Andy Wehrle
EF5
Nick Lorenz, Adrian Beymer and myself chased a severe thunderstorm complex with an embedded HP supercell from shortly after initiation southwest of Grinnell, IA.
The hoped-for discrete mode for at least an hour or two after initiation did not materialize. We watched it try to form a wall cloud several times but new cells would constantly go up to the south, and it quickly became an outflow-dominant cluster. The storms were also highly electrified, producing many close CGs, but it seemed like every time I would get out my video camera they would either stop or we would hit a stretch of trees along the road, so I was only able to get one good one on video.
We stayed just ahead of the complex as it produced significant severe hail and wind in the New Sharon/Pella/Eddyville/Oskaloosa region before breaking off the chase and heading north toward home as the complex turned to the southeast. We were treated to a beautiful mammatus display as the setting sun broke out behind the storms.

Near Pella:





Near Eddyville:




The hoped-for discrete mode for at least an hour or two after initiation did not materialize. We watched it try to form a wall cloud several times but new cells would constantly go up to the south, and it quickly became an outflow-dominant cluster. The storms were also highly electrified, producing many close CGs, but it seemed like every time I would get out my video camera they would either stop or we would hit a stretch of trees along the road, so I was only able to get one good one on video.
We stayed just ahead of the complex as it produced significant severe hail and wind in the New Sharon/Pella/Eddyville/Oskaloosa region before breaking off the chase and heading north toward home as the complex turned to the southeast. We were treated to a beautiful mammatus display as the setting sun broke out behind the storms.

Near Pella:





Near Eddyville:



