• After witnessing the continued decrease of involvement in the SpotterNetwork staff in serving SN members with troubleshooting issues recently, I have unilaterally decided to terminate the relationship between SpotterNetwork's support and Stormtrack. I have witnessed multiple users unable to receive support weeks after initiating help threads on the forum. I find this lack of response from SpotterNetwork officials disappointing and a failure to hold up their end of the agreement that was made years ago, before I took over management of this site. In my opinion, having Stormtrack users sit and wait for so long to receive help on SpotterNetwork issues on the Stormtrack forums reflects poorly not only on SpotterNetwork, but on Stormtrack and (by association) me as well. Since the issue has not been satisfactorily addressed, I no longer wish for the Stormtrack forum to be associated with SpotterNetwork.

    I apologize to those who continue to have issues with the service and continue to see their issues left unaddressed. Please understand that the connection between ST and SN was put in place long before I had any say over it. But now that I am the "captain of this ship," it is within my right (nay, duty) to make adjustments as I see necessary. Ending this relationship is such an adjustment.

    For those who continue to need help, I recommend navigating a web browswer to SpotterNetwork's About page, and seeking the individuals listed on that page for all further inquiries about SpotterNetwork.

    From this moment forward, the SpotterNetwork sub-forum has been hidden/deleted and there will be no assurance that any SpotterNetwork issues brought up in any of Stormtrack's other sub-forums will be addressed. Do not rely on Stormtrack for help with SpotterNetwork issues.

    Sincerely, Jeff D.

2016-05-24 REPORTS: KS/CO/TX/OK

Great day to be in Kansas - weather beats San Francisco hands down! We hit our target for intitiation near Meade. The storm evolved rapidly and we tracked it until it's death north of Dodge. My only regret was not venturing further down those dirt roads to get closer to the tornadoes, but the view was excellent from just about anywhere you sat. All in all we counted 15 separate tors (not including repeated touchdowns of the same one). The last was a brief condensation tube next to us from the rainy/dying remnants of the meso - still spinning - as it passed overhead between Dodge and Jetmore. Would do it all again in a heartbeat!20160524_161054x_s.jpg 20160524_163932x_c.jpg 20160524_163954x_s.jpg
 
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What an absolutely amazing day. Witnessed easily the most prolific tornadic supercell I've seen in 9 years of chasing. Initially started the day out by heading along the Northwest Passage towards Laverne. It became increasingly apparent after the Scott City tornado that we'd have to scoot a bit further north than initially anticipated, after making our way through Arnett and Shattuck, we stopped in Laverne to gas up and reassess. Noted towers rapidly rising to our north past Englewood, KS towards Minneola so we set off. By the time we arrived in Minneola shortly after 5 CDT, the cluster of cells that had gone up just north of town were beginning to organize. It went tornado warned quick with a laminar base but quickly organized and the rest is history. I witnessed at least 4 successful tornado handoffs with two or more tornadoes on the ground at the same time for the next hour and a half. What a day.

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I left Fort Collins, CO around 2pm, headed east and bypassed a couple weak super cells near/east of Greeley. They were pretty high based, but one had a fairly notable RFD cut, shown below:
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HRRR and NAM had been pretty consistent showing a dominant southern cell, and dew points/surface winds were more favorable out east of Fort Morgan. There was a cell near/east of Denver that would soon be headed to that area, so I said bye to the storms by Greeley and got into a position south of Fort Morgan, taking these:
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Near Akron I watched the tornado this cell produced and took video rather than pics, had some difficulty documenting things because I kept getting slammed with RFD rain/hail. Stayed ahead of it on Hwy 34 east of town until it went north of the road behind me. Then it began it's transition into HP:
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It maintained at least a couple more radar-indicated tornado warnings as it tracked to the NE corner of the state, but visibility became poor and I opted to just stay out of it's way to the SE, taking a few more photos. Had an awesome time with this storm!
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Twelve years to the day after seeing two tornadoes at the same time from the Chester, NE/Belleville, KS cyclic supercell in 2004, I was fortunate enough to experience the same thing with the Minneola, KS - Dodge City family of tornadoes. I started the day in Sayre, OK and headed to my initial target of Laverne, OK, eyeing the likely intersection between the dryline and a pronounced outflow boundary. After spending most of the mid-afternoon in Laverne, I then began to creep northward on US 283, eventually stopping at its intersection with US 160 west of Ashland. There were chasers everywhere!

The storm's tower soon went up over Meade, KS to the west of this location, so I continued north on US 283. I was somewhat surprised that DDC tor-warned the storm as early as they did, but in hindsight it turned out to be a very smart move. Here's a shot of the storm north of Minneola, KS just after it had been warned. The view here is to the northwest from US 283:

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An initial graceful-looking tornado soon followed. The next two pictures look northwest from the same location:

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Then the fun really began. By my count, the storm put down two tornadoes at least three separate times, and these tornadoes came in a variety of shapes and sizes. I took the following photos south of Dodge City on US 283. The view in all of them is to the northwest:

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These last two pictures capture the storm's structure as it approached Dodge City and the last tornado that I was able to see. I'd conservatively estimate that I saw at least eight tornadoes from this remarkable storm.

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Here's a bit of video from the storm's first tornado north of Minneola:

 
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Well kind of a bitter sweet day for me Got pulled away from my home and target Dodge. From the desire to get my son Jarret his first tornado of the year, he had been in Texas on a golfing trip and missed the last two days of tornadoes. So the first storm of the day near Scott City pulled us north. and did not disappoint with a few tornadoes. When we heard about the storm south of Dodge, we headed home fast got greeted with baseball hail west of town, waited out the hail and then saw the tornado as it was west of town. that one was in it last stages of life, but new one was forming to its east got behind it and followed it north, but was stopped by the propane tank in the middle of the road and then large hail following it. Gave up the chase there and went to check on Family and friends. All were safe, cars not so much Hail damage on all Here are a few shots of the day.20160524_170917.jpg 20160524_170551.jpg DSC_0125 (1).jpg DSC_0135.jpg 20160524_192043.jpg
 
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Late to post, as my son and I just returned from a week of chasing in TX, OK, and KS. A truly spectacular day with all modes on display. We were so lucky this year to be on Wray and then Dodge City. Our feelings oscillated between being totally ecstatic to deep dread that Dodge City was in the crosshairs. Thankfully they dodged the bullet. More about this on the other post about roadblocks. DSC_0590.jpgIMG_0235.jpg
 
My full report is now online at:

http://www.johnefarley.com/chase52416.htm

The report includes a number of additional photos beyond what I posted above, as well as links to videos of the EF-3 tornado that began near Minneola, the long-track EF-2 that went from SW to NW of Dodge City, and the EF-3 tornado north of Dodge City, as well as a much more detailed description of my observations of this storm.
 
Days like today are something that I know I will never forget. After catching the night time tornado in Turkey, TX we raced northbound and stayed in Woodward, OK for the night. Waking up and checking conditions we decided on a target city of Englewood, KS and made the drive to sit and wait for initation. We watched the storm that would later put down over a dozen tornadoes and as many as three at the same time form from a tower to death today. When the tower went up we drove to Minneola, KS and just watched in awe as the storm put on one of the most amazing shows I have ever witnessed, and probably ever will witness. Afterwards, we met up with Tim Marshall and Brandon Molyneaux of the TWIRL Scout 3 team and had dinner in Dodge City. The following day we went out in the morning and did a damage survey with Tim Marshall, before getting an email from Karen Kosiba to race northeast.. and that tale continues on the next thread. Here's some pictures from this day, and my video is located here:
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Sent from my SM-N920V using Stormtrack mobile app
 
Had the choice between the Colorado or Kansas targets, since E. Colorado has been a good place for me I decided that was my target. Of course in hindsight passing up the Kansas target was a huge mistake but at least the day wasn't a bust. Set up just east of Denver International Airport and watched storms fire on the mountains. It didn't take long for the southern storm to exhibit supercell features, A long inflow tail appeared as the storm approached the airport and the storm started moving a serious amount of moisture, the anvil looked like a river in the sky. Positive bolts soon started erupting from the anvil a good 20-30 miles downwind. The storm initially had a complete LP character with a totally rainfree and very high base. As I moved east ahead of the storm it seemed every rfd surge would push the storm a little bit further toward a classic supercell, eventually some low scud tags started appearing. The storm soon outright became a classic supercell and cycled some weak rotating wall clouds until finally a very large strongly rotating wall cloud appeared. A large tornado seemed imminent, but the wall cloud weakened a bit then produced the first funnel cloud. As the circulation that produced the funnel cloud weakened I could see the storm cycling a new area of rotation on radar about 20 miles east near Akron. After successfully navigating the back roads I arrived south of Akron just in time to see the tornado there, here is the video:



After filming this tornado I got sandblasted by the rfd and took a face full of pebbles. East of Akron the storm developed a very large and ominous circulation which i paralleled to the south, soon this disappeared behind precip and the storm had become a full-blown HP. I saw one additional funnel NE of Yuma which appeared to be anti-cyclonic before dark. This was a very interesting storm to watch as it transitioned through all three supercell types. Here is a timelapse of the entire life of this storm up until just before dark, it's pretty long but you can watch it make the transition from LP to classic and finally HP:

 
Our May 24th chase started out in Shamrock, OK. We got a really good rate at the Shamrock Country Inn—it was clean, new beds, recently refurbished by a motivated new owner. The doors are a bit sticky, but I can definitely recommend it.

We made our way north, looking for likely spots for storm initiation along the dryline or intersecting boundaries from the Oklahoma Panhandle up into southwest Kansas.

Eventually, satellite imagery showed the cumulus field getting more agitated north of Englewood, KS. This gave us a chance to drive through Englewood and revisit a view we had over four years ago when we chased a lonely, low-topped LP supercell north of town (14 March 2012).

We made our way to about six miles west of Ashland and shot time lapse of the building towers to see what would take hold. The one I was shooting wound up gaining strength and we headed off to watch it develop.

The storm of the day looms in the distance—west of Ashland, KS. [2156Z]
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Roads were dry and in pretty good shape, so we stayed off the main highways for hopefully more unique perspectives and less crowds. It worked out pretty well. As we got about eight miles east-southeast of Minneola, the storm was developing a wall cloud that looked like it had potential.

I hated to leave our spot in case it put down a brief tornado while we were on the move, but we needed to keep up. We made our way north and by the time we were a couple miles north of Bloom, the tendrils dropping out of the wall cloud looked pretty imminent. So we stopped in time to capture a developing condensation funnel touch down for our first tornado of the day. It turned out to be a great spot, with enough altitude to capture some intervening countryside as the silhouetted funnel danced and twisted against a distant tree line. We were about 12 miles away at this point, but the view was still great. We hung out at this spot for nearly 15 minutes as it grew in size. At one point I was thinking that this must be how Rozel looked in silhouette—not surprised it's being referred to as Rozel #2 : )

Tornado #1 churns in silhouette west of Minneola—about 12 miles from our location. [2303Z]
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Tornado #1 bulking up as it moves northward. [2313Z]
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We eventually had to keep moving to stay with the storm. While repositioning, the original tornado began to occlude behind a haze of precipitation. My daughter asked if there was a different tornado forming further to the right. Sure enough, a thin rope had descended from the fresher wall cloud while the previous tornado was still in progress. This was our first tornado pair. I couldn't make myself call them twins, because the emaciated second one wasn't even close in appearance to the first—more like the mole that shows up on the stronger twin when it absorbs its sibling I guess.

Tornado #1 occludes while whisker-thin tornado #2 reaches down to the right. [2321Z]
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About seven miles south of Dodge City and still on the dirt roads, we found a really good spot to watch as a new tornado took on Rozel-like proportions as a thin rope tornado flicked around on the east edge of the elongated wall cloud. There may even have been another tornado intertwined with that rope, but from my perspective I couldn't tell if it was just extra scud tendrils. The view of the main tornado at this point was spectacular. We were further south of it, so now it had some side lighting and showed a lot of dimension. We hung out at this spot for another 13 minutes or so before heading off to the dreaded main highway. (Rain was starting to effect the area and I didn't want to get us stuck in the mud.)

Tornado #3 gains strength while at least one rope—tornado #4—reaches down at far right. [2330Z]
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Tornado #3 taking on Rozel characteristics. [2332Z]
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Hwy 283 was about as insane as I was worried it would be—absolutely packed with chasers and locals. Despite how crowded it was, most everyone was driving, parking and loitering in an orderly fashion. We parked at a couple spots to get photos as a fifth tornado morphed into various forms—barrel/multi-vortex/cone/elephant trunk/rope—west of Dodge City. We took the highways around the east side of the city, watching as the #5 occluded and roped out while a new, sixth tornado descended from the apex of a wasp-nest shaped meso. The highway was at a decent elevation, so we had pretty good views of the action north of the city as we made our way around. By the time we got northeast of Dodge, the sixth tornado had sprouted a satellite rope funnel of its own—video from other chasers shows this in contact with the ground as well, so—tornado number seven.

One of the many forms of tornado #5 as it was moving northwest of Dodge City—as seen from Hwy 283, about 9 miles away. [0002Z]
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Tornado #5 occludes while tornado #6 drops north of Dodge City. [0010Z]
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Tornado #6 sports a satellite, tornado #7 north of Dodge City—about 9 miles to our northwest. [0016Z]
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By this time, new supercells were encroaching from the south it looked like our original cell was jogging to the east. So to avoid getting pinched, we bailed out to the east and made a half-hearted attempt to get on some other tornado warned cells east of Kinsley. That wound up seeming like more effort than it was worth, especially after the spectacle we just experienced, so we hung out for a while just west of Lewis on Hwy 50 and grabbed sunset photos.

A spectacular roll cloud sporting Kelvin-Helmholtz waves drifts by west of Lewis, KS. [0215Z]
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After the stunning sunset, we headed back to Dodge City for dinner and a hotel for the night. While eating dinner, Arizona storm chasers Adri Mozeris, Trey Greenwood and Corbin Jaeger stopped by to say hi and we got a chance to talk about all the unbelievable things we had seen that afternoon.

Throughout our chase, I'm pretty sure we observed seven tornadoes, where two were on the ground at the same time on four occasions. I'm still having trouble believing we actually witnessed all of this. Other chasers reported seeing on the order of twelve tornadoes. So the numbers in my account don't represent the actual sequence of tornadoes on the storm—just the ones we saw ourselves. Like the Rozel/Sanford tornadoes, I could be convinced that what I counted as two tornadoes may have been continuations—where say one of the thin ropes seemed to disappear, but may have actually still been stirring up ground circulation before turning into a larger tornado later. I'll update things if I find out differently.

Zoomable/interactive chase map

Full chase report including all/larger images: Storm Chase - Minneola-Dodge City, KS || 24 May 2016

Video highlights from the chase

 
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