It depends on the tornado.
A weak tornado of EF0 or EF1 strength might knock down a fence or two, damage or destroy a barn, or blow apart a few hay bales.
A stronger tornado of EF2 or EF3 strength could easily destroy a barn and badly damage or destroy a farm house. Livestock may be killed. At this point a farmer's life is in notable danger.
A violent tornado of EF4 or EF5 strength can completely destroy an entire farm. In some EF5 tornadoes, farms have essentially vanished, leaving the concrete foundations of buildings as the only evidence that they ever existed. In some cases tornadoes such as this have killed entire families.
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There is no simple answer to that. Every farmer would be different as their income would be different. It will also depend on the local rates of taxation and other regulations where they live.
As much as he/she produces
not that much
35
There is no conflict between a hurricane and a tornado. In fact, hurricanes often produce tornadoes. However, if you were to somehow pitch the force of a hurricane against the force of a tornado, the hurricane would "win" without being significantly affected. Although a tornado can have faster winds than a hurricane, hurricanes are much larger and have several orders of magnitude more energy than a tornado.
a farmer would probably get a least a 1000 dollars
Tornadoes can merge together, yes, and vortex physics predict that the combined tornado will be larger than either of the merging tornadoes. However, most tornado mergers involve a large tornado absorbing a small one, so the larger tornado is not affected very much.
No. Winds in a tornado are destructive, and the dust and condensation in the air would preventyou from seeing much.
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There is no such thing as a "cyclone 5 tornado." You can have a category 5 hurricane or an EF5 tornado. In either case, the answer would be no; there is too much turbulence.
There is no simple answer to that. Every farmer would be different as their income would be different. It will also depend on the local rates of taxation and other regulations where they live.
For a massive wedge tornado, anything short of a nuclear bomb would probably not do much. A nuclear bomb would probably disrupt it, but at the same time would cause far more damage than the tornado itself could.
Not much at all. In some rare instances tornadoes may remove the topsoil, but other than that, the ground itself is not significantly affected.
They would merge into a single although much larger tornado
When tornadoes merge they simply become one tornado large than either of the original two. It is an unusual occurrence and most of the time that it does happen it involves a large tornado absorbing a small one without being much affected.
I Don't Know, I want someone else to answer this!