Shane Adams
Now that the 2005 season is finally ending (calendar says so, somehow I think the 2005 climo itself would still argue) it's time to relfect on the year and think ahead to next year. I think the most important thing learned in 2005 was a season can be made or broken by a single week. Even though 2005 will go down as the year that was saved by early June, there were a number of other good chase events throughout the season. Photogenic tornadoes were to be had consistently throughout the Spring. A glance at the Storms of 2005 menu shows this, with events from March, April, May and into June. Some of the most significant events early on were cold core setups, which proved difficult for a lot of us, while others excelled. May was the dead zone of 2005, but provided perhaps the most talked about chase event of the year - South Plains, TX, which will be remembered more for its gorilla hail then the tornadoes (though these were spectacular too). As for the best tornado event of the season, that will probably always be debated, between June 9 and June 12. The past few years have seen early June come back to life in the Southern Plains, something we'd not seen in several years prior. Overall, I think 2005 was an average year. My personal 2005 numbers stand thus:
CHASES - 23
MILES - 13,079
TORNADOES - 9
TORNADO DAYS - 4
SUCCESS RATIO - 1 in 5.8
AVERAGE CHASE DISTANCE - 567 miles
STATES CHASED - KS,NE,OK,TX
Now we look forward to 2006. I'll not waste any time here - I'm very concerned about the S Plains potential in 2006, because of this record-breaking drought we're in. The problem with a drought is, even when the pattern shifts back to normal or above normal precip, it takes time for the soil and other elements to recover. As others have pointed out, dry soil heats faster and thus we could be experiencing far more capped systems. Also, lack of surface moisture from saturated soil or "leftover" moisture near the ground will challenge any systems with decent return flow as far as depth of moisture. I hope it's still too early to worry and I'm just overreacting, but I get this sick feeling we may already be doomed before the season even arrives. Fortunately, chasing doesn't hing on the S Plains alone. Hopefully there will be some decent events as far south as Kansas (if the drought continues), and hopefully gas prices won't get out of hand too much, as it looks like we southern chasers will once again be making marathon journeys in all directions. Oh well, a tornado is a tornado, who cares if we don't get to eat in May or June
I'm interested to hear others' thoughts on the past year/coming year.
CHASES - 23
MILES - 13,079
TORNADOES - 9
TORNADO DAYS - 4
SUCCESS RATIO - 1 in 5.8
AVERAGE CHASE DISTANCE - 567 miles
STATES CHASED - KS,NE,OK,TX
Now we look forward to 2006. I'll not waste any time here - I'm very concerned about the S Plains potential in 2006, because of this record-breaking drought we're in. The problem with a drought is, even when the pattern shifts back to normal or above normal precip, it takes time for the soil and other elements to recover. As others have pointed out, dry soil heats faster and thus we could be experiencing far more capped systems. Also, lack of surface moisture from saturated soil or "leftover" moisture near the ground will challenge any systems with decent return flow as far as depth of moisture. I hope it's still too early to worry and I'm just overreacting, but I get this sick feeling we may already be doomed before the season even arrives. Fortunately, chasing doesn't hing on the S Plains alone. Hopefully there will be some decent events as far south as Kansas (if the drought continues), and hopefully gas prices won't get out of hand too much, as it looks like we southern chasers will once again be making marathon journeys in all directions. Oh well, a tornado is a tornado, who cares if we don't get to eat in May or June

I'm interested to hear others' thoughts on the past year/coming year.