Brett Roberts
EF5
James's last post reminded me of a marginally useful tidbit I can share. I finally started a spreadsheet recently to track every tornado I've photographed, including location, time, etc. Here are the lat-lon stats for my 122 photographed tornadoes over a period of 19 years, chasing based out of the OKC area over that whole period:
The median lat-lon coordinate is inside Woodward city limits, while the average coordinate is near the OK/KS state line between Freedom and Medicine Lodge.
Basically, the unsurprising takeaway is that living on the sparsely populated southern High Plains in the general vicinity of Woodward/Dodge City would probably maximize chase opportunities within an X-hour drive. My home location is obviously a significant source of bias, likely dragging my selection of chase setups farther south (and possibly slightly east?) than they'd be if I were nomadic. So I might hedge a few counties N and assume somewhere like Garden City to Hays is the true epicenter of chase opportunities -- at least for my chasing style.
Latitude | Longitude | |
Median | 36.41 | -99.36 |
Average | 36.91 | -99.07 |
Minimum | 30.46 | -105.07 |
Maximum | 45.45 | -89.94 |
The median lat-lon coordinate is inside Woodward city limits, while the average coordinate is near the OK/KS state line between Freedom and Medicine Lodge.
Basically, the unsurprising takeaway is that living on the sparsely populated southern High Plains in the general vicinity of Woodward/Dodge City would probably maximize chase opportunities within an X-hour drive. My home location is obviously a significant source of bias, likely dragging my selection of chase setups farther south (and possibly slightly east?) than they'd be if I were nomadic. So I might hedge a few counties N and assume somewhere like Garden City to Hays is the true epicenter of chase opportunities -- at least for my chasing style.