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6/17/09: REPORTS NE/KS/IA/MO/SD/MN

Began the day extremely disgusted with a vehicle fuse issue that cost us the early KS/NE border tornado producer. The fuse issue pretty much eliminated our data, live stream, navigation, and wasted a ton of time. I figured it's just a couple days' chase, so I foolishly left the old-school basics at home - under-appreciated things, like maps and such - never again. So, in the end, we went blind with some much appreciated nowcasting by my brothers, Marc and John, and fellow Gainesville chaser, Mike Robinett. The tech issues combined with a bad decision, a train, and two wide loads also cost us the first tornado of the Grand Island series. But ultimately, the trip payed off beautifully, as we were able to witness the reorganization of the cell as the earlier meso occluded, while observing some of the best structure I've ever seen, and that includes some pretty nice storms. The helical striations and detailed sculptings were just jaw-dropping. Then came the icing as we watched the Aurora tornado spin up, cross the road, strengthen, weeken, and then strengthen greatly as a nice straight elephant trunk before slamming a farm house and barn and crossing the road again. As we moved out away from the storm, I was surprised to find the structure had actually become even more spectacular. I don't think I've ever witnessed a more fantastic structure/tornado producing storm combo in my life. A rather satisfying chase, considering the difficulties and the throng of chasers along 34.

A few vidcaps follow:

Nub tornado with gustnado thingy
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Two faint power flashes (lower right)
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Farm house west of Aurora that would soon sustain heavy damage
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Tornado takes aim, unfortunately
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About to be engulfed. Debris is flying and falling nearby at this point
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Beating a hasty retreat
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Hope to get some photos up sometime next week.
 
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Twin tornadoes

Just wanted to add another angle when both tornadoes were in progress. The smaller tornado formed with the large one and initially dirt was pulled from he southwest circulation into the main vortex. It was not a satellite tornado in my opinion; we didn't see it rotate around the main tornado, but it did finally merge. I believe Brian M also captured this from a different angle.

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Eventaully watched a weak tornado cross Hwy. 281 on the far southern end of Grand Island, there was a nice white cone funnel, with a debris field of mostly tree limbs underneath...I was about 1/8 mile from this.

I believe I can argue for the confirmation of that tornado in some video I got from a few miles just southeast of town. Definite dust flying around under the wall cloud, although the funnel was hard to see from my vantage point.
 
Chased central Nebraska and was on that cell north of I-80. Was north of Wood River for the first few tornadoes. Then as the cell was re-organizing I decided to get far ahead to get some structure shots. Still amazed at some of the crazy structure it displayed. Then the cell went bonkers while I was just south of Phillips. I made my way to the 324 exit as it dropped the large tornado. There was a smaller tornado right before the larger one...could've still been there but was hard to tell what circulation belonged to what funnel. My video shows the first circulation on the ground follwed by the other funnel and touchdown. Then the RFD was coming in strong! So I decided to get south of I-80 incase it decided to make a hard right turn, so I wouldn't be trapped by the interstate, and then keep heading east to get ahead of it. I shouldv'e gotten further east at this point for better back lighting...but it seemed that the tornado was booking east pretty fast. Video will be posted soon.

http://www.nebraskastorms.com/storms.htm

Tornado #1 - north of Wood River looking west. Of course it drops the tornado as soon as decided to move from a great view to get closer and then I'm on a road with a gazillion telephone poles on both sides of the road!
Lesson learned.

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Tornado #2 - north of Wood River lookign west. (Better vantage point but still pretty far away)
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Tornado just north of exit 324 on I-80.
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Tornado as I'm just 1 mile south of exit 324.
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Crazy structure while north of Wood River...
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more pics and soon to be posted video...

http://www.nebraskastorms.com/storms.htm
 
Austin, MN Tornado

I chased with Twister Sister Peggy today and we ended up targeting near the Mankato/New Ulm, Minnesota area for initiation. An intense supercell that later spawned the Austin, MN tornado quickly developed 25 miles southeast of Mankato and we were quickly on this storm near Geneva, MN. There was a large wall cloud on the storm that was being shielded somewhat from the intense hail core but we could see the edge upon following the storm to the east to Highway 218. Upon briefly getting cored with some nickel sized hail, we emerged very close to the meso, which was violently rotating on the northwest side of Austin and very low to ground. Under the meso, there was no condensation funnel at that time, but there was a tight circulation on the ground for several minutes. We then progressed south towards I-90 and came upon damage to structures, trees and downed power lines as well as snapped power poles. After getting through Austin and emerging on the southeast side of town, a newly developed mesocyclone dropped another tornado, and much stronger, about 2 miles east-southeast of Austin. This tornado was much larger and had multiple vortices as shown by the video. This was quite the incredible but sobering experience at this point as the tornado sat over a farmstead and large wooded grove of trees for around 4-5 minutes about ¼ mile to our south-southeast. There was large structural damage done here as well as numerous power flashes with this tornado upon meandering slowly to the northeast. We also got into some golf ball sized hail at this point that did put a crack in the windshield. The tornado eventually diminished but soon cycled, with a third tornado developing as we traveled southeast on Highway 56 near Rose Creek, MN. This tornado was a nice cone structure with a needle towards the ground and intense rotation about ½-1 mile away from us at that point. It did not appear that this third tornado led to much in the way of damage, thankfully. Thereafter, we followed the storm further southeast towards Adams and Leroy, MN, witnessing a pair of horizontal funnels (very cool looking I might add) as well as an organized and rotating wall cloud that did not put down a tornado before we lost daylight, although it very much looked like it would at a few points in its cycle. All in all, a terrific chase day for us, close to home, and actually too close to home for me considering I grew up in this area and knew a lot of the areas that were hardest hit by these tornadoes. Pictures and video are below. I do have a bunch of video that I haven’t edited yet and probably will be posting more clips later on when I get time to mull through it all.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xwfqyxt2XII
 

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I chased eastern Colorado with my brother and Dann Cianca. we ran into extremely large hail up to softball size and almost destroyed my windshild. All in all success!

CONGRATS TO EVERYONE WHO BAGGED DEM TUBES!!!

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MORE PHOTOS AND VIDEO
 
I was really on the fence about this day, since I had just gotten back from a solid 5 weeks of chasing as a part of VORTEX 2. However, the setup looked good enough to make me want to drive to southeastern Nebraska; Dan and I left mid-morning to make the relatively long trek northward. By the time we got to Wichita, we saw the developing supercells in extreme northern Kansas and southern Nebraska east of Belleville. Shoot. One of these supercells apparently produced a tornado near Marysville while we were somewhere near Salina. The 12z EMC 4km WRF that I looked correctly forecast late-morning initiation of supercells in far southeastern NE and northeastern KS, with nothing substantial forecast after this initial wave. By the time we reached Concrdia and, particularly, Belleville, we knew that we had to make a decision... We could either jet eastward to catch up with the northwestern supercell near Seneca, which may take us out of position for afternoon convection in south-central NE, or we could blow off the northeastern KS supercells and continue onward towards our target. Since the nearest supercell was about an hours drive from us, and moving away, we didn't want to risk being out of position for the main show. So, we continued northward.

Through the next few hours, we shifted westward in southern NE as the outflow from the morning and early afternoon supercells expanded west and northwestward across southern NE. Near Red Cloud, we noticed sustained convective development along I80 and along the edge of an apparently strong cap, so we blasted north. We eventually got a look of the base north of Minden, or east of Kearney, and we plotted are route to get a better view of the meso. At first glance, we saw a nice RFD clear slot working around a good low-level meso. While driving N out of Gibbon several miles, we saw a tornado to our NNW or NW; the tornado was a decent elephant trunk that lasted less than a minute or two (need to check my tape). After this occlusion, the storm took on a bit more of an HP appearance, with a wet, rain-filled RFD.

By the time we reached Alda, the newest RFD clear slot was relatively rain-free, and we were treated to at least a couple of very impressive, extremely rapidly-rotating low-level mesocyclones between Alda and Grand Island. In fact, I'm still amazed that these low-level mesocyclones did not produce substantial tornadoes. The RFD seemed rather warm, and motion on the low meso and wall clouds was impressive. I didn't think we could get ot Hwy 34 on the south side of GRI, so we dropped south to I80 and continued eastward to Giltner Rd. At this time, the structure was fantastic, though even this jaunt to get out ahead of the storm didn't get us far enough ahead to get a really good view of the storm structure.

At any rate, the low-level meso to our NW looked to produce one short-lived tornado as we were positioning on Giltner Rd between US34 and I80, before a more intense and long-lasting tornado developed between Phillips and Aurora. The track of the tornado was relatively predictable, and visibility was good, so we ended up taking roads that got us close to the tornado (~1/2-3/4 miles) while still leaving us comfortable (we were south and southwest of it at this time). The tornado started off as a truncated cone with big dust whirl at the surface, and it grew in size as it progessed eastward. For the first 50-60% of the life of the tornado, I thought it looked a lot like the Attica tornado from 5/12/04; in it's largest state, it had a nice barrel shape (NOT a wedge that I heard reported!). We followed the storm through York, NE, before calling off the chase in darkness.

Overall, I'm very pleased with this chase. The motion at cloud was and associated with wall clouds and low-level mesocyclones was fantastic (again, I have no idea why there wasn't at least one substantial tornado west of GRI). The structure was also very good when we got out ahead of the supercell enough to see it, and we got a good view of the largest tornado west of Aurora. The NWS damage assessment of this tornado rated it an EF2, probably at least 1/4 of a mile wide at it's widest, and on the ground for ~18 minutes. I'm happy that we made the right decision in terms of not chasing after the northeastern KS supercells in the early-mid afternoon and sticking with our original target. The roads were very good for the most part (every 1 mile, pretty good gravel state, etc), and the supercell moved slowly enough and nearly parallel to the E-W roads to make chasing quite easy.

MORE PICTURES AND VIDEO AT http://www.tornadocentral.com/chasing/2009/06172009.php

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Took 3 students out on a chase this day (Weather Explorers Post 999, Jared Knedler, Cathy Couture and Cody Ervin). Saw 4 tornadoes. 3 satellites and the Aurora dust monster. We started our chase from Omaha and dove down to South of Beatrice to get on the storm there that was tornado-warned but did not want to punch the core and by the time we could see a base it was clear we missed the show. So we continued on toward our target of Grand Island. We got on the cell near Pleasanton about the time it was severe-warned and we were able to stay with it till after dark. Perhaps 20 rain drops hit the windshield during that whole time yet we were rarely more than 5 miles from the meso and at times almost beneath it. Slow storm motion and good gravel roads made it easy to stay with it. We saw the first brief touchdown South of Ravenna. Here is some video of that circulation:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_4vsmg4I6I

We continued to follow the various rotating walls. Saw the quick dust up near 281 then of course the tornado West of Aurora. This was the first time that I was on a tornado that was associated with a tornado emergency message. Scary stuff. Very thankful the damage was not worse and no injuries.

And the video of the EF-2 West of Aurora. Yeah I know, don't walk away from the tripod. Anyone in this pic? :)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Wa-3X1p8nE

vid cap of first tornado South of Ravenna.
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North of I-80 exit 324 with everyone else.

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More pics can be seen here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/26969062@N07/
 
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Chased with Rich, we sat out around east of Windom, MN for a while watching a couple of towers go up and collapse. Got some video of it and will make a time lapse of it sometime. Got to meet David Drufke and his wife while watching these towers. Finally noticed the towers going up like a nuke down in south central MN. Headed towards them, caught up to the Waseca, MN storm since we knew we werent going to get to the Austin storm in time. Saw a water spout just north of Waseca and a couple of brief tornadoes (landspouts?) right under the meso and wall cloud. No funnels so it was hard to get pics or video. Stepladdered it southeast staying right with the storm the rest of the chase but could never quite completely punch through the hook. The storm had crazy motion, both vertical motion and rotation. A little frustrating but atleast we got a couple of spinups out of it. ~460 miles and home before 11:00 pm. Hopefully this isnt too many pics to have in one post.
Pics of the incredible structure:
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Updraft with a view of the base:
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Pic of the wall cloud which was rotating quite a bit.
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Pic from inside the car while moving of the same feature but hanging on the ground. Not sure if it ever touched down, never saw it produce but I cant be 100% sure.
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I still have video to go through, one of which I'm pretty sure shows one of the spin ups as we are just getting to the east side of Waseca, we'll see what it looks like on the big screen.

EDIT: Here is video of a brief tornado just north of Waseca. Unfortunately we were still dealing with trees at the time but at the beginning of the video on the left it is pretty obvious. I just got the video on Youtube, so for the next few minutes it may not be available until it finishes processing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40V7JMUiWzk

MODS: Can you add Minnesota to the title?
 
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Same as others I too was suduced by the coolness of SE NE and NE KS I bailed around Seneca, KS and headed back to my original target of Kearney.

The storm was photgentic thats for sure...
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The storm did have a Tornado report and NWS Topeka gave me a call, hard to tell here...
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I followed the storm back to Aurora (from Wood River new storm) where where I took this photo...
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My full chase log and the HD video of both events are on my website at www.endlessweather.com
 
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