The moment we started north, a tornado warning was issued for the southern storm in the line due to a spotter report of a tornado there. At first, this did not make sense to us because it was a linear storm, but one look at the velocity display on radar and another look at the surface map quickly told me otherwise.
Ooops, We Killed Storms Again
We began yesterday in Lamar, CO, and we were not in any big hurry to leave. The other driver (Woody), Bill, and I took the vans to get washed, while the rest of the group had the chance to listen to one of Chuck Doswell's presentations. This is the Chuck Doswell tour, so we get to pick his brain for the duration of this week.
Meade County, Kansas
Today was the first offical day of my storm chasing vacation, and our leader for the trip is Bill Reid. We began the day in Oklahoma City (OKC), and we were on the road around 10:45 AM. Our inital target was Dodge City (DDC), KS, as the models were showing storms to be in that area close to the time of our arrival.
Tornadoes near Akron, Colorado
The Perils of Storm Chasing
I figure writing an entry about storm chasing and its associated risks/dangers would be appropriate, considering the activity that happened in NE/SD on Friday. Many people feel they can simply jump into a car and go after storms. Well, there is much more to that than they think. Those people, often referred to as "yahoos", do not realize just how dangerous this hobby can be. Not only do you have to deal with rapidly changing weather, you also have to deal with issues like other chasers, wildlife, terrain, fatigue, poor road networks, and potential vehicle break-downs. Let me explain.
El Reno, Oklahoma Tornado
Friday, May 31, 2013, was the last chase day for the Tour 4 group. We had had a very busy and successful six chase days, but we were still missing the nice “cherry on top” tornado. We were in Ardmore, OK, and the outlook for severe weather and tornadoes looked pretty darn good later in the day, not too far away.
Millsap, Texas Tornado
Marfa, Texas Supercell
Adrian, Texas Tornadic Supercell
Joplin, Missouri EF-5 Tornado
Presho, South Dakota Supercell and Lightning
Bismarck, North Dakota Supercell
Last Chance, Colorado Tornadic Supercell
Campo, Colorado Tornado
This Baca County supercell had been in progress for four hours at least, but it had not produced a tornado in the previous two-and-one-half hours. Low-level rotation in the updraft base continued quite hard. I knew that the cell might indeed produce another tornado, but I certainly was not expecting one.
Permian Basin Texas Supercells and Lightning
Bushland, Texas Tornado
Aurora, Nebraska Tornado
May 26th Update
Crazy, crazy, crazy chase period from May 22 to May 24! I saw five tornadoes on the 22nd in NW KS, two on the 23rd in SW KS, and then ten or more in NC OK on the 24th. On the 24th we picked up the Tour 3 folks in OKC, got on the road northbound at 1 p.m., and were on the prolific tornadic storm in Garfield County (east of Enid) in one hour.
Lamb-Hale-Swisher County, Texas Tornadic Supercell
A classic, large negatively tilted upper-level trough was progged to move into West Texas by late in the day today. I wanted to focus on the area just south of the Texas Panhandle where I expected better instability and more discrete, right-moving storms. My morning target was Plainview, updated to Tulia by early afternoon. A steady steam of information was delivered to me via cell phone by William Reid to keep me on track.
South Dakota Tornado Outbreak and Intercept
I never really thought that I would see a storm like I saw on Tuesday evening. Ever.
On Tuesday, June 24, I watched the same storm produce tornado after tornado after tornado for more than an hour, with two or more tornadoes on the ground at the same time, THREE different times! It was simply unbelievable.