Andrew Clope
EF1
Hey guys, I was out near Omaha yesterday chasing what I thought could have possibly been a somewhat promising setup. Obviously I was wrong. But I have a few questions.
First, I saw a few folks post up regarding the fact that it was a cold front setup, and that they had no interest in chasing it. Why is this? I know that cold fronts are faster movers than the rest of the boundaries, and that they seem more aggressive in triggering lift/convection. I would imagine you'd want this (to a certain degree). Is the problem that it can be too aggressive? Triggering too much at once and lining out the way it did yesterday? Would it be more desirable to have a slower moving form of lift?
Also, it seems to me that yesterday all of the runs on the HRRR showed the most favorable shear to the East of the river, over in the extreme SW corner of IA. The storms seemed to fire off to the south west, where there was CAPE and lift from the front, but less than favorable shear. I was holding back to the East just south of Omaha and was hoping that A) either the storms firing down in NC KS and SC NE would stay somewhat discrete as they moved into the more sheared environment (which I knew was very unlikely), or B) that the OFB from the storms firing all along that cold front would lift a few out in front closer to where the best shear was. Neither happened, but how else could I have played yesterday? Was I correct in my line of thinking here, or am I missing something?
I ended up calling it at around 530 and headed home, just because I had no desire to get close to that complex just to see (not see) a possible rain wrapped vortex, especially with the numerous reports of golf ball sized hail. And sitting near Omaha, the anvil from the storms back west of Lincoln started casting a cloud cover over the whole area so I figured it'd be hard to trigger anything substantial with no heating anyways.
I appreciate all of the help!
First, I saw a few folks post up regarding the fact that it was a cold front setup, and that they had no interest in chasing it. Why is this? I know that cold fronts are faster movers than the rest of the boundaries, and that they seem more aggressive in triggering lift/convection. I would imagine you'd want this (to a certain degree). Is the problem that it can be too aggressive? Triggering too much at once and lining out the way it did yesterday? Would it be more desirable to have a slower moving form of lift?
Also, it seems to me that yesterday all of the runs on the HRRR showed the most favorable shear to the East of the river, over in the extreme SW corner of IA. The storms seemed to fire off to the south west, where there was CAPE and lift from the front, but less than favorable shear. I was holding back to the East just south of Omaha and was hoping that A) either the storms firing down in NC KS and SC NE would stay somewhat discrete as they moved into the more sheared environment (which I knew was very unlikely), or B) that the OFB from the storms firing all along that cold front would lift a few out in front closer to where the best shear was. Neither happened, but how else could I have played yesterday? Was I correct in my line of thinking here, or am I missing something?
I ended up calling it at around 530 and headed home, just because I had no desire to get close to that complex just to see (not see) a possible rain wrapped vortex, especially with the numerous reports of golf ball sized hail. And sitting near Omaha, the anvil from the storms back west of Lincoln started casting a cloud cover over the whole area so I figured it'd be hard to trigger anything substantial with no heating anyways.
I appreciate all of the help!