• While Stormtrack has discontinued its hosting of SpotterNetwork support on the forums, keep in mind that support for SpotterNetwork issues is available by emailing [email protected].

2015-03-19 REPORTS: TX/OK

Joined
Oct 31, 2013
Messages
509
Location
Eastern TX Panhandle
A nice little first chase of the season. Was originally targeting Archer City, but I left the house a bit late and decided to just head down to Seymour after looking at data in Vernon and briefly meeting James Gustina and his friends. Good clearing along with CAPE of 1,000 or so peaked my interest down in that area. Saw the towers going up to my east (archer City storms) but decided to stick with my guns further west. Got gas in Seymour and waited around a few minutes until storms fired to the NW of Seymour. Headed north and found a decent spot at Lake Kemp where Marcus Diaz and Jeremy Perez among a few others were watching the storm. Watched it a few minutes until it finally became outflow dominant after crossing the warm front. Made my way home, and it felt great to finally get out!!!

Storms firing east of Seymour, TX


Jeremy Perez getting the shot of a storm near Lake Kemp, TX (north of Seymour, TX)


Marcus Diaz and his buddies enjoying the first chase of the year


Decent supercell structures on storm near Lake Kemp, TX (north of Seymour, TX)


Parting shot looking east from Lake Kemp as I head home
 
Yep. A lot of disorganized cells obscured with a lot of scattered low-level clouds. But it was a start. I got 2 different weak time lapse storm builds but haven't even bothered to pull them off the camera because the clouds kept getting in the way and I wasn't impressed. Seems like 4g cellular coverage in that same area (as above) is a bit better since last season, though.
 
Great little first chase of the season! We initially targeted Wichita Falls with the intention of redirecting from there. As we came into town we checked in with our nowcaster and had to decide between storms directly to our south near Archer City and those more West towards Seymour. We elected to to head to Archer City. Storms near town were pulsing up and down as we arrived and the northwest storms seemed much stronger. However, we felt the northern storms were a bit too close to the cold front and likely were or soon to be elevated. We also felt the southern storms would be able to tap into the surface heating from the clearing just to our south. We headed East out of town on 25 as our two storms started to get their act together. We had two distinct wall clouds without much rotation for a while. Low level storm structure was beautiful with several curling rain feet dropping out of the southern storm. The storms seemed to merge as the southern one became more dominate. At this point we had a very organized and rapidly spinning small wall cloud. Just as the excitement started ramping up however the cold crashed in and undercut our storm, ruining the party. All in all a very fun chase and a great way to start off the year. Pics and time lapse to come when I have some time. :)
 
Not much to this event. I was hoping to try out a new camera/video but this is about all I got. I was in the area anyway and it was a way to kill time as much as anything else but was hoping for a few discreet storm cells but did not feel like following these what with all the other scattered cloud cover across the entire region.

12 second interval
 
Not a bad day. I chased with @Tyler Hudson and @Mark Eslick this day. We met in Childress and drove east towards Vernon. After filling up we planned to wait outside of town for initiation, but it already happened. Thanks to a call from @James Gustina we drove south towards Seymour where small precip blips on radar popped up. We sat near Lake Kemp to watch the storm slowly creep our way. We were joined by Bobby Hines, @Jeremy Perez, and @Jason Boggs where we watched the storm intensify for a few minutes before being undercut by the cold front. After re-positioning east west of Holliday to observe the storm fully undercut, we decided to try to catch up to the storm near Windthorst. By the time we got to just west of Postpak, TX, it was evident that our storm was starting to feel the wrath of the cold front. The storm took on a cold look, and looked like crap. We ended the day with Chicken Express in Jacksboro before driving back home.

March 19, 2015 Gallery

These two pics were taken near Lake Kemp, TX:

full

[
full


This was taken west of Postpak, TX on highway 148:

full
 
Here is the map that I put together from the chase. I used the random keepings that my USB GPS was able to track, and compased this map the best i could. Thanks to @Marcus Diaz for letting @Tyler Hudson and I tag along. Definitely would like to get some more storms with him.
 

Attachments

  • map.png
    map.png
    99 KB · Views: 123
This was a chase-of-opportunity with my kids while visiting family in western Oklahoma. Before heading out, I brewed up my traditional personal estimate for success for the day:
• Thunderstorms 75%
• Transient Structure 50%
• Supercell 15%
• Rotating Wall/Funnel 5%
• Tornado 1%.

I got a late start getting out of the fog and drizzle of Elk City and got to my target in Vernon by 20Z — about an hour later than I wanted to. It was nice to see clearing and bubbling cumulus to the south. After fueling up and messing around with the latest data for too long, we headed further south into the clear and near the junction of Hwy 183 and 277 by 21Z. There were two areas of initiation at this point: some early development to my northwest north of Seymour, and a more mature cell near Archer City. The Archer City tower looked great, but I opted for the Seymour target since it didn’t involve playing catch-up, and being closer to the triple point, I thought it might have a better fetch of backed surface winds. The problem with this is that the western target was also further north and so was first to greet the cold front. It also got to choke on stable inflow from the Archer City storm. (click images for larger versions)

My daughter checking out the Archer City tower — 2110Z


Until it got wiped out though, it was a nice early-season chase. After grabbing a few shots of that tower to the east, we drove back north to watch the inbound Seymour storms. At an overlook east of Lake Kemp I met @Marcus Diaz, @Jason Boggs, Bobby Hines, @Mark Eslick, and @Tyler Hudson We shared the views for a while as the convection gained strength and developed some structure. As the forward flank gust front finally started spitting rain on us, we hopped in our cars and headed our separate ways. Road options were pretty scarce, and we had to get a ways south of the storm before getting back east on Hwy 277 to get ahead of it.

Some structure on the developing cell near Lake Kemp — 2150Z



Marcus Diaz, Mark Eslick, Tyler Hudson and Jason Boggs check out radar and the storm base east of Lake Kemp — 2151Z



Encroaching outflow — 2204Z


A north option on SR 25 put us in a spot to look into a beautifully sculpted vault with a lengthy arcus/inflow tail spanning the sky and racing into the storm base. As the forward flank started gusting toward us, we cruised back south to get out of the way.

Storm base and pump jack from SR 25 — 2242Z


Terraced vault with arcus/inflow tail racing westward from SR 25 — 2247Z


Arcus and shelf gusting southward along SR 25 — 2247Z


Heading south, I wondered why truck traffic was backed up. Turns out a chaser had a yellow vehicle parked partway into the southbound lane and placing his body even further into the lane. So the trucks were waiting their turn to safely pull into the opposing lane to get around him as he waved people around. There were plenty of great pull-offs on this road—I used a couple of them. And the grass shoulder was huge and in good shape too, so there was no reason for treating the shoulder and pull out areas like hot lava. It was really really frustrating and embarrassing. I needed to get ahead of the gust front and didn’t have time stop and attempt a chaser-101 with him, or get a good read of the decals on the vehicle.

Chaser obstruction — 2249Z


The storm was pretty strung out at this point but still dishing out some interesting sights. We got further east to Holliday and noticed a bell shaped lowering. It appeared to be a new updraft trying to forming well to the east of the base I had been watching, and it had what appeared to be a bit of RFD curling in and lowering a wall cloud/RFD shelf around itself before gusting out and merging with the forward flank.

Transient updraft/lowering seen west of Holliday — 2305Z


After that, we bailed out on the storm and headed south for some views of the other storm as it approached Bowie. We got a look at the back of the storm and its upswept flanking line before calling that one off too in some beautiful country.

Backside view of the other storm approaching Bowie — 2349Z
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top