
    @asthenx7922 Před 3 lety +24

    My mom had told me stories about how there was a huge boom and so much ash suddenly on the bus and in the air when she was going to school, and traffic was in panic. Seems crazy.

  • @TheHolyMongolEmpire
    @TheHolyMongolEmpire Před 4 lety +235

    I wish people would have had iPhones then, think of all the badass videos we’d have.

    • @funibikeman6769
      @funibikeman6769 Před 4 lety +104

      The audio would be like
      Yooo boi the mountain just *nut*

    • @nautikient2151
      @nautikient2151 Před 4 lety +10

      @@funibikeman6769 😐

    • @4nciite
      @4nciite Před 4 lety +15

      One inch wide blurry videos!

    • @firemangan2731
      @firemangan2731 Před 3 lety +9

      Yeah and they would be dead way before they can even upload it 😂

    • @mariolisa2832
      @mariolisa2832 Před 3 lety +3

      @@firemangan2731 icloud baby

  • @mattrblxgameplaysglitchesa5239

    Everything is worse on the 18th.
    1. SF earthquake - April 18, 1906
    2. St Helen Eruption - May 18, 1980
    3. Granville Rail Disaster - January 18th, 1977
    4. Japan 5.9 - 6.1 Earthquake - June 18, 2018
    5. Mt. Everest Avalanche - April 18, 2014
    6. Albert Einstein's Death - April 18, 1955

    • @feetus5221
      @feetus5221 Před 5 lety +118

      You forgot 9/11/2001

    • @jiafeiqueen
      @jiafeiqueen Před 5 lety +28

      IBGCubing bruh

    • @feetus5221
      @feetus5221 Před 5 lety +3

      @@jiafeiqueen what?

    • @jiafeiqueen
      @jiafeiqueen Před 5 lety +36

      IBGCubing 9/11 wasn’t on the 18th

    • @feetus5221
      @feetus5221 Před 5 lety +97

      @@jiafeiqueen That's the joke. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
      r/whoooosh

  • @davemathews7890
    @davemathews7890 Před rokem +10

    I lived in Portland at the time of the eruption, which occurred about 75 miles away from the city. The ash came down like a snow storm. We kids were upset because our mom wouldn't let us go out and play in it. She said she was worried that the ash might contain dangerous chemicals, but the real reason was that she didn't want her clean curtains and bed clothes dirtied 😁.

  • @doe729
    @doe729 Před 2 lety +2

    Came here after watching the newest La Palma volcano update. So many where comparing it’s latest activity to Mt St Helens.

  • @mikemelina9607
    @mikemelina9607 Před 6 lety +188

    I remember when this happened. It effected weather patterns in the northern hemisphere for over a decade. Volcanic activity has more effect on climate than anything else on the planet.

    • @RiDankulous
      @RiDankulous Před 2 lety +5

      Yep, it seems one of the larger impact eruptions of the century, but I could be wrong.

    • @Milky-gr7hz
      @Milky-gr7hz Před 2 lety +14

      @@RiDankulous Mt. Pinatubo in 1991 affected the worldwide climate for a couple of years

    • @fibonaccisequins4637
      @fibonaccisequins4637 Před 2 lety

      @Orange Crush Well they said it has more of an effect than anything else…they didn’t say it had a more negative effect.

    • @Peter-cv5cg
      @Peter-cv5cg Před rokem +9

      Too bad volcanos can't be taxed

    • @computertutorials1286
      @computertutorials1286 Před rokem +3

      An eruption back in 1816 also significantly changed the climate.

  • @popcornegg4405
    @popcornegg4405 Před 4 lety +55

    0:20
    That’s a massive landslide!

  • @gordonfreeman4543
    @gordonfreeman4543 Před 2 lety +5

    It's incredible on how powerful volcano's/mother nature is when it takes its course, Mind-blowing!

  • @Heknowswhatyoudid
    @Heknowswhatyoudid Před 3 lety +8

    I can't help but hear Dr. Evil's "Hot Magmuh" everytime.

  • @indianapatsfan
    @indianapatsfan Před 6 lety +588

    The good ole days- back then people didn't blame politicians for natural disasters.

  • @brodyplaysthebaritone
    @brodyplaysthebaritone Před 3 lety +91

    It says “Footage” but what we got was 15 written paragraphs of what and how happened.

  • @BeachNanny
    @BeachNanny Před 3 lety +5

    I will never forget this. I was 11, and in Sunday school and a church in Yakima. There was so much ash, my dad couldn’t drive in it and it took us hours to get home

    • @leeuhley1
      @leeuhley1 Před 3 lety

      I was at Heisson Bridge outside of Yacolt, along the Lewis River. Freaking amazing. On my mother Helen's Birthday.

  • @caskadestudio
    @caskadestudio Před rokem +4

    I'm not from anywhere near the US but I have a large collection of National Geographics. The May 1980 edition is one of the oldest I own, and it is a really good, if profound, portrait of the events of that day.

  • @DemoDashImpact275
    @DemoDashImpact275 Před 6 lety +281

    When someone drops their mixtape

  • @danahan01
    @danahan01 Před 6 lety +22

    I was 40 miles west of this eruption on the day it happened and had a perfect view of it. It was surreal!!

    • @janitor4481
      @janitor4481 Před 5 lety

      danahan01 not enough proof for me to believe you

    • @MP-km7dk
      @MP-km7dk Před 5 lety +1

      I remember that well also. I was living in Hockinson, WA when that erupted.

  • @dashfatbastard
    @dashfatbastard Před rokem +2

    I was 100 miles downwind under the plume of Mt St Helens. At 10am, a pleasant Sunday morning turned to night in a couple of minutes. Incredible.

  • @dw2369
    @dw2369 Před 3 lety +4

    I was nine, we lived in bellingham washington and I remember feeling the eruption if very slightly . I remember driving through the area a week later and seeing a layer of ash covering the land, my dad has a container of it still.

  • @hopewrld714
    @hopewrld714 Před 4 lety +291

    When you drink a milkshake and your lactose intolerant 😳😣✊

  • @mattiefee
    @mattiefee Před 4 lety +36

    1:06 They should have had their answer when the helicopter filmed the Mountain looking like a sadistic skull peeking its head out of the Earth surface.

  • @jeffholden8169
    @jeffholden8169 Před 2 lety +2

    I was in the 9th aviation battalion at ft Lewis then , we when out for recovery and rescue it was awful to say the least, remember president Carter was there. What an experience.

  • @karlholdo831
    @karlholdo831 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember watching news reports about this in 1980, was only 8 then , but it always stuck with me, as it was so terrifying.

  • @Raixor
    @Raixor Před 5 lety +10

    Signs you might be from Seattle:
    if it's not covered in snow or has recently erupted...regardless of height, it's a hill, not a mountain.
    We moved to Seattle from San Diego, a month after this. We still have the coffee can full of ash.

  • @Mat-xy7gb
    @Mat-xy7gb Před 6 lety +72

    This is NOT clickbait, you can see the thumbnail, there is footage from the eruption and you even get an explenation

    • @Rulla33
      @Rulla33 Před 6 lety +1

      Coco Palmtree explanation

    • @T0mat0_S0up
      @T0mat0_S0up Před 6 lety

      - look at the comments

    • @Rulla33
      @Rulla33 Před 6 lety

      The Garchomp Tamer legit no-one said so

    • @T0mat0_S0up
      @T0mat0_S0up Před 6 lety +1

      IGIgaming You must be trolling

  • @carrotsfilmjunkyard9776
    @carrotsfilmjunkyard9776 Před 3 lety +6

    “Mt. Saint Hellens is about to erupt! Its gonna be a fine fine day!”

  • @dustercat21
    @dustercat21 Před 7 měsíci

    I visited during the 2004 dome building eruptive period on MSH and seeing the trees still just blown over for miles in every direction you look and then looking at a steam plume just makes you realize just how powerful that mountain truly is.

  • @Furrniks
    @Furrniks Před 3 lety +72

    CZcams : let's just recommend this to people after the expiration in Lebanon cuz why not

  • @terrymoody7739
    @terrymoody7739 Před 4 lety +16

    I was close to there, that fateful day,stationed aboard the U.S.S.Enterprise, in Bremerton, Wa., what a great spectacle! Would not have missed it for the world!

  • @vangogo4536
    @vangogo4536 Před rokem +4

    It was a strange sensation to go outside that morning and feel the ash 'raining' on you, like someone was sprinkling fine sand. Fortunately lived southwest of the eruption, and we only got a small amount, the main plume blew east.

  • @MW-xm1rc
    @MW-xm1rc Před 3 lety +30

    The thing you must remember is that this event was mostly peaceful.

  • @ViraL_FootprinT.ex.e
    @ViraL_FootprinT.ex.e Před 4 lety +16

    This happened a couple years before I was even born, but my elem school teachers used to talk about it like we had any frame of reference other than some passing mention or footage on TV from time to time. Thank goodness for technological advances that all me to see this whenever I want finally.

  • @lucidsnow3840
    @lucidsnow3840 Před 4 lety +38

    2019 anyone

    • @bellotm9223
      @bellotm9223 Před 4 lety +6

      Lucid snow stop, just stop, it’s time to stop

    • @annetteslife
      @annetteslife Před 4 lety

      Why?? I lived through horror! I was 7 years old when this happened.

  • @Mudbutbackwards
    @Mudbutbackwards Před 3 lety +24

    I feel bad for the residents who refused to leave after the many warnings, believing it was never gonna happen.

    • @razzberry4756
      @razzberry4756 Před 3 lety +2

      why do you feel bad for people that ignored serious warnings?

    • @Mudbutbackwards
      @Mudbutbackwards Před 3 lety +12

      @@razzberry4756 i definently see where you are coming from, but it is still unfortunate they perished

  • @Corn-Pop.
    @Corn-Pop. Před rokem +2

    I was 4 years old when it erupted. I'd absolutely love to have seen it with my adult eyes. For some reason I've been fascinated with Mount St. Helens my whole life.

  • @wolffroman4746
    @wolffroman4746 Před 4 lety +21

    I lived through that. I was a child living in Yakima at the time. Getting ready to go to church and the skies got really dark. The next thing I knew everything was covered in at least a half of an inch of ash....everywhere! It was intense.

    • @justsomedudeyouknow8372
      @justsomedudeyouknow8372 Před rokem

      I lived in yakima a couple times over the years. Once in 1989 and again in 2012. Terrible place unless you have no life.

    • @Evil_kanye
      @Evil_kanye Před rokem

      I thought Yakima got the most damage done

  • @paulg.1931
    @paulg.1931 Před 5 lety +171

    🎶 _mount st. helens is about to blow up_ 🎶

    • @KeeeKeeedemon
      @KeeeKeeedemon Před 5 lety +16

      _🎶And it's gonna be a fine swell day🎶_

    • @CF-Tunes
      @CF-Tunes Před 5 lety +11

      🎶And its gonna fall to the ground and turn grey🎶

    • @CF-Tunes
      @CF-Tunes Před 5 lety +8

      🎶Are going to all run away🎶

    • @McCaroni_Sup
      @McCaroni_Sup Před 5 lety +5

      🎶but me i'm feeling curious so i think i just might stay🎶

    • @hgfs6479
      @hgfs6479 Před 5 lety +9

      🎶you're all gey🎶

  • @Wayne--O
    @Wayne--O Před 3 lety

    I had just moved to WA from the east coast a few months earlier, 13 yrs old. Had never seen mountains before and was in awe of them, yet in denial that some were volcanos. Far north of St.Helens, our house faced Mt.Baker, couldn't even see St.Helen's. Eating cereal in the living room watching tv with my brother and sister we felt the vibration and heard the rumble. Immediately I thought a jet had crashed at the nearby naval base. The event played out on tv for months. We had no ash due to weather patterns.

  • @Justonn
    @Justonn Před 2 lety

    We live in Brush Prairie, Washington about 35miles from there. Just was at Yale Lake today with the fam which is a direct view of Mt St Helens. Beautiful site

  • @jstar7114
    @jstar7114 Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you so much! This really helped me on my research project. Definitely the most helpful resource I have found.

  • @karucosplays5878
    @karucosplays5878 Před 4 lety +7

    Mount Vesuvius: I burned people into castings when I erupted.
    Mount St. Helens: Hold my magma

  • @ColdPotato
    @ColdPotato Před rokem +1

    It was amazing. I was a kid on a boat fishing with my mom and dad on lake Couer d'Alene in Idaho. Suddenly it became night in the middle of the day and the fish started biting. We had to spend the night in a hotel even though we were just 90 minutes away from home in Moscow, Idaho. The ash was so bad it was rendering many vehicles inoperable clogging their air filters. This was hundreds of miles away. Years later you can still dig into the dirt there and find the layer of ash deposited.

  • @kath6118
    @kath6118 Před rokem

    this is so cool to learn ab, thank u for this!!

  • @BreadCatOfficial
    @BreadCatOfficial Před 5 lety +547

    Who is here from Bill Wurtz?

  • @hariaguiar6849
    @hariaguiar6849 Před 5 lety +6

    Darn CZcams Recommendation System, *you win again*

  • @gcp6049
    @gcp6049 Před 3 lety +3

    My mom had memories of this, remembering putting cardboard in front of the car so it wouldn't ruin it, she was shoveling ash, she lived in Ephrata Washington, she knew 1 of those 57 people who died may those lives rest in peace

  • @PALAD-jl5sw
    @PALAD-jl5sw Před 3 lety +1

    2:24 if you guys don't know, lahar is from Javanese words "ꦮ꧀ꦭꦲꦂ" which means "wlahar"

  • @applejacks971
    @applejacks971 Před 6 lety +11

    Our weather in Nebraska was really strange for a couple weeks after the eruption. Everything was hazy, ash dust everywhere, the sun was orangish during the day and the moon deep red at night. Was an eerie feeling til things finally cleared up. Even tho I was 8 at the time, I thought it was pretty awesome to experience a volcano living that far away from it.

    • @edwardmartinez8230
      @edwardmartinez8230 Před rokem +3

      I experienced a beautiful reddish sky in Corpus Christi texas at that time and have yet not seen another sky like that since then. At the time I was 5 years old and now at 47 still can’t forget it especially that this occurred thousands of miles away.