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6/11/08 REPORTS: IA/NE/KS

Very frustrating day yesterday, although I feel some solace by the lack of posts here. First and foremost, my thoughts and prayers go out to the boy scout group and their families. Hearing that aftermath play out live on the radio was quite heart-breaking.

Targeted Omaha trying to play the backed flow in the wake of morning MCS and moisure pooling ahead of the dryline & pre-frontal trough. Although better environment was clearly over NW IA, I wanted to leave enough time to get back to the WFO in case of local weather and the activity up there did not look like it would remain discrete, resulting in an HP mess. As for why I didn't pick the KS target -- well, that still needs some reanalysis. :D

The short of it, we targeted a series of line-embedded supercells from near Waterloo/Elkhorn (west side of Omaha), southward to Gretna to Louisville. I'm not exactly what people were seeing with these tornado reports, but in four separate instances we were literally right under the storm with great hilltop views, going "huh?". Hopefully some photos will surface because we saw little of interest yesterday. Every storm we impacted was clearly outflow dominant. I have hundreds of photos and several minutes of video of tendrils, petuberances, broadly rotating gust front interfaces and scud with only one decent wall cloud (early in the game at Waterloo on a 275 overpass west of Omaha ). Lightning got really amazing with the (3rd?) storm that tracked from Greenwood to Louisville along the Platte River and the green sky within was certainly depositing some huge hail.

Noticing that OAX lost their radar around quarter til 7 due to a lightning strike, we tried sending in frequent reports of air temp and the gust front location since Grand Island an Des Moines radar were overshooting the latter feature at great distance. And boy it was cold. We dropped into the mid 60s several times behind the gust front and still well ahead what appeard to be hook echos at 100+ miles from DMX/UEX radars. Some of these cells had bases of 7-10Kft later in the game, at which point we knew it was a done deal and headed home.

I realize people in Omaha and surrounding areas were certainly on edge after the other night. I think we counted that the city was under a tornado warning for something like 2.5 hours straight. Wowsers. Given the number of chasers and spotters that were running rampant, and the population density, we did find it interesting that the handful of tornado reports were both isolated and without any mention of damage or debris.

Really the most amazing part of the day was the high water. Given where water was to start the day over far NW MO/SE Nebraska (especially along the river in Nebraska City), I can only imagine that the supercell train-fest last night may have resulted in major flooding on the Nebraska side.

Congrats to the KS targeters. I know several of you provided some extremely useful information to ICT and TOP as tornadoes were headed toward Manhattan and surrounding areas. Given the typical lack of information after dark, this surely made a huge difference in getting people to safety.

Til next time,
Evan
 
With just the one day off - Eric and I shot out from Denver at 7am and got to just west of Beatrice, NE and watched cells struggle in the area. About that time we saw the rapid development south of Hays, KS and shot down hw83. At Concordia, KS the cell near Benoit, KS went tornado warned but it became high based and we left it to meet the cell near Great Bend, KS

What a beast that was. One of the most amazing structures we've seen all year! This one went on to sadly hit Salina and Manhattan, KS. Very hard to hear of all the fatalities this morning.

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Full report here:
http://stormchaserco.blogspot.com/2008/06/2008-06-11-report.html
 
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NOTE : the Time I wrote on the images is the time in the EXIF info for the images. I set my cam on Zulu time . However , if I set the camera time wrong months ago then it will be off by a few seconds or minutes. I am not saying this is the PRECISE moment. But it was along road 177, BEFORE it arrived in Manhattan. Then when we drove east on I-70 minutes later there was lots of lightning north of us and they were clearly of greenish colour ... powerflashes indeed.

taking these images was not easy. it was VERY dark. I used 1600 ISO setting on a 50mm/1.4 lens at 1.4 aperture and shot at various exposure times .

Not great photos... but still documenting the event.

more on the Manhattan storm here : http://www.ktka.com/

also, I was streaming live video as we were on 177 heading direction Manhattan KS, there was lots of lightning ( not power flashes yet, the tornado was still SW of town) , see it on www.kyte.tv/klipsi . click the "shows" tab on upper right to find the "177 S of Manhattan" clip for replay. it is mute.
 
First my thought and prays go out to anyone who suffered a lost in yesterdays storms. The news from Little Sioux came across the radio about the same time I was pulling into the drive to check on my own kids. Something like that really makes the devastation of these storms hit home.

While driving home from work I could see the updraft of the first storm that moved north of Omaha and eventually into IA. It was hard and crisp and already spreading a nice anvil. I had to pass on that one but made my stop at home and then headed west of Omaha. I live right off I680 and Maple and knew I wanted to avoid Maple Street at that time of day, so headed north and then west on State Street. I stopped at 168th and watched the scud and crappy looking updraft move in over Elkhorn. I decided to move a bit north and drove up to the Bennington high School. It was during this time that a tornado was reported 2 mi W of Elkhorn and then 6 mi N of Elkhorn, which put it right over my head….. If it was there I didn’t see it, then I was slammed with torrential wrap around rain, so I bugged out straight east and went through Bennington to a position about 5 miles east. I let the huge HP beast move on to the north and started to focus on the third storm now moving into the Gretna area, but that quickly wrapped up in rain also and looked like it was going to come more north, so I called it a night and went home and watched the rest from the safety of my basement. It looked like Scott C had a great view of the Greenwood tornado, and maybe the one just SW of Louisville, so looking forward to see if he posts anything.
 
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MORE PICS HERE

Started in Onawa then dropped down to north of Blair on top of the bluffs watching initiation. Ended up taking a cell which crossed over the river just north of Decatur, NE then I29 at Salix, IA. Let it get away in the hills up by Bronson so ended up doing the east then north thing as each cell worked it's way off to the northeast. I am really tired of chasing messy HP's this year.
 
Another chase day for me in Iowa with a HP deadly storm... :(
Left Ames, initially targeting west of my hometown, Dunlap, IA.. Then slapped myself and woke up.. I was not going to chase in the hills again.. Although I am very familiar with the area, the Loess Hills are just a bad place to chase.
I got a late start and headed west on I-80 from Ames. Saw things firing to the north so I buzzed up I-29 to mondamin. The first cell that I intercepted ended up being the one that hit the scout camp. Visually this cell was pretty bad. After watching the storm for awhile and experiencing crazy inflow.. I made the choice to break to the next cell south instead of staying with that cell into the hills.. After that my day was very similiar to Mike H's. I just busted south and watched a few more cells until I gave it up near C.B.
This is what I typically saw with the cells witnessed. It isnt much, but it is the best I could come up with..
 

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I was with a caravan of ISU Chasers... we were approaching the town of Moorhead, about 6-7 miles from the circulation, when it was going through the camp. Couldn't see much, as it was wrapped in rain.

Here's a link to a video as we were approaching Moorhead (6:42pm - 6:45pm), as well as some pics I snapped at 6:45pm on the east side of town, looking WSW. This was near the time when it got Kory and Kenny... I think...

http://www.meteor.iastate.edu/~ckarsten/chase/cases/080611.html

Chris
 
SHORT: Witnessed 2 tornadoes in Western Iowa, a slender cone NW of Kingsley which briefly touched down but the funnel persisted for over 5 minutes; and a large rain-wrapped bowl with multiple vorticies under it near Pierson.

SUMMARY: Left Wisconsin at about 9:30 am targeting the area long Hwy 20 between FOD and SUX. Stopped in Gratiot, WI to photograph significant flooding along the Pecatonica River and Wolf Creek. While passing through the Waterloo area, I heard many reports of towns under mandatory evacuation for significant flooding.

First storms began firing as I sat north of Holstein deciding what to do. I blew off the initial convection to the northwest and waited for storms to develop along the line further south. Got on some weak storms just west of Kingsley and followed them to the northeast. Just as I began driving east to drop south in front of more fruitful storms, I noticed a well definied cone funnel about 1/2 way to the ground to my northwest (on a storm that looked horrible on radar). I filmed the funnel which occasionally had filaments of condensation reaching toward the ground with a likely surface circulation. Then followed that storm northeast for a short time before deciding to head south toward the Correctionville/Pierson storm. Ended up taking a few gravel roads (remarkably in good shape) to get a good view of the action area which quickly wrapped up and got enveloped by rain. Viewed some beautiful HP structure, then witnessed a large rain-wrapped bowl (contrast enhanced) with multiple vorticies for about 4 minutes before having to blast back east. Dropped south to the Denison area where I witnessed what looked like an embedded circulation aloft just north of town.

All in all a good chase day, but sobering after hearing of the fatalities.
 
The news of the scout camp was very sobering indeed. It almost makes you feel guilty to chase because you know it is a very destructive force.

Anyway, saw the first storm go up west of Omaha near Wahoo that was severe warned as it moved up towards Fremont, pretty explosive convection at times with it but it looked a little starved. Decided to let this storm go and continued west out of Omaha as another storm initiated in the same spot. On my way west a TOR was issued for a unconfirmed tornado near Wahoo... went west then North on HWY 31 out of Omaha to eventually met the storm quite a ways north of Elkhorn, this would be the storm that delivered the lightning strike to the OAX radar. It was fairly linear but a short segment in the line did have some moderate rotation and inflow bands at varying heights. Got some decent shots here and also a couple of the crazy anvil structure now spreading over the area.

Blasted south to intercept the storm that made a right turn for the Elkhorn area as it moved just NW of Elkhorn. This storm, albeit HP in nature had some pretty incredible structure with a lot of rolling and seemingly unorganized rotation. Public/ Law enforcement reported a tornado on the west side of Elkhorn, eventually caught this tornado on HWY 31 for a brief moment before jetting south. (See blurry picture.)

Headed SE from 168th and Maple in Omaha to try to catch the storm coming out of Sarpy county into Omaha but it was rather cold, and unorganized, then blasted south from 84th and 370 in Papillion to try to catch the Louisville storm moving out of the Greenwood area, it made a right turn before we could get across the river and we got caught in the core with quarter sized hail for a good 5-7 minuets mixed with a couple Golf balls about 2-3 miles South of Papillion.

Images below:

Line segment with inflow bands well North of Elkhorn:

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Heading S on HWY 31 towards the Elkhorn area:

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Storm structure as it approaches our location about 5 mi N of Elkhorn on HWY 31:

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If you look closely above and just right of the tree tops you can see a hint of a funnel.:

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Note the blowing dust at the extreme left hand side of this image:

http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c154/kasper_NE/f0208e42.jpg

Tornado 6 mi N of Elkhorn: (first image is straight from the camera, second is contrast enhanced and sharpened)

http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c154/kasper_NE/b11db424.jpg

http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c154/kasper_NE/86cd32b7.jpg

Looking back North into the notch as we had escaped to the south:

http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c154/kasper_NE/8e93aeed.jpg

All in all an exciting chase!
 
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Cell SW of Herman, NE

Not much to add here as my report would almost duplicate Dustin's. Except that when I headed south of the Blair area, I kept going south to the south side of Omaha where I live. The wife was freaking out over the constant blaring of the sirens, so I had to get home. There were reports to the southwest of Omaha anyways. Got home in time to watch the rain move in and convert my front, lower gutter into a waterfall and watch the water seep into my garden-level (addition) dining room. #*@%!!



I've attached a pic of the cell as I tracked it southwest of Herman. I had followed this particular cell from the northeast area of Valley. It still didn't look too impressive as I let it go because of the Missouri River bridge choices. I figured by the time I back-tracked to Blair and crossed and went back north it would be long gone. It appeared as though it would try to cut in a cone-shaped funnel, and then look pretty linear again. It really looked like a shelf to the left of this pic as I bugged east go get out of the drenching rain.

Geo
 

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A couple of pictures taken in Blair, NE. Looking n, nw.
 

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