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2018-05-29 Reports: KS/OK/TX

Joined
Jan 14, 2011
Messages
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Location
St. Louis
My final chase log with more photos and video is here:
http://stormhighway.com/blog2018/may29log.php

Targeted the outflow boundary on the OK/KS border at Buffalo, OK. I followed this storm to Enid. Despite a good look northeast of Buffalo as the storm started turning right, it quickly went HP. I made it into the notch at Lookout for a quick view, and found nothing of interest aside from rapid motion with an inflow tail. At Waynoka, the storm cycled and produced at least one brief tornado and multiple funnels about 3 miles east of town. I don't have any good imagery of the Waynoka tornado as it didn't last long enough to get the camera on it. I have yet to go through my dashcam footage, so hopefully it got a usable image. After this, the outflow blasted out ahead and the storm progressively weakened. After sunset, there was some decent lightning west of Enid that I spent about 30 minutes shooting.

Here are a few of my favorite lightning shots from the day.

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Summary: Great structure, multiple times with up to 5 updrafts trying to produce, some anti-cyclonic rotation, but was late to the game due to work and missed the only confirmed tornado.

Stats: 1 possible tornado, 652 miles driven, 12.5 hrs chase time
Chase Partner: Chadwick Stelzl

Due to work commitments, we didn't leave DFW until 2 PM, so we knew we would be late to the game. I had been eyeing this day for several days because models kept showing that we would finally get the southern high plains in the left exit region of a weak jet from an upper level cutoff low (hey in 2018 - I'll take it). My initial target was Sayre, OK. By the time we drove into Sayre, the storm had just been tor warned near Mobeetie, TX. This produced 2 EF0 tornados according to NWS AMA, but we where too far SW to see them. We made our way to spot between Shamrock and Wheeler TX just outside of Twitty, TX and stopped to watch the show. At one point there where at least 5 updrafts trying to produce at the same time.. The picture bellow shows 3 and the middle one was sucking up a lot of dust. I didn't see any rotation, so I will not call it a tornado.

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After a while we went back to I-40 and stopped near Benotine, TX. Once again multiple updrafts and mesos. The one on the far right bellow is rotating anti-cyclonically.
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We went a little further east and stopped just west/northwest of Erick OK where I got these two shots bellow:

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The wall cloud in the lighting pic became better defined, then the cell went rain wrapped just as things got good. That is when things got interesting. More on that another day when I have time to go thru more pics.
 
I was on that supercell that stalled on OK/KS border for a bit close to Alva, OK when I joined on chase w few other REU students, meteorologists, and graduate students. This’s my second chase after 5-25 LP supercell near Wheeler, TX (I’ve never saw a LP in real life until then). We chose that one because we have three sups in within 2-3 hr drive from Norman, OK, and we were not sure if the panhandle storms would survive at first because of drier air. I took some pictures including these, as we followed it to southeast.

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Here are the rest of my pics from 5/29/18. Right after it went rain wrapped, rotation started to tighten up on radar and it went tornado warned. This one is from near Delhi, OK about 10 mins after it went warned,

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After becoming rain wrapped, the storm speed up it's southeast movement quite a bit and we had to keep moving. Luckily we had a good gridded road network, and some of it was even paved. There where several times where the paved road curved to go from east to south when it meet a dirt road and make a triangle. A couple of times we looped around this triangle to get a good look at the storm behind us. One of the times we did this we saw what appeared to be a satellite tornado that had spun up in front of us. We couldn't safely stay, and neither of us got a picture (I was driving and my chase partner missed the shot when I had to suddenly stop at a yield sign to wait for oncoming traffic). Here is another pic I got once we where a safe distance SE of the storm:

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I love the mushroom look to that one. As the sun set, the colors got incredible:

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Still catching up on my chase reports. As least this one is a bit more interesting than my 5/27 and 5/28 reports... Unlike those two days, our forecast/target was pretty good today, in fact we were sitting in Laverne OK when the very first cells popped up. A couple quickly died off as they moved north but one finally held together and we shifted a bit northeast to Buffalo to keep an eye on it and give things some time to develop.

At this point I noticed on the surface obs that it appeared the OFB - today’s boundary of interest - had lifted north to DDC. I started wondering if we should reposition, yet here we were in a generally favorable area and storms were actually firing. I pulled up the latest DDC AFD, issued at 1:11PM CDT, and they confirmed that the OFB had indeed lifted north:

“...This boundary may have retreated back north all the way to KDDC as we have SE winds now.”

However, they also indicated that the greater tornado potential (which they didn’t seem too excited about) was in the southeastern portion of their forecast area:

“Any tornado potential would be located across the far SE, if that.”

The DDC forecast area reaches as far east as Barber County KS and down to the OK border - so this influenced me to stay where I was.

It took a while for the Buffalo storm to get its act together but it eventually took on supercell characteristics and then developed some interesting lowerings. I thought there was a chance it could produce here, but midlevel rotation was obviously lacking as no tornado warning was issued at this time.

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Shortly after this cycle, the storm took on HP characteristics and assumed the typical donut/horseshoe shape (note chaser caravan ):

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We stopped for a photo op with buildings in the foreground in the next town - I don’t think it was Waynoka, it may have been another town north of there, sorry I can’t recall the name for sure or confirm the exact route I was on...

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South of town, it was a peaceful scene out ahead of the storm, with chirping birds and mooing cows juxtaposed against the menacing rumble of thunder. At this point I wasn’t expecting much more out of the storm other than enjoying the storm environment with some scenic photo ops while playing cat and mouse staying ahead of the HP supercell.

Now I’m definitely sure these next pictures were taken from the road south of Waynoka. The first is looking NW, the next is N:

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The storm looked nastier in the above pics and had some great cloud motion but looked “outflowy”. I was quite surprised when a tornado warning alert went off on the cellphone in my pocket. To my knowledge this is the first time a TOR warning was issued on this storm.

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We shot up north on 281 into the storm to take a look and see if we could get into the notch. We were quickly enveloped in rain, and visibility was poor from that as well as trees lining the side of the road. We stopped to take a look at the map to consider whether we could safely get to Waynoka and head east out of there on 281 or use the stair stepping road southeast that branches off of 281 south of Waynoka. By now the couplet was west of due north of us. We continued north slightly but as we started to get into hail we thought the better of continuing deeper into the storm due to the hail (not huge, but we were in a rental), the low visibility, and the generally dangerous hook slice that this particular approach would have entailed. So we bailed out south, watching the RFD rain curtains wrap across the road in front of us. We went east on 412 to stay with it, but it became outflow dominant and weakened considerably before too long.

By the way, there had been a storm in the TX panhandle that had tempted us earlier... IIRC, the HRRR model had depicted a couple of isolated supercells moving out of the panhandle...

We spent the night in Woodward. From the hotel parking lot, grabbed this shot of the sun-lit back side of another storm, and watched its near-continuous lightning in the distance after dark.

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It was an enjoyable chase day, the first such day of my 2018 trip and believe it or not probably the best day since the big Dodge City event in 2016 because my 2017 chase trip featured only two chase days, neither of which were as good as this. So I went to bed feeling happy about the day, it was a bonafide supercell chase day with a realistic tornado possibility. I was reasonably content with our forecasting and execution. But then in the morning I found out about the tornado near DDC, which even made the mainstream news. Nothing is worse than telling people at home about a chase day that was enjoyable even without a tornado, and then next thing you know they’re asking if you saw the tornado they saw on the news. Well I guess there’s a life lesson here, if you feel happy with something, why should your perspective change just because something better might have happened somewhere else? Easier said than done, though... In retrospect it makes sense that a tornado occurred where it did because the OFB had lifted north - and I had noticed that when I may have still had time to adjust position - but why did the DDC office underplay the tornado potential and say it was more likely to be in its southeastern zones, even as the same AFD acknowledged the northward movement of the OFB? I can’t imagine going with my own gut rather than the professional meteorologists... And judging by chaser volume on the roads, it seemed like at least 90% of all chasers, including many tour groups, had stuck with the OK target too... Another mystery to add to the list; even more frustrating than missing stuff is coming home with so many unanswered questions...

EDIT: for proper pictures and placement within text as well as grammar
 
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Too late to edit but I just noticed that in my post above, paragraph below the radar image, I should have written “...By now the couplet was EAST of due north of us”
 
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