Post links to your 2011 chase season summaries

Bill Hark

EF5
Joined
Jan 13, 2004
Messages
1,353
Location
Richmond Virginia
Many chasers like myself often take a long time to put together chase season summaries and there is no specific place to post a link other than on one's own website or individual chase day reports.

I'd like to start a thread for single links to completed 2011 chase summaries pages.

Here is mine (includes May 21 Ada, May 23 Okeene, May 24 El Reno and Shawnee, OK tornadoes and April 27, Oilville VA tornado)

http://www.harkphoto.com/stormchase2011.html

Bill Hark
http://www.harkphoto.com
 
This is certainly a part of the forum that I hope never dies. I'm always interested in seeing what experiences others had on the days I chased since I rarely have the same experience as others around me.

EDIT: I forgot to include the stats from the November 7 chase. Stats now updated.

My chase highlights are on the website in my signature. This year's chases are here with the following quick stats:

Chases: 10
Tornadoes: 8
Tornado days: 4
Miles chased: ~5380
Cap busts: 3 (+½?)
States chased in: IA, NE, KS, OK, MO
Best day: June 20

Quick summary: Scored a multiple tornado day on my first chase of the year, a first! Experienced my worst two chase busts ever, both in KS or OK, in May. My first two successful chases this year were in Iowa. June was rather quiet with only three chases for the month. It was looking to be my worst season since I started chasing in 2008 when a seasonably strong trough moved in and gave me the best day of the year, and arguably one of my three best chases ever, on June 20th. Great success in Nebraska to close out the year!

Featured chases
April 9
May 22
June 20

Other chases (Feel free to read as little as you want.)
April 10
Chased the advancing dryline/cold front in northeast Iowa. Left Ames around 1 PM and managed to be very near the first storm of the day at initiation. However, as was progged, storm speeds were ridiculous, and we fell behind it quickly. Numerous other cells began to go up to the southwest of the first one, thus putting us in position to intercept numerous cores coming up the line at us. Unfortunately, low level shear appeared to be lacking, and instability must not have been great. None of the cells went severe unless they were within about 5 miles of the Minnesota border. Managed to intercept one cell in Ridgeway, IA that produced quite a hefty downburst with blinding rain, a nice gust of wind (yeah, just one), and some beebee-sized hail. I was happy just to get the hail. I was also impressed that the terrain held up all the way into western Winneshiek County, IA (i.e., near Ridgeway where we stopped and turned back).
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May 11
My worst chasing bust ever. Seeing a calm pattern taking over in the next several days, I decided to go farther out from Ames than ever before. Left Ames at 5:00 AM for a Pratt, KS target. Made it there at about 3:00 PM and quickly realized the day would bust, as an unpredicted overnight MCS and repeated redevelopment in TX and OK pretty much wiped out the thermodynamic environment to the north. Turned for home when the cirrus shield spread in from TX and OK, thus capping the environment with little instability. I also missed two tornadic storms in IA that went berzerk for some reason in spite of weak 500 mb flow. This chase was a 1060-mile, 21-hour humiliation.
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May 24
The May 11th epic chase bust was not to be outdone! Just two weeks later, a powerful shortwave and high risk day persuaded me to make the trip back to south-central KS. Only this time, we were pulled into north-central OK when storms fired early and southwest of our target area. We made a mad dash for one particular tornadic supercell, but it crapped out as we approached it. Then, of course, the outflow boundary from the morning MCS to the north decided to result in numerous tornadic supercells to our north in western/central Kansas while we were messing around with the crap in the middle. Thus, again, we missed absolutely everything. I haven't a single picture or video from this 1060-mile top end bust. As a final insult from mother nature, on the drive home, the storms that went by decided to persist and develop into an MCS as it sped northeast at almost the same speed we did. I had to drive in moderate to extremely heavy rainfall for three straight hours from somewhere near El Dorado on the Kansas Turnpike to north of the Kansas City metro area, and then again once we got back into Iowa. For as much money as I've paid to drive on the Kansas Turnpike, the road sure does get slippery when it gets dumped on. Pretty poor drainage if you ask me.
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June 13
A pathetic cap bust in the southeast NE, southwest IA, northeast KS, northwest MO region. The same setup occurred at least three times within a week of this day: a surface warm front crept slowly northeastward during the morning and early afternoon, then suddenly stopped and retrograded back to the southwest during the late afternoon. Add to that a stout EML and thus strong cap moving in from the southwest and the fact that stratus blanketed every square inch north of the warm front, and you get a very narrow baroclinic zone at the surface with a cap above it. Thus you have great shear but no instability north of the warm front and great instability with sufficient shear but towering LCL heights and a cap south of the warm front. That means no tornadoes no matter how high the significant tornado parameter is. Plus, we had to drive through Missery with its horrible county highways on the way back to I-35. Fail.
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June 19
As a strong late-June trough set up across the Rockies, this day offered some "day before the day" action. There was a warm front setting up across northern KS into northern MO with huge CAPE and sufficient shear. The biggest problem again was the cap, which held strong through northeastern KS and northern MO, save for one brief tornadic supercell south of I-70 near Salina before dark. Since Logan and I decided not to chase south of I-70 anymore for the remainder of the year, we had no play (plus the storm developed pretty late). We made it as far south as Cameron, MO before giving up and turning around. Then there was the amazing string-of-pearls supercell train that developed at around 9-10 PM across southeastern NE and southwestern IA. Only one of them produced a tornado, but the storms looked identical on radar for a solid hour or more. Quite a sight. But nothing like what the next day would bring.
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June 26
I told myself that June 20th was my last chase of the season. I wasn't paying a ton of attention to this day since the SPC convective outlooks weren't showing much of interest that would be reasonably close. I was awakened by a text message from Logan at 9 AM that says, "wtf?! 15% hatched tor!" I had seen the previous day 2 outlook from the day before, but the 30% hatched probability for severe weather disappeared in the afternoon update as the forecast became less certain. Even the 06Z day 1 update did not have much more. Then, all of a sudden, the 12Z day 1 update flew in with this 15% hatched tornado probability and indicating the wording of strong tornadoes. So I got up, still kind of tired, and immediately checked all of the available data. The data told me that it looked good if 1) the warm front made it as far north as the models were saying it would, and 2) the cap stayed south. However, a stratus deck made its presence known early in the morning on visible satellite over the exact region depicted in the 15%/hatched tornado contour. After a few hours of watching the stratus mostly stay (but start to erode towards noontime) and the warm front essentially make no progress north, as well as seeing some pretty warm 700 mb temperaures move in (see 12Z observed, 15Z analyzed, 18Z analyzed, and 20Z analyzed 700 mb temperatures), I was somehow compelled to get west because the HRRR continually spat out a large cluster of supercells across western IA and eastern NE. However, shortly after leaving Ames with Logan, the stratus deck, which had been eroding rapidly from east (in Iowa) to west (into eastern Nebraska) and from south (in Kansas) to north (into Nebraska) began filling in again. Also, a plume of thundershowers began developing out of a stationary origin somewhere west of Omaha and sent a west-east band of precip across most of eastern NE and into western IA. It was persisting and moving due east. The HRRR was not capturing these features. Thus, we decided that it was going to be a cap bust and turned around.

On our way home from Adair on I-80 we spotted a storm blowing up in southwest IA. We didn't see evidence that it would become a tornadic supercell (possibly an elevated supercell), but we decided to intercept it anyway for the chance at some large hail. We spent a good 30-45 minutes under the maxed-out VIL core between Greenfield and Creston and sampled plenty of hail, but pretty much all non-severe. There may have been one or two 1" sized stones, but most of it was nickel and below. At times it looked like maybe the storm was trying to turn into a supercell, but it suddenly weakened as it began to go outflow dominant. It would end up being part of a complex that would form into an MCS across southeastern IA towards the early evening hours. We left it and drove home. I still spent 6 hours, 270 miles, and $20 of gas on the road for a chase, but I consider this one a moral victory since we had the knowledge to call it off pretty early and did not cap bust. We actually had some fun in the hail core, and it was more than we would've otherwise seen.

SPC finally removed the 15% tornado probability in the 20Z outlook but left the hatched in there. Here's how that risk verified: http://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/outlook/archive/2011/day1otlk_v_20110626_1300.gif. There was a tornado reported from a brief supercell in far northwestern MO, although it hasn't been verified. There was also a confirmed tornado in western IA, but at 8:40 PM and part of the leading edge of the raging MCS that swept across the state that evening.
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November 7
Ahh, the benefits of moving to Oklahoma. Of course I had to endure the second half of the hottest summer ever and the peak of one of the driest years ever (not to mention three of the strongest earthquakes ever to occur in Oklahoma), but quite an opportunity arose when the models forecast the chance of significant severe weather this day. The setup didn't look that great in the models leading up to this (mainly, instability was lacking...generally < 2000 J/kg was forecast). However, the models underdid the surface temperatures because the forecast precip that was supposed to block out the insolation during the morning did not materialize. Hence, CAPE actually exceeded 3000 J/kg in the area of interest. Since my car's brakes had recently gone down the tubes, I was temporarily without an automobile. While I recognized the opportunity for the day and wanted to go, I could not find anyone who would let me chase with them. I thought I would have a miserable day watching it all unfold from my NWC office, but at last I was able to get out with Jeff Snyder and Howie Bluestein! (yes, I was somewhat star-struck at being able to chase with him).

We left Norman at 3:30 and headed down I-44 to try to intercept the main supercell that had already produced several tornadoes. We listened to more reports come in through the spotter radio networks as we went. This was a limited technology chase, as all we had was our cell phones. Amazing that we could manage a chase like this with just cell phones, but my phone alone has mobile data and a mapping software with GPS, so that was really helpful. We managed to get on the storm just as it was going through its last cycle near Fort Cobb. We saw the tornado as it went through almost the entire spectrum of shapes, from bowl to wedge to multiple-vortex to cone to stovepipe. At the closest point we were paralleling it on OK 146 north of Fort Cobb as it moved mostly north. The storm had been moving northeast, but turned back to the NNE during the end of its life as it began to weaken. Once the meso occluded and the tornado pulled back into the storm and died, the storm fell apart and we headed back to Norman. Got back by 7 PM! Of course it had pretty much been dark since when we broke off the chase, but for leaving at 3:30 in November and getting to see a tornado, I'd call the chase successful. Unfortunately, since I didn't have my D40 with me, I could only get shots from my cell phone, and those didn't turn out very well. Oh well.
 
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My 2011 summary has been done for a while now. It was easy to write because we didn't see anything.
 
I've been wasting too much time writing my logs, and so they aren't even done yet. Here are the ones I do have:
http://skip.cc/chase/2011.shtml
I've written out a few more but I haven't dropped them into the template yet. Hopefully I will be caught up before I start adding more in '12.

I haven't tallied the mileage up, but 13 tornadoes on 7 tornado days. One interesting stat: 0 chases this year that were both south of 70 and west of 35. I either had work obligations on the couple big days OK had, or was otherwise playing another end of the setup. My first chase of the year resulted in a tornado (spoiled), which was also my first Iowa tornado (after being 0 and 25).
 
Good Idea Bill !

I have been toying with a related idea for a while now, but I haven't had time to work out all the details...
Maybe someone with more spare time could work on this, so I'll just throw this one out for anyone to run with...
This might sound too far out, but I see no reason why it would not work...

My chaselog-page idea might be based on something like this...

The SPC has a database with storm reports, by Year, Month, Day, Zulu-Time, Type of report, Location (state, county, latitude-longitude)

You can look at a national map for a given day/time and see the events, but you cannot get details from pointing at the map itself.

I would like to see a similar map, where drifting a mouse over a report icon (wind, hail, nader) would cause sticky notes to pop that would show
the report data, PLUS a list of links to chaser accounts with pics, videos, narratives, etc.

If you picked a particular chaser's account for that day, you could get a similar map that showed their path for the day with dates, times, etc.
and then by following their path on the map, you could read the narrative, see the pics, etc. as they progressed.

Logging your chase could be as simple as clicking on a Storm Report Map to fill in your Times, locations, notes, and pics, etc.

Maybe a master map could be available that could show everybody's individual chase for that given day.
Maybe the map could be animated with moving overlays of radar, satellite, lightning, etc.
As the animation progressed (maybe in 15-minute intervals), it could show the individual chasers' paths,
icon's could pop to provide links to show what it actually looked like at a given location/time.

This could give a truly complete picture of a synoptic scale weather event with micro-scale details available.

You could examine why you busted while others scored big (or vice-versa),
look into the decision-making processes (what they did based on what they saw), etc.

Details of an event could be filled in at any time,
so it would NOT be necessary to have the entire data-set
present to make this idea work.
I also have a pretty good idea of how the database would have to
be organized, so if any of you Geography/Meteo/Comp Sci Majors need a project,
I'll be happy to fill you in...

-Truman PS Nice catch in Oilville, Bill. I just missed that one. (I-95 traffic, lol)
 
That would be cool, but good luck getting someone to volunteer for such a huge undertaking.
 
The final product would be huge,
it would almost surely have to be built in stages. My thinking...

Intially - A geographic database with text-based logging,
so chaser's could enter time, location, narrative, links for images, etc.

Later - build the mapping display, where viewer could control date, time, etc

Finally - graphic interface for logging

Maybe if I built the first stage someone could pick up from there...
 
Chase log entries can be found here, most consisting of just images and stats at this point: http://skyinmotion.com/chase/index.php?y=2011

Chase days: 22

Tornadoes: 18

Logged miles: 11,395
- Miles/chase: 518
- Miles/tube: 633

Tornado days: 7
*February 27: Grainola, OK (1)
*April 14: Madill, OK; and Tushka, OK (2)
*April 24: Baird, TX (1)
*May 21: Sulphur, OK; Hickory, OK; and Ada, OK (4)
*May 24: Lookeba, OK; Chickasha-Tabler, OK; and Criner-Goldsby, OK (3)
*June 20: Long Island, KS; Stamford, NE; and Ravenna, NE (3)
*November 7: Manitou-Synder, OK; Wichita Mountains, OK; and Ft. Cobb, OK (4)

Best structure days:
*April 14: Madill/Tishomingo, OK
*May 21: Ada, OK
*May 23: Gotebo to Apache, OK
*June 20: Long Island, KS
*October 11: Lefors to Alanreed, TX

Firsts and Bests:
*First February tornado (Grainola, OK, 2/27)
*First intercept of tornadoes on three different storms in one day (5/24)
*First NE tornado (Stamford, 6/20)
*Largest hail impacting my chase vehicle (3.75-4.00", Union City, OK, 10/22)
*First autumn and November tornado (Manitou-Snyder, OK, 11/7)
*Most autumn chase days with legit supercell intercepts (5)

The biggest story of 2011 for me, without a doubt, was the incredible showing by the Sooner state after all the pain it has inflicted upon me over the years. I arrived at OU in 2005, and as of January of this year, my only daylight OK tornadoes had been El Reno (4/24/06) and Hennessey (5/19/10). I never thought I'd see an Oklahoma year so spectacular that it would instantly make up for the state's "performance" the previous five or so, let alone one with a La Nina and severe drought.

If you can stomach the cheesiness, I couldn't resist chronicling all my home-state intercepts in one summary image, in light of the above: http://skyinmotion.com/external/2011chase/2011_mytors.png

Radar composite of the storms involved: http://skyinmotion.com/external/2011chase/my_ok_sups.png
 
I have completed my 2011 chase summary pages -----

Summary page

Image gallery and links to each chase account

Looking back on spring and early summer 2011, there were only a handful of really good tornado days during May and June in the favored chase areas. I managed to miss two of these (May 24 and June 20), but made up for it on two days in Missouri on storms that few others were on (May 22 and May 25). Fortunately, there were a number of amazing, colorful stormy/sunset opportunities which made up for the dearth of slow-moving, photogenic tornadoes during May and June.

Bill Reid
 
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