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State of the Chase Season 2025

Tornado of the century occurred yesterday in western NE. Discrete supercell, barely moving, lasted nearly an hour, shape-shifted through every phase imaginable, impeccable backside lighting, beautiful prairie backdrop, and it didn't appear to hit anything. All on a random 2% day.

I don't know how anything gets better than that.
 
Pretty sure the 'State of the Chase Season 2025' just went up a notch for a bunch of folks in southwest Nebraska last night... me, on the other hand, was 1,300 miles away on a work trip...

Oh, and baseball-sized hail clobbered my house at 4am in northern Colorado this morning...

You're welcome, all! haha
 
The phrase "it only takes a day" gets thrown around far too much for my liking. Yesterday near North Platte was the very rare case where it rings true. I legitimately think that even if the season-to-date yesterday morning had been as bad as 2018 or 2020, being in good position for Wellfleet/Dickens would've completely atoned for months of drought-stricken awfulness and then some.

On the flip side, it's the kind of gut punch that the rest of us will spend every marginal/flawed chase day for the next 5 years reflexively thinking back on: "why couldn't it have been today's nondescript setup instead?" Actually, I already started doing that retroactively last night... "why couldn't the Hydro OK storm over the weekend have done 1/10 of this?" Storms like yesterday, Ashby 2020, and Campo 2010 are the ultimate reminders of the absurdity of this endeavor... that the real prize that we're all really after, the true subconscious motivation every time we make that 6-hour drive for a setup with 28 kts of bulk shear and 22 F spreads, comes down to brutal luck a handful of times per decade.
 
I've disconnected myself from the disappointment of missing days like yesterday, because of days like yesterday. So many times over the years I chose to stay home, thinking the chances of something not happening are far greater than what could happen, only to see sudden reports of epic-ness taking place which then would then motivate me to get out on the next one, only for nothing to happen. Like clockwork, season after season, and yesterday was no different.

The only answer is to literally never stop chasing (argh) and that's not something I even want to entertain anymore. So, yesterday's once in a decade tornado gets filed in the coulda-woulda-shoulda category for me and a "Hat's Off" to everyone else who made the trip out. The only thing I truly know these days is there will be more and I'll probably be mowing the lawn or some other mundane task instead, due to my own choice.
 
I think it's no secret that the best days are the low end days... everyone runs to the high risks and its so rare to EVER see anything of that quality. You look at the Akron 2023, Campos, yesterday... they're all low-end days that may not even reveal themselves to the morning of. Yes, that makes a case for the 'never stop chasing', but the truth is if you want THOSE types of quality, you have to focus on those lower-end days. And yesterday was NO exception. Folks that live a couple hours away (had I been home, I would've likely been chasing), or those on vacations/trips were the only ones there. And that's how it works for all these insane days.

Sucks I was away... I hated watching that live knowing I would've been there. But I got in to my hotel, watched my Akron 2023 footage on repeat for an hour, and cried myself to sleep. Today I will annoy the living hell out of everyone about it, and tomorrow I will wake up and piss and moan about what I'll miss today. When that is done, I'll move on just like I did with Campo... but daymn..
 
hahaha these are great threads @Tony Laubach (did you at least order a sub and ice cream while you were in sobstation? lol )... I had to come back from a business trip out in San Diego earlier due to some work issues, missed the protests by a day and had photos of the drive down on the water by the tall wooden ship, that less than 24hrs later were street covered funny enough, so this year's chase has been canx'd. and that's the way it goes sometimes.
 
It definitely sucks to miss an event like Wellfleet/Dickens. It’s what makes this hobby so maddening, and can drive an unhealthy obsession to chase everything, similar to the gambler that can’t pull himself from the slot machine or the roulette table, because the next bet could win the jackpot. It hurts because these events are so very rare that the regret over missing it can be unbearable. When you miss something big on a low-end day, I think you have to ask yourself, “If it’s a 5-hour drive, for only a 5% probability of something memorable, would I be willing to make that drive 20 times to see it?” (This may not be a statistically valid way to look at it, but you get the idea). Unfortunately, that is probably limited comfort in this case, because the answer is likely YES, I would have made that drive *50* (or more) times to see Wellfleet/Dickens!!!

I wasn’t even out there, but it makes me regret that I can’t spend more time on the Plains, because the odds of seeing something like this drop even further when limited to 2-3 weeks of chasing each year. However, if I was out there longer, or even if I lived out there, work obligations and PTO limitations would make me more selective in the setups I chase, so who knows if I would have even chased that day. Even on chase vacations, I have passed on chases that had a low cost/benefit relationship (i.e., 6 hour drive for a low probability event, especially if it left me with an equally long ride for a better setup the next day).

I do think some of the superlatives about this tornado are excessive and driven by recency bias. Don’t get me wrong, of course it was awesome by any objective standard, and most certainly the tornado of the year. But of the decade? Of the century? Not so sure about that. Even IF it qualifies as such by some objective criteria, a *personal* best is much more subjective and remains within reach for each of us, analogous to our talk about how we judge chase seasons. For example, I watched Connor Croff’s video of Wellfleet/Dickens, and he repeatedly said he had never seen such an amazing tornado, but I kept thinking that I was equally impressed by his Durango OK video from 2024. I have yet to have such a close encounter with a tornado crossing the road in front of me, as he had with Dickens. I still hope for that experience, it’s still on my chasing bucket list. But if I am lucky enough to get it, it will be a fulfilling experience, even if before that peak moment the tornado is not as beautiful as Dickens, or hadn’t been on the ground for over half an hour. So yeah I guess objectively this tornado offered a lot of different visuals and experiences, but many of those are available to us on separate chases, even if rarely or never in the same chase. Maybe we can take some comfort in that.
 
I do think some of the superlatives about this tornado are excessive and driven by recency bias. Don’t get me wrong, of course it was awesome by any objective standard, and most certainly the tornado of the year. But of the decade? Of the century? Not so sure about that. Even IF it qualifies as such by some objective criteria, a *personal* best is much more subjective and remains within reach for each of us, analogous to our talk about how we judge chase seasons. For example, I watched Connor Croff’s video of Wellfleet/Dickens, and he repeatedly said he had never seen such an amazing tornado, but I kept thinking that I was equally impressed by his Durango OK video from 2024. I have yet to have such a close encounter with a tornado crossing the road in front of me, as he had with Dickens. I still hope for that experience, it’s still on my chasing bucket list. But if I am lucky enough to get it, it will be a fulfilling experience, even if before that peak moment the tornado is not as beautiful as Dickens, or hadn’t been on the ground for over half an hour. So yeah I guess objectively this tornado offered a lot of different visuals and experiences, but many of those are available to us on separate chases, even if rarely or never in the same chase. Maybe we can take some comfort in that.
Probably a good perspective from more distance than those of us who hypothetically could've found a way to be there without a plane ticket (not that I ever even gave it a thought, if I'm honest). I think one factor is that, even though 2025 has been decent so far even outside Dickens, it strikes me that all the other Plains TOTY candidates were substantially less impressive than the top few tornadoes of the past couple years. This is especially true if you exclude the Floyd NM postfrontal fluke over Memorial Day weekend, and an oddly similar event in the OK Panhandle on June 8, both of which like 3 chasers saw. Arnett, Morton, and a couple others have been really solid, but they don't touch the best stuff from 4/26/24, Akron 2023, 6/23/23, 3/31/23, etc. The separation Dickens/Wellfleet has from everything else that could even be considered for second place this spring might be unusually large.
 
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