Dan Robinson
EF5
I was working a string of midnight shifts during this past week, and consequently wasn't expecting to be able to chase any of these events away from home. After a coworker graciously swapped shifts with me, I was able to get some sleep on Saturday night, go to the early church service and depart St. Louis after 11am for the first Great Plains trip of the year.
This day's setup was rather complex. Multiple outflow boundaries, two parallel warm frontal zones and a dryline-stationary front intersection were expected to provide opportunities for tornadic supercells mostly east of I-35 along the Kansas-Oklahoma border into western Missouri. Despite my late departure from St. Louis, all of these areas were within my reach, so I began the trek down Interstate 44 for a starting target of Baxter Springs, Kansas.
The primary warm front was located to my west, but a second parallel warm front was apparent on surface observations directly overhead. Soon after I arrived in Baxter Springs, thunderstorms began firing on the latter boundary directly overhead, with a nice supercell taking shape. This was producing some good negative cloud-to-ground lightning, allowing for a really nice 6,000fps high speed capture near Riverton:
This storm initially had a healthy-looking updraft base, but soon it became apparent it had crossed the boundary and gone elevated. A low ground-scraping arcus developed on the outflow that looked ominous, but was actually a harbinger of the storm's long-term cessation of tornado potential. I stayed with the storm to near Jasper, MO before breaking off and heading west to the better-looking supercell that had gone tornadic near Independence, Kansas.
I arrived on this storm at dusk near Altamont, south of Parsons. It was now a high-precipitation (HP) blob, with any visible tornado chances looking slim to none. It was producing some decent lightning, so I set up for stills as tornado sirens wailed in the distance:
I moved east after the RFD precip began catching up. At this point, multiple storms were forming to the south and merging with the supercell in its forward flank. This happened 6 or 7 times as I stopped to watch at Hallowell. There were a few bursts of negative CG lightning here, and I caught a couple of OK 6,000fps shots.
After the final merger, the storm rapidly developed a new RFD surge that overtook me here. I scrambled east to get back out ahead as new tornado warnings were issued. Lightning ahead of the storm picked up, with numerous close bolts. I stopped several times to attempt high speed shots, but all of these bolts were uncooperative in the very short intervals I had to keep ahead of the RFD. I only captured them on the dashcams. This one near Sherwin struck a power line just to my east:
Another in the field just to my west near Columbus:
The storm was continually tornado-warned from this point on, but anything would be hopelessly rain-wrapped. I decided to just call the chase and begin the drive home. I wanted to ensure I was rested for what was potentially a very big event back home the next day. I stopped one more time south of Carthage to watch this storm move over Joplin, but the good lightning had become much more sporadic and there wasn't anything else worth shooting.
I caught up to some of the earlier supercells at Waynesville, encountering some pings of what sounded like quarter-sized hail. I ended up in yet another tornado warning near Rolla for a circulation well south of the interstate that I wasn't in position to have a view on.
The drive between here and St. Louis was very difficult. I just could not get out ahead of the heavy precip cores. I finally broke free of these at Fenton, making it home at 3:30am.
This day's setup was rather complex. Multiple outflow boundaries, two parallel warm frontal zones and a dryline-stationary front intersection were expected to provide opportunities for tornadic supercells mostly east of I-35 along the Kansas-Oklahoma border into western Missouri. Despite my late departure from St. Louis, all of these areas were within my reach, so I began the trek down Interstate 44 for a starting target of Baxter Springs, Kansas.
The primary warm front was located to my west, but a second parallel warm front was apparent on surface observations directly overhead. Soon after I arrived in Baxter Springs, thunderstorms began firing on the latter boundary directly overhead, with a nice supercell taking shape. This was producing some good negative cloud-to-ground lightning, allowing for a really nice 6,000fps high speed capture near Riverton:
This storm initially had a healthy-looking updraft base, but soon it became apparent it had crossed the boundary and gone elevated. A low ground-scraping arcus developed on the outflow that looked ominous, but was actually a harbinger of the storm's long-term cessation of tornado potential. I stayed with the storm to near Jasper, MO before breaking off and heading west to the better-looking supercell that had gone tornadic near Independence, Kansas.
I arrived on this storm at dusk near Altamont, south of Parsons. It was now a high-precipitation (HP) blob, with any visible tornado chances looking slim to none. It was producing some decent lightning, so I set up for stills as tornado sirens wailed in the distance:
I moved east after the RFD precip began catching up. At this point, multiple storms were forming to the south and merging with the supercell in its forward flank. This happened 6 or 7 times as I stopped to watch at Hallowell. There were a few bursts of negative CG lightning here, and I caught a couple of OK 6,000fps shots.
After the final merger, the storm rapidly developed a new RFD surge that overtook me here. I scrambled east to get back out ahead as new tornado warnings were issued. Lightning ahead of the storm picked up, with numerous close bolts. I stopped several times to attempt high speed shots, but all of these bolts were uncooperative in the very short intervals I had to keep ahead of the RFD. I only captured them on the dashcams. This one near Sherwin struck a power line just to my east:
Another in the field just to my west near Columbus:
The storm was continually tornado-warned from this point on, but anything would be hopelessly rain-wrapped. I decided to just call the chase and begin the drive home. I wanted to ensure I was rested for what was potentially a very big event back home the next day. I stopped one more time south of Carthage to watch this storm move over Joplin, but the good lightning had become much more sporadic and there wasn't anything else worth shooting.
I caught up to some of the earlier supercells at Waynesville, encountering some pings of what sounded like quarter-sized hail. I ended up in yet another tornado warning near Rolla for a circulation well south of the interstate that I wasn't in position to have a view on.
The drive between here and St. Louis was very difficult. I just could not get out ahead of the heavy precip cores. I finally broke free of these at Fenton, making it home at 3:30am.
