Nick Nolte
EF2
I was going to append this to the DISC thread for this day, but someone else mentioned it might deserve its own thread.
Here's the videos, first one is HD video of the feature, my camerawork isn't pristine, but you can see what I'm talking about. The second video is time lapse from my dash webcam, it's quality is poorer, but you get a sense of the direction of movement. The feature shows up around 0:12.
I was about half a mile northwest of Pleasant Hill, IL in Pike County at about 10:50 am CST on 12/31 parked off IL-96 looking SW when what looked like white smoke showed up and appeared to be connected to the storm base and in contact with the ground. I am 99% sure this was NOT a tornado, but it coincided with a radar indicated couplet at the same time. I am also positive it is not actually smoke as it coincides with the storm.
My original thought was (and after talking with others) that the updraft was grabbing cold air from the ground and it was condensing very quickly, or it was grabbing snow fog from close to the surface. However, the updraft would move NE with the storm and this feature moved S.
So, ideas? Discussion?
Here is a radar animation of the area/time in question: http://i55.tinypic.com/28vaal0.gif
Happy New Year!
Here's the videos, first one is HD video of the feature, my camerawork isn't pristine, but you can see what I'm talking about. The second video is time lapse from my dash webcam, it's quality is poorer, but you get a sense of the direction of movement. The feature shows up around 0:12.
I was about half a mile northwest of Pleasant Hill, IL in Pike County at about 10:50 am CST on 12/31 parked off IL-96 looking SW when what looked like white smoke showed up and appeared to be connected to the storm base and in contact with the ground. I am 99% sure this was NOT a tornado, but it coincided with a radar indicated couplet at the same time. I am also positive it is not actually smoke as it coincides with the storm.
My original thought was (and after talking with others) that the updraft was grabbing cold air from the ground and it was condensing very quickly, or it was grabbing snow fog from close to the surface. However, the updraft would move NE with the storm and this feature moved S.
So, ideas? Discussion?

Here is a radar animation of the area/time in question: http://i55.tinypic.com/28vaal0.gif
Happy New Year!