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What’s a good starting location for a chase day relative to the area of tornadoes

Kristian K

Enthusiast
Joined
Sep 29, 2025
Messages
2
Hello, I am new here and wanted to get into the hobby of storm chasing, I’ve never seen a tornado ever in my life and wanting to know a good starting location in area that has a risk for tornadoes on a that day.

My thoughts of starting within the most western side of the risk area since that’s when the first cells of the day start forming.

If you have other thoughts where I could start the chase day, let me know.
 
Welcome Kristian,

Because we often cannot tell precisely where the supercells will form, I generally go to a place with Wi-Fi (often for lunch, buy something from the place where you use the internet) in a location with good roads in multiple directions. That way, once we are an hour or two away from initiation and have higher confidence in the scenario, I can take those roads to get where I need to be.

Good luck and stay safe when chasing!
 
Welcome to Stormtrack Kristian!

The tornado risk areas outlined by the SPC aren't all that good for telling chasers where to go. In the Great Plains you will usually want to be on the dryline in places where isolated tornadic supercells are more likely, which include things like dryline bulges, dryline-outflow boundary intersections and places along the dryline that are under faster upper level winds. Those favorable locations can be anywhere in a big SPC tornado risk, or even just outside of where the biggest risk is. For instance, the SPC might paint the biggest tornado risk where after-dark squall-line embedded tornadic storms are expected. The places you'd go for daytime, isolated tornadic storms might not be where the highest risk is shown. In general, the western edge of the risk is where the dryline is, but it's easy to end up *behind* the dryline just going to the western side of the risk area.

On most chase days, you can get a general idea of the chase area from the SPC outlooks, but to narrow down where to target you'll need to be looking at satellite, surface obs and radar to locate the dryline and any boundaries. Models can also give you some idea of what might happen and what storms might do.

Gabe Garfield has a lot of videos on his Youtube channel about forecasting tornadoes that are pretty good for a newcomer to start learning the ropes: Gabe Garfield
 
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