Quincy Vagell
EF4
Not a lot to say here, so I'll keep it brief. I targeted West Texas, knowing that it was kind of a muddled setup. I left Shamrock, TX to head toward Lubbock and storms started firing just after lunch. I knew that wasn't a good sign.
I got down to Ralls and noticed that two relatively discrete storms were starting to throw out an outflow boundary to the south. I stopped and waited. There were a few times in which it looked like the cells were trying to become rooted on the boundary, but I'm not sure it ever happened. After some time, one of the storms showed some increased low-level rotation around Roaring Springs. I'm not sure if there was a tornado, but John Sirlin reported a tornado, while Jim Tang thought that he narrowly avoided one. I was a few miles away and as it's been most of the week with smoke, unless you were up close and personal, you probably couldn't tell the difference between a possible tornado and a sloppy mess.
Without a great road network and an expectation for storms to quickly grow upscale, I decided to go east and try to get out in front of the storms. Best case, maybe catch a few photos in front of an approaching squall line. Worst case, head right back home to Oklahoma City and make it in time for a late dinner. Well, I did briefly stop at Eldorado for a few photos, but visibility was limited and the shelf cloud was not exactly the highest contrast one I've witnessed.

Hopefully this image isn't too big. It's also the first and only time I've tried to create a panoramic image with photos merged using the A7iii. I know I'll want to practice with this more to get it right in the future, but the window of time I had between too-low-contrast and storm moving overhead was very short.
I started the chase in the Lubbock CWA and made it home right around sunset, fittingly, just as an MCS was about to move through.
Today's chase wasn't a total letdown, as I didn't have the highest expectations in the first place.
P.S.
I was seriously considering the I-10 target today, but didn't want a long drive for tomorrow and kind of needed to get back to Oklahoma City tonight, anyway. Even though a particularly intense supercell did develop down there, with it being south of I-10, the road network is pretty awful. I probably didn't miss too much, but I'd be very curious to see if anyone on here was on that storm.
Oh yeah, and Iowa...
I got down to Ralls and noticed that two relatively discrete storms were starting to throw out an outflow boundary to the south. I stopped and waited. There were a few times in which it looked like the cells were trying to become rooted on the boundary, but I'm not sure it ever happened. After some time, one of the storms showed some increased low-level rotation around Roaring Springs. I'm not sure if there was a tornado, but John Sirlin reported a tornado, while Jim Tang thought that he narrowly avoided one. I was a few miles away and as it's been most of the week with smoke, unless you were up close and personal, you probably couldn't tell the difference between a possible tornado and a sloppy mess.
Without a great road network and an expectation for storms to quickly grow upscale, I decided to go east and try to get out in front of the storms. Best case, maybe catch a few photos in front of an approaching squall line. Worst case, head right back home to Oklahoma City and make it in time for a late dinner. Well, I did briefly stop at Eldorado for a few photos, but visibility was limited and the shelf cloud was not exactly the highest contrast one I've witnessed.

Hopefully this image isn't too big. It's also the first and only time I've tried to create a panoramic image with photos merged using the A7iii. I know I'll want to practice with this more to get it right in the future, but the window of time I had between too-low-contrast and storm moving overhead was very short.
I started the chase in the Lubbock CWA and made it home right around sunset, fittingly, just as an MCS was about to move through.
Today's chase wasn't a total letdown, as I didn't have the highest expectations in the first place.
P.S.
I was seriously considering the I-10 target today, but didn't want a long drive for tomorrow and kind of needed to get back to Oklahoma City tonight, anyway. Even though a particularly intense supercell did develop down there, with it being south of I-10, the road network is pretty awful. I probably didn't miss too much, but I'd be very curious to see if anyone on here was on that storm.
Oh yeah, and Iowa...