Quincy Vagell
EF4
I started the day in Dodge City to keep an array of options available, but I made a decision fairly early on in the day to head south toward the panhandles. Although it was a bit of a conditional play, I favored the moist axis across the eastern portion of the panhandles and how deep layer shear vectors were perpendicular to the dryline. Around midday, I highlighted the fact that one could argue for five different chase targets. I don't think Southwest Texas performed, otherwise all of the other targets had some photogenic storms.
I wandered toward Canadian, TX and I would end up finding myself staying in that general area for the next few hours. A cell initiated northwest of Canadian and began to quickly organize.

It wasn't long before the storm did another left-right split, similar to what I encountered on the 17th. The southern/right turning cell seemed the most dominant, so I stayed with it. As it drifted northeast, although its updraft was relatively small, it began to take on a striated appearance as there was clearly substantial mid-level rotation.

Seemingly out of nowhere, the storm got tornado-warned. My visual was of a messy base that was elevated far from the surface. Radar velocity scans looked impressive, but they were more indicative of rotation aloft, which was responsible for isolated very large hail.
Storms began to merge and I decided to loop around to the west and then the south to get in position to watch the tail-end cell. For a time, it showed some signs of becoming a mature supercell, but that didn't last long, as it gradually weakened into the late afternoon/early evening hours. While I was working on catching up with the storm, I sloshed down an increasingly washed out dirt road, encountered some hail and finally had to bail out. The timing worked out, as I got to witness a double rainbow before ultimately turning around.


The chase capped off with mammatus, once again, which only seemed fitting.

This wraps up a mini 3-day chase tour that brought me to the panhandles each day. I think I've only had one Oklahoma panhandle chase prior to this year, but I found myself in that general vicinity for three days in a row. What was nice about Friday was that I avoided the masses up in Kansas and did not see one chaser on the road at all, so I largely had the panhandle storms to myself.
Even though this year has been a struggle, finding photo opportunities has been fairly easy. I look back to 2014 as a rough chase year, but as hard as it's been in 2018, few chases have resulted in complete frustration and no photos like that year.
I wandered toward Canadian, TX and I would end up finding myself staying in that general area for the next few hours. A cell initiated northwest of Canadian and began to quickly organize.

It wasn't long before the storm did another left-right split, similar to what I encountered on the 17th. The southern/right turning cell seemed the most dominant, so I stayed with it. As it drifted northeast, although its updraft was relatively small, it began to take on a striated appearance as there was clearly substantial mid-level rotation.

Seemingly out of nowhere, the storm got tornado-warned. My visual was of a messy base that was elevated far from the surface. Radar velocity scans looked impressive, but they were more indicative of rotation aloft, which was responsible for isolated very large hail.
Storms began to merge and I decided to loop around to the west and then the south to get in position to watch the tail-end cell. For a time, it showed some signs of becoming a mature supercell, but that didn't last long, as it gradually weakened into the late afternoon/early evening hours. While I was working on catching up with the storm, I sloshed down an increasingly washed out dirt road, encountered some hail and finally had to bail out. The timing worked out, as I got to witness a double rainbow before ultimately turning around.


The chase capped off with mammatus, once again, which only seemed fitting.

This wraps up a mini 3-day chase tour that brought me to the panhandles each day. I think I've only had one Oklahoma panhandle chase prior to this year, but I found myself in that general vicinity for three days in a row. What was nice about Friday was that I avoided the masses up in Kansas and did not see one chaser on the road at all, so I largely had the panhandle storms to myself.
Even though this year has been a struggle, finding photo opportunities has been fairly easy. I look back to 2014 as a rough chase year, but as hard as it's been in 2018, few chases have resulted in complete frustration and no photos like that year.