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5/8/08 REPORTS: MS/AL/TN/GA/KS/OK

Joined
Dec 19, 2005
Messages
517
Location
Saltillo, MS
i just got back from chasing a tornado warned storm that caused by the looks of things, EF-0/EF-1 damage right there in down town tupelo near the barnes crossing mall...my phone was ringing and someone told me that there was a tornado coming, so i got on the road and tried to find it...

ive got a lot of different pictures of the storm, but i gotta go through them and put em up later...the visibility was terrible, and the landscape was terrible...i was on 363 near saltillo when i believe i saw a rain-wrapped tornado, there was alot of rotation in the cloud base, and alot of low clouds that made seeing anything hard untill i was right on it...

i headed south fast near the lee-itawamba county line and i took this picture...it was hard to tell if this was truly the tornado, because everything in the sky was moving so fast...but im about %85 sure thats it...

DSC01624600x450.jpg


the radar signature was pretty strong here...thats bevs pit stop on the left, and that sign is the lee-itawamba county line...i was probably about a mile or two away from it...

by the looks of things, the scruggs in tupelo is hit pretty bad, and the sonic near captain dees...it also looks like some subdivisions near coley road took some hits...damage looks to me like EF-1...ill probably go out and take some pictures of it later...
 
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I left Wichita Falls this morning after chasing NE TX last night and targeted Liberal KS. I was hoping for convection SE to S of the sfc L, where I expected parameters to be optimal, but that area stayed capped as our big sup blew up to the N or NE of the sfc L. It was awesome, just made me a bit late to the show.

I could see that storm to my NNW shortly after having lunch in Shamrock TX at about 1 PM. As I drove there, bands of cirrus streamed off to the ENE directly over my head, but arced to the NE then N to my N and NW, painting a perfect picture of the upper divergence. Simply beautiful. It was like looking at a model in the sky.

First pic was taken as I was hauling N toward Garden City at 2157Z:

080508_2157.jpg


This one is from 2247Z after I headed E on Hwy156 E of Garden City:

080508_2247.jpg


At 2322Z, a monster tube seemed imminent:

080508_2322.jpg


After I took that pic, though, the storm went outflow dominant and the lowerings disappeared.

I gotta say, after not chasing last year, my skills are rusty. I somehow believed I could beat the storm into Jetmore, but instead got nailed there by golfballs. Afterwards, I went back and measured several stones at 1.75". Very fun chase.
 
This is Jon Davies, posting under Shawna Helt's account, as I still don't have a response to getting an ST account and password.

Jim Reed got some nice shots of the landspout in the Selkirk KS area Thursday p.m. You can see one of his images and a brief case study at:
http://davieswx.blogspot.com/

Jon Davies (thanks Shawna!)
 
I was also on that Supercell out in Edwards County, Kansas. I started the day (With Roger Hill) in Oklahoma city and saw the large EHI values setting across Kansas and down to the TX Panhandle – Our target was actually the OK Panhandle as I did not think that we could reach the triple point North of Dodge City in time (I left OKC at 15:10pm in the afternoon) By the time we reached Woodward, OK we saw that the cap was going to be too strong with models no longer braking out prceip there – meanwhile a supercell (which had produced land spouts) was ongoing North West of Dodge – what the heck I thought can we catch it?

Astonishingly we did! – Just north West of Kinsley, KS – the storm had maintained an inflow couplet for a long time – but was high based – by the time I got there wet RFD was surging around the hook as the storm turned HP. But the inflow, man I have NEVER seen nothing like it!

The inflow was pulling down power lines as well as the odd pole, IWe crossed an inflow jet that was passing over Lewis and saw roof slates/wood being pulled off houses like paper. Winds I estimate to be 70 – 90mph sustained – the van was almost blown off the road.

I stayed ahead of the supercell until well after dark then broke off before return back to OKC at 02:15am– a 588 mile round trip.
 
05/08/08 KS

Intercepted storm that produced the landspout in Hodgeman Co NE of Kalvesta KS. Was SE of the circulation with inflow winds screaming in to the storm over 65 to 70 mph was sure it would produce at any time. Circulation started to get rain wrapped so hopes of seeing anything if it happened soon faded. Cut back south to hwy 156 to go east to get back ahead of it. but did not make it. 2 miles west of Jetmore got cut off by golfball size to tennisball size hail flying sideways pushed by winds that had to be over 70 mph. Turned back west to get out of that, then south and east but was to far behind the cell by this time, so waited for the second cell and stayed ahead of it towards Hanston. Saw damage from the first cell along hwy 156 power poles and metal from stuctures along the road. Went south from Hanston towards a new circulation but got slammed again by high winds and large hail. Only have a few pictures before the circulation got rain wrapped spent the rest of the time trying to stay out of large hail.
 

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Another day another chase close to home! These are much easier on the wallet. My chase route on May 8th was very similar to that of May 6th -- starting out northwest of Garden City and following the supercell east-southeast through northern Finney County into western Hodgeman county. In fact, in Hodgeman county, I traveled some of the same dirt roads I did just two days prior -- and had a similar "deja vu" experience of racing a storm back to Jetmore...and effectively ending the chase *in* Jetmore.


I had not planned in advance to chase May 8th, which was Thursday, in between my 1st and 2nd 9pm to 5am shifts. Only very rarely will I be able to chase on a day where I have to be in the office by 9pm. Typically, for this to happen, a storm has to form about an hour to an hour and a half west of Dodge City, and I basically chase it back east towards the direction of home. I also need to find out if the office is going to need me in early in case they were short-staffed for working severe. All the ducks were in a row for me to chase before work, so I set out for the Garden City area. Just after I left Dodge around 2:40pm, landspout tornadoes were already occurring in the Selkirk, KS area to the southwest of Leoti. A 1000 J/kg CAPE axis was positioned across the Garden City area to go along with very strong cyclogenesis just west southwest of Garden City. The low level and deep layer shear was excellent for supercells.


A formidable cell finally established itself south of Leoti which was heading for southern Scott County. I made my way to to Friend where I headed west then north on county roads for the intercept. The storm was a dry-classic supercell by this point with a fairly nice wall cloud. I opted to go north a bit to stay out of the sun, and viewed the updraft region from the northeast (instead of the traditional southeast). Contrast was excellent here, and I was able to get away with this due to the lack of precipitation with the storm at that point. Eventually, the new mesocyclone was taking shape along Hwy 83 and I had to get east... but beforehand, I optioned south to get back to the proper positioning south of the main updraft.


I reached the Finney-Scott county line road and continued east on this road for quite a distance, as the main updraft and mesocyclone rotation was about 6 miles north of me moving almost due east at the time. Cloud base rotation was becoming a little more prominent, but rather broad. Inbound winds on radar were approaching 70 knots (ground relative), so I knew this was a necessary ingredient for a future tornado. You could see this inflow visually at cloud base upstream... it was impressive east to west motion. Time at this point is about 5:10pm when I was positioned a few miles east of the Finney-Scott-Lane county tri-border. By 5:15 to 5:20 or so, precipitation was falling in the rear-flank downdraft region, and a huge pendant echo on radar was becoming well-established. I was running GR2Analyst and looking at higher slices, the bounded weak echo region (BWER) was incredible -- one of the most prominent BWERs I have seen -- and I've seen a lot of them. This was just a classic supercell in all aspects.


The RFD precip was approaching the county-line road, and it was fortunate that Hwy 23 came when it did. I did stop a few times prior to continuing south on a couple of one-mile legs. The first time I stopped at a T intersection with Mennonite Rd, I was observing some wild rotation in two different area to my immediate northwest and again to my more distant north. I was preparing to see tornado-genesis at this point. Time at this point was around 5:30 or so. The 2nd time I stopped at a 1 mile south leg prior to reaching Hwy 23, the RFD precip was bearing down on my location as a number of chase vehicles rounded the corner to go south. I got some decent images of the chase vehicles with the RFD precip in the background.


I finally made it to Hwy 23 where I blasted south...but the hook echo precip beat me. I was blasted by roughly 60mph west winds and large rain drops on the way to my next east option, which was Lake Rd. through Ravanna (which isn't a town, all Ravanna is is ruins of one building). I had to keep blasting east to get a decent view of the new mesocyclone area. All this while, I was probably thinking there was a rain-wrapped tornado way back in the old occlusion. I never saw any evidence of such, though. At one point though, I did see what looked like a large old "tornado cyclone" cloud mass reaching the surface. That was interesting! It faded quickly though, and I only got photos of the break-up of this feature. As I made it into western Hodgeman county, the storm was transitioning fairly quickly into an HP storm as it was making its bead on Jetmore. I traveled east on a farm road a couple miles north of Hwy 156 on my way to Jetmore. The structure was quite good, despite the storm being very wet now just to my north. I eventually made it to Hwy 156 and then to Jetmore before the large hail hit...and I continued south on my way home. I ran into my co-worker, Scott, who was out chasing with his son south of Jetmore as we watched the now HP supercell travel east away from us. New storms were forming to the northwest, and I managed to get a few images of this before finally calling it a chase. When I finally called it a chase shortly after 7:30pm, I was only about 10 miles from home -- still having almost an hour time to spare before going into work! A very nice "spontaneous" chase to say the least!


Below are a few images. More can be found on my chase account blog



supercell structure as it was a "LP-dry classic" type west of Shallow Water:
20080508_1610.jpg


Rapidly rotating feature looking to my northwest, looking north from Finney-Scott-Lane county tri-border:
20080508_1725.jpg


Storm now an HP supercell northwest of Jetmore:

20080508_1830.jpg
 
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