• After witnessing the continued decrease of involvement in the SpotterNetwork staff in serving SN members with troubleshooting issues recently, I have unilaterally decided to terminate the relationship between SpotterNetwork's support and Stormtrack. I have witnessed multiple users unable to receive support weeks after initiating help threads on the forum. I find this lack of response from SpotterNetwork officials disappointing and a failure to hold up their end of the agreement that was made years ago, before I took over management of this site. In my opinion, having Stormtrack users sit and wait for so long to receive help on SpotterNetwork issues on the Stormtrack forums reflects poorly not only on SpotterNetwork, but on Stormtrack and (by association) me as well. Since the issue has not been satisfactorily addressed, I no longer wish for the Stormtrack forum to be associated with SpotterNetwork.

    I apologize to those who continue to have issues with the service and continue to see their issues left unaddressed. Please understand that the connection between ST and SN was put in place long before I had any say over it. But now that I am the "captain of this ship," it is within my right (nay, duty) to make adjustments as I see necessary. Ending this relationship is such an adjustment.

    For those who continue to need help, I recommend navigating a web browswer to SpotterNetwork's About page, and seeking the individuals listed on that page for all further inquiries about SpotterNetwork.

    From this moment forward, the SpotterNetwork sub-forum has been hidden/deleted and there will be no assurance that any SpotterNetwork issues brought up in any of Stormtrack's other sub-forums will be addressed. Do not rely on Stormtrack for help with SpotterNetwork issues.

    Sincerely, Jeff D.

How rare are double tornadoes?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Rob Strunk
  • Start date Start date
http://www.rap.ucar.edu/staff/landolt/2007mar28/

The tornadic sup just north of the KS one I was on had twin wedges as well. I was driving during that part and only got stuff after they were merged. That link above shows the "twins" sequence well though. Justin Walker had them too but I see his site is down. As did Chris Rozoff and Matt Kassawara...but hey...no site there anymore either. I thought Chris, Matt, and Justin's showed them both as wedges better. Interesting more than one storm was doing that the same day.

Yeah, I let my website go down, I didn't have the time to keep it going right now. Here was my view from the south, I went up a dirt road and it turned to crap and I stopped and let it run away. I enhanced it quite a bit. This was near the time when the tornado was near Grant, which I suppose is about the time you were shooting it Mike.

Edit: This also was clearly one large circulation as this progressed. The tornado on the right side was the main part of the circulation and the tornado on the left actually started as a little needle on the right and it circulated around the main circulation and got much bigger. This stage of the storm only lasted about 4-5 minutes, it was pretty brief. Early, this storm had multiply circulations with multiply tornadoes. It was quite a storm....as many were that day!


28march2007.jpg
 
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Thanks for posting that Justin. I think that is pretty much right when I first saw things...

07-3-28-1.jpg


I drove west a few more miles losing site of it for a bit, not that much further, before I pulled over on east side of Grant. When I first pulled over, it had to be right when those two merged into one another.

About here on his sequence which I wasn't yet taking stills of...

twins11.JPG


That is what I remember seeing when I looked about straight south(he's right by me I believe as I think it is his parked car in my stills and the car was there when I pulled up). Probably the wildest looking thing I've seen chasing. All that chaos was merging as one messed up the other, but at the same time something really really wanted to come down out of it. All the sudden bam that crazy intense stovepipe appears, but what made it so crazy was how intense it looked AND the motion it had as in left to right and right to left movement of the whole stovepipe. But then same moment about, it was all gone again. I then got the still cam mounted and my sequence begins after that. With the bowl still there but not ready to plant the big single one down just yet.
 
I got a pretty good look at two smaller tornadoes occurring in the eastern semi-circle of the Greensburg KS EF-5, about 25 minutes before the tornado struck Greensburg. The farther away (and smaller) of the two was definitely moving from right to left within my vantage point looking due north... i.e., apparently satelliting in a westerly or northwesterly direction around the northeastern periphery of the primary tornado. http://www.tornadohead.com/050407chase.htm
 
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