Marcus Diaz
EF5
Lots of supercells on radar this day. Curious to see what all the other storms did. James Siler and I were close to home and chased the storm that was south of Memphis, TX. The storm took on supercellular characteristics before shrinking away. After that we tried catching the storm that moved south of Paducah towards Crowell before it too died off, so we ate in Childress and came home. We went into the area and reported baseball sized hail SW of Memphis. The hail pic was from an earlier point where it was mostly tennis ball sized. Overall not a bad little panhandle day.
Also I was wondering if y'all could help me out identifying this feature in this video. Since the storm was sitting over HWY 287, we opted to stay north of the storm until it moved on. So we stopped just on the northern outskirts of Memphis when I saw this. It was north of the main updraft base (seen to the far right) and was weakly rotating. About the time this feature looked the best (@ 5:22 pm), we had a ground circulation just in front of us. At the time I thought maybe it was a hybrid landspout/gustnado that quickly spun up. But I'd like some professional opinions on what it might be. Note that I'm using a 0.43x wide angle lens, so the circulation looks far away, but was literally almost overhead.
Watch video >



Also I was wondering if y'all could help me out identifying this feature in this video. Since the storm was sitting over HWY 287, we opted to stay north of the storm until it moved on. So we stopped just on the northern outskirts of Memphis when I saw this. It was north of the main updraft base (seen to the far right) and was weakly rotating. About the time this feature looked the best (@ 5:22 pm), we had a ground circulation just in front of us. At the time I thought maybe it was a hybrid landspout/gustnado that quickly spun up. But I'd like some professional opinions on what it might be. Note that I'm using a 0.43x wide angle lens, so the circulation looks far away, but was literally almost overhead.
Watch video >