Amelia Urquhart
EF0
I'm very very late to this, but this low-end chase day in Central Oklahoma put out a photogenic hailer with a very blue core visible looking down the notch. I was able to get this timelapse looking west from Cole.
The slow-moving supercell deviated to the south, and I followed it all the way down to Elmore City. However, when I finally found a good pulloff, I found myself a little too close to the core for comfort and immediately had to take a county road east.
About five miles to the east, I set my timelapsing equipment back up and watched the cell drift over Elmore City. It appeared to be rotating rapidly, but the cap stopped it from ever getting close to a tornado.
About halfway through the timelapse, I started using longer and longer exposure times to capture the CG barrage.
As it grew upscale, I dropped back and positioned above Turner Falls to continue shooting CGs.
The slow-moving supercell deviated to the south, and I followed it all the way down to Elmore City. However, when I finally found a good pulloff, I found myself a little too close to the core for comfort and immediately had to take a county road east.
About five miles to the east, I set my timelapsing equipment back up and watched the cell drift over Elmore City. It appeared to be rotating rapidly, but the cap stopped it from ever getting close to a tornado.
About halfway through the timelapse, I started using longer and longer exposure times to capture the CG barrage.
As it grew upscale, I dropped back and positioned above Turner Falls to continue shooting CGs.