kevin-palmer
EF2
I was out yesterday photographing storms in Central Illinois. I was near Goodfield when this storm started forming. There must have been a strong updraft because there was a rain-free base for awhile at the beginning. Then a little bit of rain started to fall and that's when I started recording this time lapse. I shot a picture every 3 seconds for 12 minutes. At the very beginning I captured a wet microburst. I did a search and could not find very many other videos that showed a ball-shaped rain shaft such as this. But I have no idea what happened next. A lowering started forming out of the clouds that looked exactly like a wall cloud. But it was on the north side of the storm, instead of on the south side underneath the updraft. I sent this in to the local NWS office and it even stumped them. But they want to use the video for spotter training classes. Any ideas what I captured?
Watch video >

Wet Microburst by kevin-palmer, on Flickr

Fake Wall Cloud by kevin-palmer, on Flickr
Watch video >

Wet Microburst by kevin-palmer, on Flickr

Fake Wall Cloud by kevin-palmer, on Flickr