It’s never a good day when tornadoes happen so close to the Oklahoma City metro area and today was one of those days. And May 24th brought a High Risk across the region as issued by the Storm Prediction Center.
A dryline punching into central Oklahoma along with rich boundary layer moisture across the region was sure to bring supercells to central Oklahoma, and that it did.
As expected, storms exploded across western to central Oklahoma and tornado reports were coming on many of these storms. We had set up initially just west of El Reno. We watched as a small cumulus cloud rapidly developed into one of the monstrous supercells that Oklahoma is known for.
It didn’t take long and we had our first tornado of the day. Due to the high precipitation mode of today’s storms, the tornadoes we saw were not easily photographed.
We followed the storm, taking a path to avoid heavy traffic in the Oklahoma City metro area to Piedmont, Oklahoma and then to the east to Stillwater.
Once the line of storms crossed Interstate-35, they began to move into Osage County, which is one of the most difficult areas of Oklahoma to chase storms in due to hilly terrain and trees. Because of the area the storms were moving into as daylight was becoming short, we let them go.
We prefer to chase storms over open country and never like chasing close to Oklahoma City. Unfortunately, there was extensive damage along Interstate-40 near El Reno and to many other areas of Oklahoma today.
A fun day of storm chasing in Nebraska. Our storm chasing tour group witnessed a large tornado-warned storm that lasted for several hours. It was a great day for the photographers on the tour with deep storm structure, lightning, and mammatus. We were a bit late to see the first tornado from this HP supercell near North Platte. By the time we arrived, it was cycling, with several occlusions occurring before it finally cycled and produced a fairly stout, low contrast, partially rain-wrapped tornado. A second small and brief tornado occurred after the first one wrapped completely in rain. Fun day, even though we were a bit too late for the most photogenic tornado of the day.
An interesting day unfolded in Baca County, Colorado with one of the most photogenic tornadoes of the year, if not the past decade. We started the day in Wichita, Kansas where after a morning briefing we were focused on two potential areas of severe weather development for the afternoon. The first target area was in the Texas Panhandle, the second was in southeastern Colorado. The two target areas were not far from each other, but far enough that if you pick the wrong one, you wouldn’t have enough time to get to the other. We headed west to Dodge City where it was decided we would make a final decision on the day’s target area.
At 3:05 p.m., the Storm Prediction Center issued Severe Thunderstorm Watch #238 (not the tornado watch we were hoping for) to the dismay of many frowning storm chasers in our group. I remained optimistic about the “upslope magic” of eastern Colorado and the Raton Mesa, and as such I determined that the Colorado target area was our focus. We left Dodge City and continued west towards the Kansas/Colorado border with Baca County being our intended target.
The fastest route to Baca County would take us through the Cimarron National Grassland in southwest Kansas, a grassland of few roads. As we arrived in Elkhart, a small “blip” appeared on radar in our target area. After a quick stop at a convenience store, I took over driving duties and proceeded north on Highway 27, and then turned west on Kansas Highway 51 which would turn into a dirt road once we crossed into Colorado in just a few miles.
The base of the small storm started to come into our view and I could see that while it was a small storm, it did have a large lowering. This little storm was trying! When we arrived at highway 287 just north of Campo, Colorado we pulled over and watched the south-southeast traveling storm come to us.
Within a half hour, the wall cloud was directly above us, no longer from our (beneath the base) perspective did it have a lowering look to it, but it did for those who had a distant perspective. The wall cloud was intensely active with a lot of horizontal and vertical motion, my excitement level began to grow. But, I wanted to get ahead of the storm in case it did tornado, so that our group would have a safe location to view it from, for as long as possible, without having to constantly be on the move.
Back in the van, we quickly traveled south when from the back of the van I heard, “Tornado!” I turned my head to the right and without a doubt, we had a confirmed tornado moving along beside us. We stopped quickly to get a few photos, and then proceeded further south as the tornado crossed Highway 287 within a mile behind us.
Once we gained some distance, I pulled over again, and we spent the next 20-minutes in complete awe as we watched this perfect tornado that appeared as if it literally jumped off the big screen straight out of the Wizard of Oz spinning its way through open country right in front of our eyes. It was an absolutely incredible day that at first appeared dismal with a rather weak meteorological setup and no issue of a tornado watch that turned into pure Colorado magic!
We ended the day with a brief tornado in the Oklahoma Panhandle as the same supercell crossed over the border. One day with tornado interceptions in two states! One for the log books!