• 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.

2025-04-04 REPORTS: TX/AR/MO

Joined
Mar 30, 2008
Messages
1,478
Location
Norman, OK
Day trip from Norman down to see storms form along the boundary in northeast Texas/Southeast Oklahoma. Ended up on a very HP supercell near Clarksville Texas and managed to witness a hog coming out of the rain and going right by us to the north.

Here's my video of the Clarksville TX Tornado

I've got more information and a full recap at Storm Chase Log: Clarksville Texas Tornado - Ben Holcomb
 
Inital staging target was Sulfur Springs TX. We bit on a cell and chased it NE, gave up on it and went south (this ended up being the Clarksville tornado). We ended up getting the Lake Gilmer TX tornado.

We stopped filming when the RFD hit us and turned around and got stuck behind a school bus dropping off a kid in the pouring rain of the RFD. Our timelapse dash cam video of the tornado and school bus was posted by my chase partner.
.

We got some good structure near Atlanta TX and ran into Daniel Shaw.

Ww crossed into Arkansas and stoped to grab some food at a gas station in Bradley and not long later Jordan Hall and Scott Peake pulled up in different vehicles. We talked for a good while and after the line hit we left and went north towards Hope. We ended up in yet another tornado warning, but if it ever produced we never saw it. It was well after dark. We headed back to DFW.

Our chase parh:
IMG_20250406_204337.jpg
 
I was originally planning on staying close to home to shoot lightning with the elevated activity through the day. I didn't think the warm front was lifting fast enough to make the bootheel option worth it, and the primary target farther southwest was out of contention for me due to the terrain and the distance required. We ended up socked in with fog and low stratus by midday, quashing any hope for lightning visibility in the STL metro. So I decided to head down toward the bootheel. After I made it out of the fog in Cape Girardeau at 5pm, the front was still way down south of Sikeston and there were no upstream storms that would reach the front before sunset. I was ready to turn around and go back home.

The Poplar Bluff storm was within reach, but already across the boundary and elevated. It was very active with lightning though, so I decided to wait for it southwest of Cape Girardeau near Delta. This ended up with a really nice CG lightning barrage. I captured several keeper stills and 6,002 fps high speed shots.





I was right next to the viral image of a supposed rope tornado captured by a MODOT camera at Highway K and I-55 in Cape Girardeau, but I did not see this feature. I reviewed my dashcam video and did not find anything convincing there either, other than some look-alikes caused by either low clouds and/or distortion from raindrops on the lens. This was an elevated HP storm that was ingesting very cold surface inflow (the line demarcating low clouds and fog was right at Cape Girardeau) that you would not expect to see produce such a high-visibility tornado.

I posted many more shots of this storm on my blog:

 
Last edited:
FULL CHASE WRITE-UP: https://tonylaubach.net/chase-log-april-4-2025/

Ed Grubb and I intercepted the Gilmer-to-Texarkana HP supercell... while we were unable to get any convincing imagery of the tornadoes north of Gilmer, we were able to post-process the holy ghost out of some video grabs south of Lone Star of the tornado that went through that area.

20250404Lonestar1-1068x601.jpg


Radar grab roughly a minute or so later...

20250404_radar519pm-696x1508.jpg


Looks like two potential tornadoes there southwest of Lone Star (we obviously had view of the eastern one)...

Incredible lightning from this supercell the entire time. So much so that I was able to handhold my Nikon and react to bolts freehanded and captured three different CG strikes on 12 attempts in 90 seconds.

20250404Linden1-1068x601.jpg


We followed this in to Texarkana and stopped for dinner, coming out to the flash flood emergency as our storm was the elading car of a train of cells to just unload over the metro.

20250404k.jpg


FULL CHASE WRITE-UP: https://tonylaubach.net/chase-log-april-4-2025/
 
Another difficult chase in Arkansas along the farm land north of the Arkansas River and then into the Mississippi Delta. I spent a lot of time trying to coax a view out of a road by Gravesville. There are spots to be had without trees, but a lot of them are really dumpy when you need one in a pinch. My first cell of the day at least had a base on it, but not really doing much more as we crossed paths.

Next up were a pair of tornado warned storms moving up from the southwest. The smaller cell was first to arrive as I tried to find a viewpoint on windy roads with some options cut off from flooding. This one had lost strength and dropped its tornado warning as it approached. As it moved over and off, it picked up a tornado warning again. There was no point trying to reacquire it given the road network and visibility issues further into denser trees.

North of Damascus, Arkansas — 2221Z

As it trucked away, it framed up with the counterpoint to terrible storm views, which is beautiful landscape views. It flipped me a little shear funnel as it diminished into the distance.
North of Damascus, Arkansas — 2233Z

I repositioned to see if the follow up storm would be any good, but it too decided it was time to take a snooze and floated on by with a tame, flat base.

With that futile exercise out of the way, I hustled southeast, hoping to get a look at a huge supercell heading toward Little Rock. I had the bright idea to set up in the flat farmland east of the city and time lapse the evening show. I scouted out the perfect spot and set up the cameras. The cell of interest of course eased up as it approached and blended with a developing line of storms. There was still hope of a lightning show along a big shelf cloud but that didn’t gel either and a gust front was sending light showers overhead while the main line hung way back.

The next tornado warned cell was aimed at a crossing of I-57 at Beebe. So I cruised up that way, found a flat, muddy spot to watch it move in. And it started to fall apart with just enough gusto to give up a clear CG.

Beebe, Arkansas — 0451Z

The line of storms to the west was now well organized and hustling eastward. I opted for Highway 64 as the surfing road and pretty interesting how that worked out. As the line approached Crowley’s Ridge, it started spinning up mesovortices and picking up tornado warnings. I stopped just east of the town of Wynne to watch one of these move in. Shortly after turning around and facing that way I caught a power flash out of the corner of my eye. A couple more power flashes confirmed that big wind was happening behind the approaching precip core. The dash cam and video camera caught those flashes and a glimpse of lightning illuminated core structure.

Dashcam frame grabs (in the full report linked at the end) show power flashes and structure. Time stamps in those frame grabs are in GMT/Zulu time and accurate within a few seconds.


Lightning illuminated core structure with tornado and tail cloud looking toward Wynne, Arkansas. (0646Z)

Biggest power flash looking toward Wynne, Arkansas — 0650Z (R6II video frame, contrast enhanced)

I had to cut it short after that last flash and blasted east again. At this point, I was just trying to find the right spot to duck away from the strengthening bowing segment. I wasn’t sure I wanted to cross the river into Memphis and was strategizing the best option to unzip from the line before then. While those mental games were going on, craziness was unfolding directly behind over the town of Earle. The rear dashcam was kind enough to document that scenario as incredible structure and a lowering funnel took shape with a batch of their own power flashes. Even if I'd known that was happening in the moment, I’m not sure I could’ve found a safe way to stop and get better photos or high-def video. Makes me want to start researching a rear dashcam with better quality because the noisy views of structure and pendant tornado make me wish I could've managed a safe stop and some quality, tripoded long exposures. As above, time stamps are in GMT/Zulu time and accurate within a few seconds:

Power flash with tornado — 07:05:50Z

Brightest power flash with tornado — 07:06:25Z


Lightning illuminated structure and tornadic circulation — 07:06:45Z

I didn’t realize all this had occurred over Earle until the next day when I went back to see if I could find any damage near Wynne. Before I could get there, I came across the downed power lines and trees at Earle. I stopped to discretely take photos of the utility crews working when I saw one of the local residents in his yard running equipment to clean up tree debris in his yard. I pulled up to ask if he would mind if I gathered some photos for a report since this site was not showing up yet on the SPC storm report page. He related the story of his phone waking him and his family up middle of the night. They flipped on the TV and saw the meteorologist describing spinups in the line happening on a moment’s notice and it’s hard to predict each one well in advance. He said that the next thing he heard was the loud “freight train” noise that lasted about 15 seconds and then it was over. He shook his head for a second and said, yeah, they always get described that way, but that’s what it sounded like. Fortunately the homes on that road were not damaged, but it was a very close call. The size of the tree that was taken down in his front yard was staggering, besides all the others up and down that road.





Further west at Wynne, the Crowley’s Ridge Country Club, the damage was not as extensive, but multiple trees and a section of utility poles were down. In both towns, the utility crews were making fast work of the repairs.

The Wynne tornado shows EF-2 ratings along a roughly 12 mile path. The Earle tornado hasn't been plotted by the Memphis NWS yet, but I did get the report and photos to them. The residents and utility crews were making fast work of repairing and cleaning things up.

Just an absolutely insane night after a very slow and frustrating start to the chase day. Damage from those two tornadoes gives me a heightened respect for he quick and dangerous spinup hazards in QLCS setups with strong parameters downstream.

Full set of photos available here:
H&H 4-5 April 2025 Arkansas Tornadoes
 
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