What's new? Photos, videos, analysis and more

Store test 1 0

Store test 1

Product details: Size: 8×10, 5×7 or 4×6 Price: $25.00 [wp_cart_button name=”Test Product” price=”25.00″ var1=”Size|8×10|5×7|4×6″ var2=”Frame options|frame|no-frame”] [show_wp_shopping_cart]

0

International Border

Storm chasing prospects today are north, near or possibly north of the international border with Canada, as a climatologically significant setup targets the area. As upper level energy pivots east from southwestern Canada, a...

0

Southeastern Nebraska: June 11, 2018

I started the day focused on southeastern Nebraska with the potential for a few tornadic supercells. By mid-afternoon, storms in northeastern Nebraska started to rotate fairly quickly, but I wanted to hold off for...

0

Montana Mammatus: June 8, 2018

This chase day was all over the map. I started in central South Dakota, as I was leaning toward targeting a warm front somewhere in the vicinity of southwestern Minnesota, but kept options farther...

0

Drifting Back to Oklahoma

Today’s severe weather setup drifts back toward Oklahoma. The surface setup features an area of low pressure over the Oklahoma/Texas panhandles, which will be moving slowly eastward through the day. South of the low...

0

Uncertain Prospects

Usually by early afternoon on a storm chase, I have a fairly good idea about where I’m going. It’s not always a slam dunk, but usually there’s a target in mind and reasonable confidence...

0

Modifying Outflow

An outflow boundary is draped from near the Red River in southern Oklahoma, northwestward into the eastern portion of the Texas panhandle this morning. Ongoing convection in central to eastern Oklahoma will tend to...

0

Transient Supercells: May 23, 2018

Another panhandle chase, this time in the Nebraska panhandle, featured transient supercells, passing from northeastern Colorado into western/central Nebraska. Multiple isolated storms developed in northeastern Colorado during the afternoon, but it took some time...

0

Texas Panhandle Storms: May 18, 2018

The day started in Dodge City to keep multiple chase targets in range, but it became clear fairly quickly that I was going to favor the Oklahoma/Texas panhandles. The moist axis verified well and...

0

Similar Setup

The setup is similar to yesterday, with the only noteworthy differences being a slight eastward shift of a surface low and somewhat stronger mid and upper level forcing. The surface low should be positioned...

0

Wandering the High Plains

Today’s storm prospects are focusing in on eastern Colorado into southwestern Kansas, as an area of low pressure spins over the Front Range. Climatology says that northeastern Colorado is the tornado hotspot of this...

0

Cimarron County, Oklahoma: May 16, 2018

An isolated thunderstorm developed over the western portion of the Oklahoma Panhandle yesterday. While the thunderstorm was not particularly intense, it did moved fairly slowly, allowing for me to sit in one location and...

0

Fire-Induced Supercell: May 11, 2018

This was one of the most interesting chase days in my career and it seems fitting that it would happen in the Texas panhandle. Due to the variety of storms I’ve seen in the...

0

Nebraska Supercell: May 10, 2018

The “southern strategy” paid off on Thursday, as I chased a relatively isolated supercell from far northeastern Colorado into southwestern Nebraska. Around mid-afternoon, multiple thunderstorms developed in the northeastern Colorado vicinity, but it took...

0

Panhandle of the North

As May carries on, poleward moisture transport is beginning to support storm chases farther north. Although it’s not completely unheard-of, it is still a bit early (climatologically speaking) to be chasing in the Nebraska...