3/30/2006 REPORTS: KS,NE,OK,TX
Posted on March 15th, 2010 by cfz
Just got home from school at Hutch Highschool where they sent us to the tornado shelters when the sirens blew here in town. Tornado reported doing damage in Hutchinson at 11th by the Mall and at the hospital and on the north side of Hutch on Lucille and 43rd street. all this was reported by a "local off duty law enforcement officer". I havent look at the damage myself yet (which I may still do) but from what I have heard it was mainly just windows blown out and other minor damage on the east side of town. I couldnt see it my self because I was hiding in the Hutch High bathrooms with about 100 other students in the dark, but I'm pretty sure it was a non-mesocyclone/ landspout type of tornado similar to the one that knocked out car windows in Newton Kansas back on January 28th of this year.
So that was an interesting experience to say the least, I was amazed at how badly our schools tornado plan worked out, We had students still walking the halls at least 10 minutes after they announce to go to our tornado shelters, that could be bad if we get a tornado actually strike the school ever. Anyway we still have shingles and branches blowing down all over town at this very minute as the westerly winds behind the dryline are blasting in at 50-60 mph so still some interesting weather around. Guess I will be repairing roof tommorow :(
Now, I saw no tornadoes today, but I still had an awesome time. Between the wondergul squall and the challenge of getting in position (even though the storms died), I had a good chance to shake down my equipment setup and have fun doing it. Plus, the usual chase magic was following me around. For example, at the gas stop in Syracuse, the clerk who was ringing up my Slim Jims seemed really distracted... and then she suddenly got this huge smile and blurted out to me that her sister, who has had cancer for the last 3 years, just called her and told her that her cancer was in remission. Outside, the last storm had just rolled through and the sun was poking through the clouds for the first time of the day. Yeah, it was a pretty cool chase.
Anyways I watched the storms to the NW strengthen along with a group of cows and then decided to follwo the cell as it kinda went parallel to I-44 North of Lawton. The storm began to exhibit signs of a wall cloud and some weak rotation and produce some half-dollar size hail. I took a few picks and followed the cell on into Chickasha. I decided to let this cell go on towards the metro as I did not run into all the moms crowding the highways to pick up kids from as well as the chaser hoards and I jumped over towards hwy 81 and went south to catch the cell that would produce possibly a couple weak tornadoes North of Velma. I caught this cell and followed it towards Elmore City adn sat atop a hill on I think hwy 29 and took some timelapse of the wall cloud passing very near as sirens sounded in the town.
I saw what I thought were a couple brief funnels with very good rotation in and around them and what at times was a rather large wall cloud. After tonights inspection on the timelapse I do believe one of these funnels touched the ground but oh so briefly. On the time lapse you can cleary see debris fly up towards the funnel off the ground and then dissapear. It was very very brief but now I do believe this was indeed the weakest or tornadoes but the time lapse was pretty neat. I followed this cell as it weakend towards Ada and waited as it died for the backbuilt brother to arrive that also began to have some good rotation. I decided to leave this cell at Ada however and head home even tho there was reports of debris falling from the sky such as leaves.
I headed South having to manuever sround the Indian Nation turnpike due to construction but caught a small LPis looking cell near Sulphur. I could also see the nice updraft and the anvils of storms to the SW along the Red River and decided to head that way on the way home to catch a few lightning pics.
I LOVE it when you can kinda ladder step your way South and catch multiple storms! Sometime ya wish ya didnt leave the northern storm but other times it can make ya look like a genious. :-p.
For a March chase this wasnt bad at all and I think this may be my first tornado in March.
Ill post pics and vidcaps and perhaps a brief timelapse on my website at http://www.texhomastormchasers.com
Memorbale things about this chase were.
1. Happy Cows arent jsut in California
2. Amazing rotation at times
3. Not alot of really large hail reports. Golfballs largest maybe?
4. Very early chase hours
5. The quickest tornado touchdown I have ever seen
6. Amazed how people will block overpasses when there is only pea size hail
7. The Indian Nation turnpike under construction and a 13 miles detour
8. The newly "fixed" road on I-44 near Elgin drains VERY pourly. Hydroplaning there was horrible. Had to do about 45 mph to keep her on the road.
9. Road networks once out of Ada to the East are not very good along with hills and trees galore.
10. My forecast was pretty good. I figured we would have a better tornado producer South of I-40 but oh well. I was unconvinced it had even produced earlier but after viewing video I can "kinda" count this as a First tornado of the year tornado but I still only really count the ones you can look at and say " Oh my god! Look at that tornado!" ;-)
I also saw what was actually a very humbling scene in Chickasha. They had a funeral procession for a fallen firefighter who I believe was killed in duty last week or so battling grass fires. There were TONS of firetrucks, police, & utility trucks all driving beneath two extended ladders from two firetrucks that created an arch. When this occured it also completely stopped raining at the exact time. It was as if heaven actually was opening up for someone.
Now, I saw no tornadoes today, but I still had an awesome time. Between the wondergul squall and the challenge of getting in position (even though the storms died), I had a good chance to shake down my equipment setup and have fun doing it. Plus, the usual chase magic was following me around. For example, at the gas stop in Syracuse, the clerk who was ringing up my Slim Jims seemed really distracted... and then she suddenly got this huge smile and blurted out to me that her sister, who has had cancer for the last 3 years, just called her and told her that her cancer was in remission. Outside, the last storm had just rolled through and the sun was poking through the clouds for the first time of the day. Yeah, it was a pretty cool chase.
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Im getting ready for Ok/KS in about 4 hrs from now.. i been driving all night and caught an HP supercell near NEB City im pretty sure it was a brief one .... i observed hail to the size of marbles... id say if any size exactly about Dime Size.... other locations in MO and IA i had pebble .. to tiny hail but heavy rain... got a few nice pic i was upset ot be to west of the tornadic sp' thatd had come up through Fillmore Co mo producing tornadoes i dont know if this was reported but just about 3 1/2 miles north west of Lamoni there was a brief touchdown im pretty sure it was a tornado... i mean i was looking at the lightning flashes west of me, ouside of lamoni, the SP was tornado warned... ill have to go back through video but im pretty sure there was a brief tornado touchdown, i headed off in that directiona d found alot of mud covering the county road on P-64, also there were some trees knocked down, i assume it was the circulation hoever i couldnt confirm an acutal touchdown.. i didnt see any debri on the ground... it was diffacult to tell with heavy precip falling... also when i had turned up towards Ellston many metal signs had been bended over and 3 were laying in the road... maybe it was staright line winds.. or a brief touchdown.. i saw from lightning flashes waht appeared to be a long skinny funnel.... cany anybody confirm a touchdown if you were on the cell????
http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j31/nedanne006/DSC03904.jpg
http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j31/nedanne006/DSC03902.jpg
http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j31/nedanne006/DSC03901.jpg
CORRECTED( added pic
Im nto good at sticthing photos heres the storm i encountered near Nebraska City , it quickly gulped me over with heavy rain, hail and wind.... it was pretty awsome to see before it got me ;-)
http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j31/nedanne006/hpnebcity.jpg
Im exhausted goodnight"
Long chase day for me ... not to much excitment but i had a feeling the storms in MO would have tornado potential after dark i followed one storm all the way to North of Osceola and gave up.... now for the long drive in a few hrs.... here's just a a few quick shots from the digi( ok i got ahead of myself today is only FRI... yawns... i can sleep woo hoo"
It was good to finally chase west of McAlester. Roads were pretty bad, trees were abundant, and hills got in the way. This area wasn't HORRIBLE, and I don't think I'd avoid chasing there if there was a supercell there, but it certainly isn't what I would consider to be "good" chase territory, that's for sure! I'll probably throw some pics up tomorrow.
EDIT: I should note that, as usual, OUN was on the ball in terms of their presence on area ham radio / spotter/skywarn repeaters. There was quite a bit of play-by-play on the Cyril and OKC repeaters (also some good info on a freq that I have labeled as "Ardmore", but most be somewhere nearer Pauls Valley or Ada). Awesome job keeping everyone on the ball -- chasing and spotting is much easier when we have that good information!
My cellphone data worked intermittently, largely because I left my external antenna at home. Gr.
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me and my buddies were also on that storm. at one point we had a nice little group on the bridge over US69 just east of that ammunition plant south of McAlester. but we were watching one wall cloud, then noticed another lowering further to the west, and it looked really low, but there was a hill there. but some guy that was "with" channel 2 called it in as a tornado on the ground, which i think is ridiculous. it was too far away to tell. so maybe my first tornado, maybe not. we decided to label it as a tard-nado. we moved a little north on 69, stopped to watch both areas, and saw a few different funnels that were very interesting. one was like a rope funnel, with broken condensation leading outward and down on the far east side of the east wall cloud. it was spinning a little bit, then disappeared in about 20 seconds. very cool to see. not a bad chase, considering it was visual.
After chasing that tornado for a good long while I turned back to another storm coming up behind it....At Buffalo, KS...things got pretty hairy...the circulation was wrapped in rain...but looked so incredibly cool...then as it trucked on NE a nice trunk came to the ground. I only have video of that one. Then I followed that storm up to Chanute then Iola and east on 54 it was getting dark but looked to me that another cone, trunk had formed and was imbedded in the core. This is on Video as well. I hope everyone stayed safe. Now I'm going to sleep and getting rest for SATURDAY!
I waited around OUN to see if the convection in southwestern OK would break up into discrete storms. I (with Jana Lesak, Gabe Garfield, Justin Walker, and *forgot the name,,, sorry!*) were originally planning on hitting up the storm near I40 to the west of OK, as it appeared to be becoming discrete. However, as we were leaving OUN, the cells in southwestern OK looked to be breaking up a bit, so we headed south in hopes that some insolation down there would help the cause.
The first storm we hit was northeast of Chickasha. It looked kind of outflowish, and it appeared as though the storm to its south was raining into that storm's inflow. So, we dropped south, eventually ending up two storm south in Pernell. We sat there for a bit and watched some nice RFD and wallcloud action to our west. We stayed with this storm through east of Wynnewood. Rotation was evident from time to time, but it didn't look too impressive. At some time, another cell developed to its west, near Paul's Valley. We watched this storm as we moved with it through Ada. We did stop somehwere west of Ada and watched some incredible rotation. The rotation of the rain bands and wallcloud is some of the most intense I have ever seen, and we all thought that the storm was going to produce. Well, it didn't.
We kept with the storm through Ada, where road network options became an issue. Here again, however, we did see some very nice, very wet RFD action. We ended up having to head into the forward-flank downdraft core for a bit, and we got some penny-sized hail for a while. Through the rest of the daylight time, we followed this storm through east of McAlester. Road network was a problem, as were hills and trees. We did have a time where we were north of the strong rotation and south of the larger hail and main core (in the 'bears cage' as some refer to it as), and there was at least one time where the storm possessed a very low, very large wallcloud. However, even then, the wallcloud(s) didn't look all too organized. We called off the chase northeast of McAlester.
Overall, I was slightly disappointed with the chase. We were able to get on two nice supercells, and there were a couple of times during which I really thought we'd see tornadogenesis (particularly that time when we were 10-12 miles west-southwest of Ada). However, something was obviously missing. Speaking of missing, I'm not sure how we missed the tornado near Velma, since we were watching it, but I assume it was a precip-blockage issue. I was also surprised that, despite sampling almost all parts of that supercell, the largest hail we experienced and saw was penny-size. For whatever reason, the supercells largely looked HP, with very wet, precip-filled RFDs (though they both had clean RFD occlussions once or twice).
It was good to finally chase west of McAlester. Roads were pretty bad, trees were abundant, and hills got in the way. This area wasn't HORRIBLE, and I don't think I'd avoid chasing there if there was a supercell there, but it certainly isn't what I would consider to be "good" chase territory, that's for sure! I'll probably throw some pics up tomorrow.
EDIT: I should note that, as usual, OUN was on the ball in terms of their presence on area ham radio / spotter/skywarn repeaters. There was quite a bit of play-by-play on the Cyril and OKC repeaters (also some good info on a freq that I have labeled as "Ardmore", but most be somewhere nearer Pauls Valley or Ada). Awesome job keeping everyone on the ball -- chasing and spotting is much easier when we have that good information!
My cellphone data worked intermittently, largely because I left my external antenna at home. Gr.
By the time we had gotten to around to about 6 miles south of Beatrice, we were just barely ahead of the storm. It had amazing speed. As reported by another person above, the storm began to bow out. While heading north on US-77, the storm overtook us and we were hit with 70 mph winds, heavy rain, and around quarter size hail. So after we let the heavier rains pass we headed back to Lincoln to end the day.
I believe this particular line would eventually be the one that went through the Papillion and Omaha areas causing some damage. Lessen learned today: Keep lots of distance between you and the storm when it is moving at 50+ mph.
All in all, I really enjoyed the chase today. It's been two years and the wait was well worth it. Sometimes it's just important to have some fun. Most importantly, I pray that there were no injuries today.
The storm motion was around 50mph so it was hard to stay with it. Heading towards highway 77 we tried to cut over on a dirt road but it was very muddy and had to go back to the paved road that went over to highway 77. This is when the chase started to go down hill.
http://img338.imageshack.us/img338/9112/03302006chase19pf.jpg
Took a quick stop to get cameras ready right before the highway, just got back into the explorer and a Butler Co sheriff dove up and was storm spotting. So we had to follow him until we got to Florence Ks and jumped on highway 50 heading north, well the traffic was so bad could not catch back up with the cell. We turned north towards Council Grove trying one last attempt to catch the cell but it was moving to fast. We broke off the chase because there really was no good road network and the speed of the storm. So we headed back west on highway 56 heading towards Herrington trying to intercept the line that was showing rotation coming out of Reno Co. The storm lost its punch right before we got to it so we decided to call it a day.
http://img307.imageshack.us/img307/4663/03302006chase128hd.th.jpg (http://img307.imageshack.us/my.php?image=03302006chase128hd.jpg)
http://img426.imageshack.us/img426/6222/03302006chase144wg.th.jpg (http://img426.imageshack.us/my.php?image=03302006chase144wg.jpg)
On the way back got a flat so had to change it in the wind, rain and muddy road. It was not a bad chase day no tornados but car, equipment problems (had to reset XM three times) and the speed of the storms made it stressful.
Also I got to meet fellow Stormtrack member Ryan Shirk and his brother in law they caravaned with us.
[[My favorite picture that I took]]
Click it to see all the pictures.
When I get my video back, I'll do some video captures for some other pictures.
I never stopped in Ratliff City and I don't own a hatchback. The only person I heard honk at me was in a red SUV, and this happened south of Pernell. But the "completely dumbfounded" part I believe.
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Bingo, that was me. Just I got the location wrong in the post. But I did notice you werent driving your white car with the back window blown. You were in some car with split antennas on top.
I saw a storm on radar near Hobart that caught my attention, and decided to go after it, owing to the fact there was still plenty of time/daylight left should the first "wave" crap out. I left OUN at 10:45 and drove to Chickasha. Took US81 south to OK19, and sat there for a while listening to the play-by-play between spotters and WX5OUN. Resisted the temptation to try and fly north to intercept the early cell along I-40 which was a nice supercell for a time. Kept myself to the game plan and gradually drifted south along US81, watching the approaching cluster of storms. Caught my first view of a base northwest of Marlow, and watched that linear storm do nothing as it moved by to the northwest. Another core was southwest of it, so I drfited south into the north side of Marlow and watched this base produce a non-rotating (but persitant) wall cloud. Eventually rain became an issue, so I moved south through town. Once on the south side of Marlow, it was obvious this storm was outflow-dominant as well, and reports of nickel to golfball hail around town began to pour over the scanner. I briefly considered heading north back to OK29 and going east to target the Marlow storm, but a report of a new storm still further southwest near Duncan got my attention.
I moved through town, and as I came to my east option (OK7), I broke free of the rain and saw a high, flat base. There was an intense precip core north of it, and while the storm itself didn't look too spectacular, I notcied it was the last in line. I moved east a few miles, then stopped to observe and shoot a bit of video. The storm was still looking like all the others; outflowish and linear. However, it was still ther last storm in the line, so I stayed with it. I got back on the road and continued east. After a mile or so I looked in the rearview and saw a rapidly rising scud bomb flowing into the RFB. I stopped, set up the tripod, and rolled video. The evolution of this was incredible to watch. Rapid rising motion was occuring all along the base of the wall cloud, and I looked almost overhead to see the eastern edge of the rotation. The mesocyclone gradually tightened, as after a few more minutes, strong rotation was noted within the wall cloud itself. Surface winds picked up dramatically, to where I had to hold my tripod to keep the vidcam from blowing over. Rotation became violent, and a large cone funnel began to descend. The RFD began to wrap around, which was filled with black-as-night precip. The funnel was over halfway down and rotating violently, as a few small tendrils tried to reach for the ground. Before I could see full condensation to the ground, the rain curtain wrapped around, completely obscuring the tornado. I packed it up and blasted east, until the rain curtains parted and I could once again see a large cone tornado (actually it looked like a Hershey's Kiss). I couldn't see condensation to the ground, but based on the violent rotation, persistence, and all the rain around it, I assumed it was a tornado the entire time. As I pulled over to set up the tripod after it reappeared, it finally condensed fully to the ground, in a classic "SKYWARN" logo tornado shape. It rapidly roped out in the "vaporized" style, as the next mesocyclone strengthened east of it. I moved east and stopped again near Velma. The wall cloud/lowering looked kind of ragged, but had chaotic motions. Within a few minutes a large cone funnel developed and dipped halfway to the ground. It persisted, and came about 3/4 of the way down, as pieces of scud were lifted off the ground and pulled into the funnel. This tornado persisted for a few minutes, until the RFD crashed in, wrapping the tornado in precip. I could barely make out the shrinking funnel within the rotating rain curtains as the tornado dissipated. During the second tornado I ran into Jeremy Wilson and Aaron Hughes.
After the second tornado ended, I flew east on OK7 to OK76, then went north. South of Pernell I ran into other chasers who were braver than I, as they headed north into the rotation while I turned around and headed back south. I was blasted with RFD as I heard a report of a tornado west of Pernell. I drove south until I got away from the intense RFD winds (took both hands to keep the car on the road at speed), then stopped and turned around to face north. I never saw the tornado. I turned back south and continued back to OK7, where I once again blasted east to I-35, all the while slowly losing the storm. My miscalculation and subsequent "escape" south of Pernell had been a fatal navigational error; I never coulld get back in front of it and, despite knowing it would continue for several hours, I let it go to concentrate on a new storm west of Pauls Valley. This storm was ingesting the previous stale air from the first one, and never could get its act together. After being delayed just north of Pauls Valley by an accident (which you'll see shots of on KOCO-TV because they rolled up on it), I headed home.
A great way to get on the board in 2006. I'm miffed I let the storm get away, but happy I was able to observe a few tornadoes before it did. There was no tornado warning on this thing the entire time I was seeing tornadoes. I tried to call in the rapid rotation near Duncan just prior to the first tornado, but of course my phone had no coverage. I will be submitting a report and video to OUN tomorrow.
Did it all while driving with one hand, LOL. My car kept popping out of 5th gear all day, so I had to hold it in. That made for a hectic chase.
I pulled off I-35 in Moore at Indian Hill Road...with some nickel to quarter sized hail. No damage, thankfully.
My focus was down closer towards the Ardmore area, so I headed back south on I-35. I crossed over the Canadian River and off to my west, I saw a lowering, so got off at Goldsby. I was pulled into the Goldsby Baptist Church parking lot recording what was happening with the lowering, when Brady Brus told me that there were some tornado reports in Choctaw.
We considered having me head back up towards OKC, but then decided to keep focused on the southern storms. I got off at exit 72 near Pauls Valley when I saw the lowering, then decided to head a bit further south. I got off at exit 66 and saw the storm becoming better organized. The storm was headed straight at my location so again I headed a bit south. I'm glad I did. I was able to get some very good video from the south end of the two storms, including a very good inflow and tail cloud. At one point, the storm seemed to be struggling to produce a tornado, almost directly over I-35, but the rotation weakened on it.
I started following the storm towards Ada, but needed to meet the satellite truck back in Pauls Valley to get the video ready for the news. I was able to get some good pictures of the McAlister, OK supercell, and an anvil with nice mammatus. Those will be posted shortly, and some video captures may be posted sometime during the weekend.
Tail end Charlie (the one that produced the tornados that Shane saw) started looking really nice, so we headed south on 177 towards that storm but trying to stay east of it. It had become tornado-warned by that time, but we were too far east trying to get in position for (hopefully) more tornados that didn't happen, so we didn't see the tornados. Wound up intersecting the storm about 5 miles East of Wynnewood and followed it up to Ada. By that time, there were actually 2 storms, and the one behind the first looked a lot better, but it turned out to be this massive HP bomb, so even if there had been a tornado with that storm, we would have had a really hard time seeing it because it would have been surrounded by a nasty-looking HP core. We went south on 3 since the storm was moving more E'ly rather than NE'ly to get out of the way, and then headed north for a little while on 48 near Lula (and easy on some county road...I think 1600 or something). Ran into Gene Rhoden and RJ Evans while stopping to get a last glimpse of this storm before letting it go into the jungle that is better known as SE. Oklahoma. Chase humor story of today (for us) was that there was a marijuana plant growing on the side of the road right where we pulled off to watch the storm/talk to RJ and Gene. I guess someone threw some seeds out the window dodging the cops or something!
Anyway, Greg and started to head back to Norman, and decided to drop south on 99 briefly near Ada to catch a smaller cell that was moving through the area, hoping to get a last glimpse of something before heading back. Not too much luck, other than some CG's.
All in all, it was a pretty good chase. Would have been better to see a tornado, but I was perfectly happy :-). I'll put a few pictures up in a bit but first I need food.
Anywho, onward with the report. We watched the wall cloud in the Elmore City-Pernell area and heard the reports of tornadoes, but we watched this thing the whole time and did not see anything highly visible, so I bet they were rain wrapped, which I will have to check film on to check. Either way, the storm cycled down and went through a split about I-35, which really threw us off for awhile, as I found myself in between two storms and both had some decent rotation at times.
Finally, I'm pretty sure we observed a rain-wrapped tornado about 10-15 miles WSW of Ada. We experienced some ping-pong balls falling from the sky just before that, then the wall cloud completely wrapped itself in rain. We approached from the North and we began seeing a lot of leaves falling out of the air just about a 1/2 mile from the rain. We then saw a couple of trees broken in half, but I'm not sure if this was from a tornado or not, but I'm fairly sure the leaves were caused by a nader.
We later heard the reports of debris falling from the air from this same storm, so I imagine it was one of the folks who were convoying behind us (we had channells 11, 4 and 9 right behind us for about an hour and a half). Either way, it was a great storm and another great set of memories. I wish we could've saw the first two within a few miles of home, but I will not be too picky, this was the first Supercell I've seen in what seems like forever. Now time to focus on the next event...
We left Cordell a bit behind the game but managed to get ahead of the line of storms and worked our way south on Hwy 81 to tail end charlie which we had to core punch at Duncan in order to get into position. As we neared the southern edge of the core, we heard spotters reporting rotation along Cherokee road--I thot--here's yet another example as to why it is unwise to core punch!!. We were lucky I guess and got into position in time to see the first tor east of Duncan and then the second NNE of Velma. With trees and low contrast the video isn't really worth much so I won't bother to post any captures. No time to get out and tripod, and both tors were brief in any case.
Broke off the chase a bit after the cell crossed I-35. It didn't seem to be able to get itself re-organized to produce anything other than some weak rotation.
Wondering why the tors aren't on the SPC report page. The spotters were all over them even tho the cell wasn't tornado warned....
Good chase for the first time out this year and my first time out from my new location.
Gene
(really laughing)
I never stopped in Ratliff City and I don't own a hatchback. The only person I heard honk at me was in a red SUV, and this happened south of Pernell. But the "completely dumbfounded" part I believe.
For some reason this day had the song "Always" by Saliva running in the back of my head the entire chase.
Well I left Norman at around 11:30 shortly after the 2nd TORN WW went up. Headed for the southern cell round Chikeshea. Watched it do its thing then crap out as the one out of Lawton toward Duncan starting picking up steam. Raced south on 81 toward Duncan out of Chikeshea. Had to flip the bouy switch on the truck as street flooding was widespread in Duncan. At that point the storm starting getting its act together and tightining up as was not only visible on radar but also visually. So we booked it east on 7 out of Duncan and came up to the backside of the cell as the area of roation was to our north and east. Then somewhere between Countyline and Ratliff City, the thing started dropping as went tornado but just briefly. Almost simultaneouly OUN blarred the warning on the 2meter frequencies. Coming into Ratliff City I saw Shane Adams on the side of the road in his blue hatchback looking completely dumbfounded so as I screamed by I leaned on the car horn like a train. But anyway we came to the intersection of highway 7 and I-35 pulled over at fillin station and sat and watched the cell went thru a splitting process looking totally unorganized in doing so. Then after about 10 minutes WX5OUN came on and wanted chaser on the eastern cell toward Pauls Valley as that one was becoming the dominant one. So we headed north on I-35 toward Pauls Valley and headed east on 19 out of Pauls Valley but didnt go far as the western cell then took over as dominant cell. So we went toward Pauls Valley.............................errrrr anyway that went out and was on this cell that time knows what we ran into. Yep thats right THE WALL of magenta 70dBZ zero visibility water and pea sized hail. After much panic looking for an awning, we found shelter and waited out 5minutes as the cell passed. So we back east out of Pauls Valley. After dawning our scuba gear and rafts through the heart of Pauls Valley (and who said the burn bans should be put back??) we did, as Gary England would say, a "jump back" in time to December as we ran into white out conditions on the road and all throughout the fields. In my life I have never seen so much pea sized hail covering the road. And not only that, it was like this for a good 10 to 12 miles on the road east. Hell, the cows were up on the levis as their fields were under 3 feet of water. At this point we were getting into hills and crap toward Ada and decided to call it quits as the terrain was becoming what is known as Eastern Oklahoma.
But all in all it was a fun chase, nothing to write home about but honestly I didnt walk out the door expecting to see a tornado anyway. Walked out the door at approx 11:30, walked back in at approx 7pm. So thats how it went.
Looks like I might doing this all over again here this weekend or next week even.
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EDIT: Norman Dome 5,534,349,589,358 Tornadoes 0
"I see, the blood all over your hands
Does it make you feel, more like a man?
Was it all, just a part of your plan
The pistol's shaking in my hands and all I hear is the sound
I love you, I hate you, I can’t live without you
I breathe you, I taste you, I can't live without you
I just can't take anymore, this life of solitude
I guess that I'm out the door and now I'm done with you"
I did a brief damage survey this evening and IMHO it looks like we had some straight line winds but I could find no evidence of any tornadoes. Damage consisted of a few uprooted trees, a few flattened signs, some large hay bails tossed about, a demolished horse barn and part of a metal roof torn off of a church. While the debris was blown all in the same direction it appeared that the damage path was very narrow, only about 100yards wide, and along a straight line.
http://www.convectionconnection.com/CHASE-033006/
Aaron
http://weather.ou.edu/~nwilson/chasing/mar3006/mar3006c.jpg
Overall it was a fun chase, but the event definitely did not live up to the PDS hype. Early initiation, backed winds aloft and too many storms fighting for inflow definitely limited the action today - but it was nice to see supercells with some structure, lightning and heavy rain (we managed to avoid the hail). AND its only March...errr for one more day!
A couple of my best pictures of the afternoon: http://weather.ou.edu/~nwilson/chasing/mar3006/
Stayed back for a while watching an unorganized, sloppy mess get going all around me here in NE Nebraska. When some storms began to take on severe characteristics and went tor warned, I was on the road to intercept.
Observed today was a nice gust front/shelf cloud with non-rotating lowerings and some eddies that were deceptively swirling about. Once in the beast, (moving from the northwest to south you had no choice but to get in there, plus when I was arriving coverage was increasing remarkedly), I got hit by extimated 50-55 MPH winds with higher gusts -- tumbleweeds were flying on and over my car like crazy. CGs were not very constant with these cells up here, however, there was some nice CCs intermixed.
Hitting the core was like entering a waterfall with torrential rains and possibly some pea hail, but the rain/wind combination brought visibility down to just in front of the hood of my Explorer.
I intended to chase further, but after encountering this cell, everything went to a stratiform heavy rain mess, and there was nothing more with any semblance of structure to see so I went home.
Am I dissapointed? Not at all. As a storm chaser, I chase storms, and was thrilled to start off the season with a great show of convection. No tornadoes, no severe hail, lots of lightning, strong marginally severe winds -- I wont call that a bust by any means -- I call it the season opener. Here's a toast to the rest of the season.
Got video of the core and the gust front and non rotating lowerings -- will see if anything worth showing here later. Fun day!
My girlfriend, who works at InfoUSA in Papillion, claims the building might have been hit on the SE corner of the building by this tornado. She gave me all the characteristics of a tornado (debris cloud, sounds like a fright train, etc..). The damage looks insignificant, but there were obvious signs of fatique and cracks in the foundation of the building.
I have my doubts that it may have been a true tornado. If there was, it would have been impossible to see with the large amount of precip. The ornado would have ben rainwrapped.
No pictures... camera battery is dead. :(
Pics coming within 30 mins or so. Hopefully I'll calm down a bit.
---------------------------
Here are the vid caps:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v143/mikeperegrine/SavannahTor3.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v143/mikeperegrine/SavannahTor1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v143/mikeperegrine/SavannahTor2.jpg
Damage photos and more explanation on this storm can be found: http://www.stormtrack.org/forum/index.php?showtopic=10796
One more quick note ... I gave the nuttiest report to EAX tonight I've ever given, but they called the tornado warning immediately ... which was cool. These were taken as the tornado was moving across the top of that ridge ... I was actually not in any real danger as it was moving more north than east at the time, but it did cross the road I had been on not more than a minute before. Tor was moving fast - - - I'd say around 50 mph or so at the time.
EDIT - damage reports now coming in from two miles north of Savannah ... ambulances were called, a silo rolled in a ball ... and the road that I barely escaped from is closed with telephone polls and trees across it. If I had been one minute later on that road, I wouldn't be writing this right now.
EDIT 2 - I'm getting a little more shaken up ... there are now multiple injuries reported on this tornado. I honestly tried my best to get traffic going northbound on 71 to stop, but the cars kept going and now I'm getting upset because I know they were driving right into this. It sounds like the injuries so far were minor. 4 homes were destroyed or damaged, however.
I left Wichita around 11am and targeted the storms moving up from NW OK that were beginning to show signs of maturing on radar. I was eventually greeted by the storm about 15-20 miles SW of ICT. My first reaction was to notice the huge beaver tail that was feeding into the storm from the S. Over the next 10-15 minutes the storm seemed to rapidly strengthen both in person and on radar and it quickly became svr warned. Eventually, I managed to get a up close look at a lowering that seemed to pretty rapidly develop, observed some fairly strong rotation for 5 minutes or so and was pretty sure I would hear a tornado warning coming over the radio but to no avail. The rotation abruptly stopped over the next few min, I have a feeling the storm over S Sedgwick county at the time which was strengthening played a role in limited inflow into our main storm at the time. I decided to target the storm down by Clearwater that was over 60dbz on radar now. I managed to get into West Wichita near the airport when I began to encounter some pretty large hail, over the radio I heard a report of near to over golfball sized at the airport so I immedietly found a carwash and took cover as the area was slammed by near golf-ball sized hail. I let the storm pass on to my NE and was able to capture some great structure shots on the back of the storm. I eventually followed the storm all the way into Marion county without much luck. I decided the storms to my SE were moving to rapidly and I decided to head back west for the tornado warned line of storms out near Hutchinson. I arrived in Newton and headed just west of town and observed a pretty organized slowly-rotating wall cloud that persisted for a good 20 minutes but failed to produce. I called it a day after this and headed home.
Ready for some slower-moving sups tomorrow..
Initially targetted Hebron NE out of Lincoln, but ended up doing as many others did, chasing the tor warned cell from Concordia toward Beatrice. Saw a decaying wall cloud with possible funnel in a cell before this and farther to the Northwest, but was really not that impressive. When we finally got ahead of the targetted cell, stopped for about 2 minutes and took pictures of a wall cloud with weak rotation present SW of Beatrice. RFD QUICKLY flew in on us as it was in the process of rapidly bowing out. The road network to the east of US77 was weak so we were basically screwed. Pulled into a pasture to take the full onslaught of the storm. Saw ~8 in. diameter tree branches fall close in front of the car ( the 70 mph wind estimate from OAX was actually called in by me) as we took ~ golfball sized hail. Most of the stones were smaller, but there was one right next to my car door that was up to that size. I was seriously thinking my car windows were going out, but got lucky. It was an exciting chase, but without tornadoes. Congrats to those who had better luck today.
I have this picture (http://weather.ou.edu/~nwilson/chasing/mar3006/mar3006d.jpg) on video
I ended up catching up to a cell coming into Wilson county and got these pics as it dropped east of Buffalo, Ks.
http://stormdriven.com/cblog/uploads/0330061901.jpg
http://stormdriven.com/cblog/uploads/0330061902.jpg
http://stormdriven.com/cblog/uploads/0330061904.jpg
http://stormdriven.com/cblog/uploads/0330061906.jpg
More are on the blog (http://stormdriven.com/cblog/index.php?/archives/11-March-30th-2006-Wilson-Co.-KS..html)
I'll add some video tonight or tomorrow
I witnessed cells firing to my west and east all day, but was confined to work all day. At one point one of the cells to the east started showing organization and there was visible circulation in the mid levels at least.
The one cell that did completely roll on us was part of that line that was tor. warned in Concordia. By the time it got to Beatrice it had turned into a grungy bow beast. The shelf cloud that came rolling over had some interesting motions to it. At one point there appeared to be some rotation to an especially lowered portion, but I can't verify. As the storm rolled over Beatrice it started off with light rain, lightning, and the ominous green sky. I gave my co-workers an off-hand estimate of nickel size for the largest stones and was proven right a few seconds later. The light rain and hail turned to a blinding deluge that was driven by 70 MPH gusts according to OAX. I can't verify that because I could not see out any windows at work during the time, but I would believe it.
I really wish I could have snagged pictures of the shelf cloud as it came roaring into town. It really was grungy.
Later in the afternoon I got bored while the dry slot was rolling over Nebraska, so I decided to try my hand at some photography. I wanted to capture the storms on the western edge of the slot as they rolled over town, but the whole system was cranking east at about 60 MPH at least (I was doing 60 and it was overtaking me). I did manage to snag a shot of a supercell to my southeast (somewhere in Kansas) by the shot came out as a blurry mess. I did get a shot of the line just a little farther north of it. I also got a picture of the storm on the western edge of the dry slot as it started passing overhead.
Photography from the day may be found at: http://www.thespiralingshape.org/img/wx/060330/
Nothing of MikeH quality, but then, what is?
EDIT*** Confirmation of an F0 Tornado in Papillion, NE by OAX. Tracked right through my neighborhood.
Thanks much to Peggy for nowcasting!
http://www.twistersisters.com/images/033006/metz_033006_01.jpg
http://www.twistersisters.com/images/033006/metz_033006_03.jpg
http://www.twistersisters.com/images/033006/metz_033006_04.jpg
http://www.twistersisters.com/images/033006/metz_033006_06.jpg
http://www.twistersisters.com/images/033006/metz_033006_02.jpg
http://www.twistersisters.com/images/033006/metz_033006_05.jpg
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