There are an endless amount of weather tweets that are sent out everyday. Whether it’s a puffy cumulus cloud or a beautiful sunset, there are a million (that might be literal) to go around. Now, some are quality, quality tweets. Others are….well, others are interesting. Either way, there are always great tweets out there. Here are the top 10 that I found from around the Twittersphere.
#10 Landon Hampton
#bluemoon pic.twitter.com/OzNgRUQ6l4
— Landon Hampton (@WxOrNotBG) July 31, 2015
Hahahaha. Because, you know, everyone thought the moon would actually be blue.
#9 D☈D
Dante’s Inferno/Ghostbusters sunset tonight. pic.twitter.com/G5M9wrB0qM
— D☈D (@drdabroholos) July 30, 2015
There were some incredible sunset pics after the storms this week.
#8 Mackenzie Austin
Here she comes @Kentuckyweather! Moving quickly into Lawrenceburg! #summerstorm ☔️⚡️ pic.twitter.com/gq5p95fJYO
— Mackenzie Austin (@kenzieeelynnn) July 29, 2015
A #shelfie from my hometown!
#7 Sean Schofer
Large violent tornado on the ground north of Edward, MB. #mbstorm #skstorm @reedtimmerTVN pic.twitter.com/O0aW768ovs
— Sean Schofer (@SeanSchoferTVN) July 28, 2015
3/10 of the tweets this week involve this tornado. What do you think captured my attention this week?
#6 Mark J.
Ooof, 81 dew point here at the office. May go out and sling to see how accurate the Davis is. #kywx
— Mark J. ⚡️ (@MJ33Wx) July 29, 2015
Yes, you read that right. an eighty-one degree dewpoint. 81 DEGREES. That is insane. At that point, you’ll sweat before going outside.
#5 NWS Louisville
The dewpoint has dropped from 75 to 60 in just a few hours in #Louisville. The muggy air is a thing of the past! Enjoy! #kywx #inwx
— NWS Louisville (@NWSLouisville) July 30, 2015
……And considering the tweet before this, these are the tweets we like to see!!
#4 Dr. Mike Moyer
“@NWSMobile: #Science! pic.twitter.com/hHVSBtVHf1” Now this is cool!
— Dr. Mike Moyer (@wxenthus) July 30, 2015
He’s right. That is so cool. It is so cool to see large scale atmospheric dynamics able to be represented in the mesoscale environments. The way those outflow boundaries create thunderstorms along their leading edge is an small scale representation of how cold fronts work!
#3 John Kucko
Rainbow from 35,000 ft. over South Dakota yesterday flying east. @spann @JimCantore @SamChampion #ItsAmazingOutThere pic.twitter.com/irUYsx3bpO
— John Kucko (@john_kucko) July 28, 2015
Whooooooa!
#2 Johnny Kelly
Picture: RT@justinhobson85: Very large #tornado at about 851pm CDT. WNW of #Melita #mbstorm pic.twitter.com/uZk0zZCwHk #Manitoba #Canada
— Johnny Kelly (@stormchaser4850) July 28, 2015
Again: this tornado lasted 2.5 to 3 hours. It is difficult to describe how absurd that is.
#1 Greg Johnson
Ever wonder what a ‘multi-vortex’ tornado is? Text book exp. happened on Mon in Manitoba @spann @weathernetwork pic.twitter.com/x38ePAZSf3
— Greg Johnson (@TornadoGreg) August 3, 2015
Maybe you now see just why I thought this tornado was so cool.