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2015-04-22 REPORTS: TX/OK

Joined
Dec 8, 2003
Messages
1,419
Location
Southeast CO
Here's a pic of the "Lockney (TX)" storm from east of it. I only wish the pic was better, because it does not do it justice (we debated trying to go somewhere else without the power poles, but there was no time!). I've been chasing awhile, and this, at this moment in time, was one of the top 3 or 4 jaw-dropping most gorgeous storms I have ever seen. A short time later it was completely different. I bet somebody else has a better pic. Maybe my chase partner from today... Bill Robertson.

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Started the day on the same HP Behemoth that tracked towards Happy. Bailed on that for the photogenic Floydata cell that produced the "tornado" near Lockney. I still remain skeptical of that, but did manage to witness the funnel from afar. Not a bad chase for a marginal setup.

Full log: http://www.aerostorms.com/april-22nd-texas-panhandle-supercells/

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Got on the main storm while it was still NW of Hereford. Saw my first possible tornado just north of Hereford as I watched a dust swirl move into a feed yard north of town. It lasted a minute or 2 (First picture below). Got to the SE of Hereford to see it try to wrap up over town. From there it was just trying not to get munched by it. Saw funnels a few other random times, but no clear tornadoes after that. I ended up bailing before most for the Lockney storm, because I needed gas and I knew there was a station there. Whoever was camped out at the gas pump checking the radar instead of moving away from the pump, it took all my strength not to honk at you for sitting there for so long. After filling up I bailed west right as the Lockney storm wrapped up. Heavy rain and hail forced me to dive south, which is right when the tornado dropped so it definitely limited my picture and video opportunity (3rd picture below).

Still working on the video, which should be uploaded tonight.

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EDIT: added photos and captions

Another frustrating chase.

Aimed for the Childress-Amarillo corridor. I wasn't too excited about the idea of having to go to damn near the New Mexico border, but I had a feeling forecasts of initiation there would verify. By the time we got to Childress it was clear the area I hoped to chase in (NW TX and SW OK) was going to remain capped despite some heating due to the presence of a cold pool from morning storms over OK. The accompanying OFB also served to limit or eliminate any southerly component to the winds with access to the good moisture farther south, thus keeping theta-e down and helping restrict any development in the area. We moved west towards Silverton as the "storm of the day" developed southwest of Amarillo. I found it humorous just how long that storm basically sat in one place. In the two hours we spent approaching it from the east, it moved probably no more than 15 miles eastward, staying in Deaf Smith County the whole time.

We came to our first observation point WNW of Happy along F.M. 168 just south of the Buffalo Lake National Wildlife Refuge. In retrospect, it might have been better if we had headed west out of Tulia towards Dimmitt then headed north instead of going north first. There's a pretty bad break in the road network in the area limiting east-west travel between U.S. 385 and 87 that we were unaware of until we got out there (first time chasing in that specific area). Regardless we had a very open view of the storm to our west as it finally began to pick up some forward speed and move southeast. We probably were there for over 30 minutes watching it push out a lot of dust and outflow along the southern edge with constant, sometimes very low, scud closer to the precip core. However, it never appeared to rotate at the low levels. Eventually we had to move to stay out of the core, and we were pretty much fleeing for the rest of the chase after that point.

The image below shows a summary of what we saw at this position. Apparently David Drummond was close enough that he saw a tornado somewhere in this at some point. I don't know when it was compared to my images, but it had to have been just a dust whirl. Although there were plenty of lowerings (some very low) I never saw anything obvious.
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The storm accelerated as it approached Happy, so we went more south than east to stay ahead of it. We ended up in Tulia, then headed back towards Silverton before diverting south on F.M. 378. Many miles south along that road we decided we'd had enough of messing with the storm - it was clear to us it was no longer a reasonable chase target since it was losing its supercellular characteristics and was more of a wind-blown hail threat than anything at that point. So we decided to let the flaring southwest flank of the storm overtake us. It was pretty uneventful.

Figuring the chase was over at that point, but having our easterly route home blocked by the storm, we meandered while waiting for a gap to open up over F.M. 97 to get off the caprock. We noticed the Plainview storm moving due east to our southwest, so we decided in the meantime to have a look at it. Zooming south on F.M. 378, we got around the core a few miles north of Lockney. What we saw disgusted us: it looked like a cold pool had already formed and was miles ahead of the precip core, as we could see scud rising in the shape of an arcus cloud into the updraft base well south of the edge of the core. We saw a snaky needle like scud tag, but perhaps someone thought that was a funnel cloud. idk, it was weak if anything. So we turned back around to head towards F.M. 97.

Upon reaching TX-207 the storm went tornado warned, so we detoured south towards Floydada. We got south in time to see some very cool supercell structure without any clouds around it just north of Floydada. We were looking into the region where a tornado would most likely be found if there was one, but it was getting dark and contrast was poor. We saw lots of lowerings/wall clouds, but could never make out any funnels or tornadoes, nor did we ever see any dust swirling around on the ground. This was right at the time Roger Hill dropped an SN report of a tornado. Apparently we were either too far away or just blind, idk. Couldn't have possibly been long lasting, fully condensed, or large. Anyway, the structure on that storm (which was not the storm I had previously called the storm of the day) ended up being the big reward on this chase. I only wish we had been 5-15 miles further east/southeast so to have gotten a wider view of the structure.

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The photo above is heavily processed to bring out some detail and contrast, and I'm very happy with how it turned out. I especially like that I was able to capture a visible manifestation of streamwise vorticity being ingested by the storm, evinced by the curling cumulus texture running with the beaver tail coming in from the left. It was visibly rotating, although not exactly quickly.

This was my second chase in a row in which the most rewarding storm occurred after 00Z and after I figured the chase day was effectively done because the main daytime storms were petering out or evolving upscale. At least we were close enough to this one to get to view it, but this kind of crap is getting very frustrating.

I may follow this post with pics. We'll see if I get around to it.
 
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Took this pic (contrast enhanced) at 536pm CDT SW of Canyon, TX, near FM 1705 and FM 1714 about 7 miles east of the Buffalo Lake Refuge. sw-of-canyon3_enhanced.jpg
It looked like rotation was trying to focus in the right-center part of the wall cloud at the time, and it also seemed like the cloud base descended toward the ground where the rotation briefly tightened. Other than that, I also spent the next couple hours trying to stay ahead of the SE-surging forward flank. Successfully managed to stay inside the hook from Happy through Tulia and east on TX-86, but got caught by the storm near TX-207 south of Silverton. Got a good view of what appeared to be a strongly rotating wall cloud at 724pm SW of Silverton looking NW from FM145, but could not tell if there was a surface reflection of that rotation.
 
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Even though this day was in the backyard, I was disapointed that first storm couldn't put down a solid tube at any point. It tried though, it really did. I noticed the RFD was constantly surging alongside the storm the entire time. It never really wrapped around unfortunately. But it was still a fun chase. First pic was southeast of Hereford when the storm was reorganizing.

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Then here's our view of the small tornado west of Lockney.

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Despite being only 2 miles south of the second tornado report, we didn't see anything. I suspect it was shrouded in the rain off to our northwest. Regardless, the structure at this point was awesome. We got too greedy looking for tornadoes when we should've been further south to get the structure.

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More pics from this day can be seen HERE
 
Pretty much the same story as everyone else. I left Austin around 6am and went straight to the I-27 corridor. Moved into position around Hereford and followed the storm to near Silverton where I bailed south and west to view the storm near Lockney. Viewed the brief tornado from here as well.
My GoPro footage should make a good time lapse if I ever get around to editing it. 42215c.jpg 42215b.jpg 42415a.jpg
 
I caught one storm near Silverton then dropped down to the "Lockney" storm near Floydada. I saw a few funnels but never saw anything solidly in contact with the ground with either storm.
 
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