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2011-05-18 REPORTS: CO / KS / OK

Joined
Dec 9, 2003
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Oklahoma
Sat in El Reno much of the day, feasting on visions of tornadoes moving slowly across the area. The forecast was for strong low-level shear, beautiful low-level hodographs, and decent instability. I'm still not sure the cirrus really inhibited heating much, considering the time that the thicker cirrus moved over the area. The Oklahoma warm sector was near the ridge axis much of the day, and, being in the right exit region of the upper-level jet streak, the background synoptic field wasn't particularly conducive. Six o'clock magic didn't do anything. Noting that all the Cu had essentially disappeared, with only a few very flat cu (cumulus humilis) remaining, we opted to call it quits and head back to OUN.
 
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2011-05-1 REPORTS: CO

I pretty much had abandoned all hope of convective initiation in SE CO, but resolved to stay put until after the 5pm hour (superstition). Since the ST revamp, I just got back the chance to post in Target Area, so I'll defer to my forecast for today on my blog (http://stormdoctor.blogspot.com/). Ultimately I landed in La Junta, CO, and recognized I had no chance whatsoever to get down to OK anyway. I passed the time reading a book, and then suddenly storms erupted directly to my west.

Short: Cyclic single-tornado producing classic supercell

Long: From the get-go, a single cell on the eastern fringe of Pueblo Cty took on very characteristic visual cues that it would rapidly become severe and likely would sustain itself. This particular cell had unimpeded 25kt easterly winds and was rapidly consuming cells forming to its west and one cell to its south. As it did so, despite 30+ deg dew point depressions, the cell developed impressive laminar-appearing inflow bands from the south (which I suspect were actually failed updrafts) and a classic midlevel feeder band from the east and the LCLs began dropping immediately.

What was impressive was how rapidly this all occurred. The cell went from CI to classic supercell within an hour. The storm entered a perfect steady state and pulsed only a few times before it began to show visual cues of splitting. An RFD cut could be seen splitting the updraft as I proceeded north on CO 109.

As the RFD cut tightened the circulation on the northern-appearing split, massive amounts of hail began falling from the southern circulation. I still had internet access, so reported the hail (which varied from dime-to-nickel size, but managed to cause immediate hail fog). On radar the cell looked single cellular, but visually there were two updraft bases with the northerly one persistently with the stronger midlevel feeders.

Getting through the hail at 2330z, I managed to get under the northern cell's rain free base and for a short time got to enjoy warm easterly winds. By 2350z, the southern cell pulsed visually and formed a pretty impressive high based wall cloud. At first I thought this was due to outflow from the RFD cut, but got a terrific vantage to see the storm develop a brisk easterly sfc-level inflow jet. This was unmistakable, as was the westerly winds coming from the back of the cell from the RFD (which itself set off a westerly inflow jet/outflow boundary).

I was approximately 5 miles WSW of Arlington on US 96 when the southerly storm developed sfc-level rotation under the wall cloud. At 2355z I was confident I wasn't looking at a gustnado, and data on radar suggested significant rotation at all levels, so I felt confident that this was a true mesocyclone storm tornado.

The tornado stayed over open land only 1 mile south of me, and it remained stationary under the southern updraft, but then obtained a brief dual vortex (both appeared slowly rotating and nonviolent), and the two vortices briefly "danced" around each other before the tornado dissipated at 0000z exactly. This was the only definite tornado I witnessed today, and it wasn't particularly pretty, but man did it feel nice to have a forecast verify when I had all but given up on the day.

By that time, the southern cell became undercut by very cold outflow from the RFD and remained undercut for the remainder of the subsequent hours. The northern cell rapidly became the dominant cell but was outflow dominant and only rarely re-ingested easterly wind. The cells both put out astounding dusty outflow and had beautiful gust fronts while periodically the northerly cell would redevelop impressive inflow bands at the midlevels and would take on classic supercell characteristics.

The gustfronts were intense and frequently developed very low LCLs, occasionally being only maybe 100ft AGL, and once had me terrified I'd misinterpreted the storm visually and it was about to put down a tornado right next to me. But the cold westerly winds and the fact the rotation lacked inflow to the east left me pretty convinced that it was part of the gust front, it just was so damned close to the ground.

Because the motel I'm in has "wireless internet" that turns out not to provide any internet access at all, I'm having to use roaming on my cell phone as I write this, and I can't post the photos from today yet. I will addend this report tomorrow morning as soon as I find either an EVDO signal or a good WiFi network.

I'll note that the supercell was staggeringly the big show with the tornado being merely icing on the cake. Data network availability throughout Kiowa Cty still remains pretty spotty in places, but I was reasonably impressed today with the strange places I suddenly had terrific cellular signal (try County Road E west of Galatea--huh?).

Today also marked my first chase with my new digital SLR (the Canon T2i). Since I had the original Canon Digital Rebel SLR (from my parents in 2003), the advance in technology coupled with a pretty snazzy new Canon EFS 18-200mm...the photos are already just lightyears better even preprocessing. Can't wait to share them very soon.
 
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I also busted today. I waited a while in Wichita and later in Pratt trying to decide between the Oklahoma triple-point and Colorado targets. Finally, I chose an area just east of Woodward. I was happy to see cu as I crossed the boundary near the Kansas/Oklahoma state line and watched temperatures rapidly climb from the low 60's to 70's. The cumulus was rather flat in appearance and high-based. I stopped near the intersection of 281 and 412 and saw cirrus expand across the sky. I was considering shifting farther southeast but then noticed an area of agitated cu to my immediate southwest. It slowly developed into a narrow high-based tower that vanished. I waited along with chasers Chris Kridler and Robert Balogh in Seiling. A small radar echo near Seiling had also vanished. We called it a day and headed north. At least we had really good barbecue ribs and brisket at the Smok-Shak in the remains of Ingersoll, OK (east of Alva). I am now in Pratt, KS.

I use a Verizon USB dongle and cradlepoint and despite an external antenna, I had no internet from Alva south to Seiling.


An area of agitated cumulus at 3:39 PM SW of the intersection of 412 and 281
http://www.harkphoto...51811cu1539.jpg

Same formation at 4:37PM
http://www.harkphoto...11tower1637.jpg

It becomes this weird little narrow tower by 5:11PM
http://www.harkphoto...11tower1711.jpg

The tower is almost gone. It is just this little dark smudge over Chris' head by 5:28
http://www.harkphoto...kridler1728.jpg

Ribs and beef brisket, yum!
http://www.harkphoto...1811dinner2.jpg


Bill Hark
 
My wife and I again headed out from Denver toward the southeast CO/KS border area, thinking that if anything was going to happen within day range it would happen down there to the northeast of the mesolow where 50 Td was pushing upslope behind stout 15 kt+ winds. As we were enduring the always-interminable Lamar traverse, the La Junta cell showed up. Not being one to easily learn from (yesterday's) experience I pushed ahead toward Springfield reasoning that if "it" was happening over there "it" was surely about to happen here where conditions seemed better.

Approaching Springfield it became clear -- as it were -- that any convection was being quickly squashed into stratified pancakes, and it was time to head back toward the La Junta origined cell, which was the only "it" of the day. Got to a nice vantage north of Eads on a side road in plenty of time for pictures of curious cows in the foreground and the by-this-time left-split/right-split pair entangled in a dance of crap pass just to our west. Being on the dynamically correct side of the jet seemed to rule today, too.
 
Hard to call today a chase, but ended up watching several funnels churn the skies over northern Denver from Tower Road and I-70. Didn't have a well contrasted view from that distance, but could easily see the rotation and funnels as they dipped out form beneath the insanely hail-producing storm. Witnessed some marginal cells later in the day from Bennett as temperatures started to cool. Ended up producing a nice shelf cloud as it moved by.
 
I have photos of the tornado and immediate mesoscale environment up on my blog here:

http://stormdoctor.b...-supercell.html

I still have a lot of image processing to do, but the tornado pix and structure shots at least work now for documentation purposes.

Here was the southern split described above with clear inflow jet to the east and RFD/OFB to the west.

MesoscaleEnvironment0005z.JPG


Pictures of the tornado (not spectacular). Note that the ground rotation actually had swirl about 1/3-1/2 the way up to the funnel shown above. All of the photos have been only marginally adjusted due to exhaustion, and need for sleep.

TorTouchdown1.JPG


Tornado2.JPG


All of the above photos were between 2355z to 0005z and were taken facing due south 5 miles WSW of Arlington, CO on US 96. More structure shots and my favorite photos from the day sometime else.
 
Chased the southern target here in CO. More than enough shear was in place, but cells that did fire struggled to maintain due to a lack of instability. Ultimately we had one major show, and Jason's post above describes it well. I did, however, manage to miss the visual on the spout as I was moving to another location at the time. I saw the dirt plumes coming in from opposing directions as I was driving, but must have missed the other action on the ground. There was plenty of other structure and features to keep me excited on this chase as well!

Full write-up here: http://tornadotimmy.wordpress.com/2011/05/20/51811-report/
 
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