Short version: Thanks to the chaser/spotter network I was able to join up in IML with some friends, Mick McGuire and Dave Floyd. The highlights of the afternoon were in seeing no other chasers (apart from ourselves), and watching two tornadoes (longest persisted for ~17 min) with residual snowdrifts scattered about the landscape.
Long Version: Based on the now bountiful mesonet data that exists across the tri-state region, we were able to resolve and target what we perceived to be a triple-point in northeast Colorado. After sitting still in IML for two + hours, to better pass the time we traveled west to Colorado to find the sfc baroclinic zone. We reached the bndry ~ 4 miles west of Holyoke. As a band of low-topped storms moved northwest toward us, we saw the following rain free base with an awful lot of cloud base motion and said to ourselves, “What the hell is that!?!†The view in the following shot is to the SSE at a range to the rain free base of ~15 miles.
http://www.stormeyes.org/pietrycha/tmp/delete/070324hyk4.jpg
We quickly expedited south out of Holyoke on U.S. HWY 385 driving through a thin rain core. While in the core we could see to our south an elephant trunk shaped condensation funnel. The funnel extended 2/3 toward the sfc and persisted ~2 min. As the funnel dissipated, a new slender (rope) funnel formed immediately adjacent to the previous funnel. The rope extended completely to the ground and persisted ~ 1 min (our distance away from the tornado at that point and time was ~3 miles and rapidly closing). By the time we cleared the rain core and could obtain a stationary photo, all that was left was the parent circulation with rapid rain curtains. In the following picture the view is to the west with a camera distance from the occlusion of ~ 2 miles, three miles south of the Yuma/Phillips Cnty line. Note the occlusion, per the clear slot.
http://www.stormeyes.org/pietrycha/tmp/delete/070324hyk3.jpg
We then headed north on HWY 385 back to Holyoke, to picket fence the line of updrafts as they crossed the sfc baroclinic zone. From our moving vantage points, there was a 45-minute period were every updraft and attendant wall cloud we could see spun like a top and / or produced well developed funnel clouds. Unfortunately we had to get right in the action given the low contrast conditions. LCLs were ridiculously low compared to what one typically finds in eastern Colorado, against dense rain cores.
Around 2215 UTC our second tornado developed ~2 miles southeast of Holyoke; multi-vortex in appearance as thin condensation funnels rotated along the periphery of the tornado cyclone. In the following picture the vortex is ~1.5 miles to our south. The view is to the south. Note the low LCL (this is the HPlains of Colorado, afterall).
http://www.stormeyes.org/pietrycha/tmp/delete/070324hyk1.jpg
The tornado traveled north and moved ~ 1 mile east of Holyoke. As the tornado moved north toward CO HWY 23, the then multiple vortex tornado showered the area around Mick and I with vegetative debris. The rapid merry-go-round cloud base motion was a real treat! We had to shifted our position east ½ mile to get out of the way as the tornado crossed HWY 23. North of HWY 23 the tornado consolidated into a rather quiescent appearing condensation funnel. This next picture is looking NNW at a range of ~ 5 miles to the tornado.
http://www.stormeyes.org/pietrycha/tmp/delete/070324hyk2.jpg
The life span of the tornado was around 17 min long.
A third tornado was reported north of Amherst, Colorado. We never could confirm that report yet we could clearly see a well developed, though pencil thin, funnel cloud extend ½ to the sfc, 2 or 3 miles north of Amherst, then ~ 5 miles to our northeast. I think the public tor reports north of Amherst were bogus as funnel cloud ½ to the sfc doesn’t = tornado.
We then moved into Nebraska to intercept the “warm sector’ storms. The storms were complete trash. OFD, high based junk they were, which may have been a byproduct to some degree of the overnight MCS devouring what little PBL juice there was at that time across northwest Kansas .
--Al Pietrycha (an OF to most of you now on here)
P.S. Hard lesson learned by me = don't shoot in ISO 100 unless there's really bright back or front lighting.