Month: April 2009

  • 04/11/09 Chase Forecast

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    I’m not very optimistic about severe weather, particularly tornado chances (SPC has a 5% risk area outlined), especially since current dewpoints are still mostly in the upper 40s in the Permian Basin.  There does appear to be a tongue of elevated moisture at 850mb advecting into the Midland/Odessa area and toward Hobbs, NM.  This is expected to mix down somewhat as the day/evening goes on.

    Right now, I’m only expecting some late, elevated, marginally severe storms across the area.  However, freezing levels suggest they could be some pretty efficient hail producers, and wind profiles suggest any strong storms should rotate, which should increase the hail size, and of course with rotating storms there is always that chance of a tornado (even if in this case it’s remote).

    So, I’ll be heading out for Seminole, Texas shortly, adjust from there as needed.  I think at the very least I will finally get an decent opportunity for some lightning photography tonight I hope.  Rain is a good bed across much of the area, which is VERY much needed as you have heard me talk about before.

    I’m not liking the forecast radar reflectivity models for further east in Texas tomorrow, so I may forego that day.  I’ll evaluate that later tonight.  Right now it looks like a huge grunge chase with maybe a few embedded severe storms.  Of course a lot of that depends on how things evolve tonight.

    I’ll be live streaming today.  However, if I am in the Lubbock CWA, you may not be able to see it.  I will have to stream for the TV station and I haven’t quite got all the red tape worked out so they can use the TVN feeds, so I am streaming on a backup for them.  I’d give you guys the URL, but that server can only handle a handful of viewers to the stream. 😉

  • 04/09/09 Storm Chase Recap

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    This was perhaps the worse chase day I’ve every had that I can remember!  While it was a long trip, and storms didn’t really cooperate for good chasing (at least in Southern Kansas), that wasn’t what made it bad.  It was the fires!

    You couldn’t drive 25 miles without either seeing large patches of blacked earth, or a recent burned area still smoldering, or any many cases even an active fire burning.  Fires were burning down the dryline all the way in to central Texas!  All of this smoke, combined with dust from the dust storm in west Texas was being drawn right up in to Oklahoma and Kansas.  By mid-afternoon I was experiencing significant respiratory distress as well has my eyes were burning something awful and quite red.  Even today I am still irritated from it.

    It seemed no matter where you went you couldn’t get away from it, even in the rain!  The above picture was about the best I got out of the day, and gives you an idea of the near constant eerie lighting from the smoke and dust.

    About an hour before sunset, with storms heading into very unfavorable terrain for night chasing, and the fact I felt horrible, I decided to call it off and headed back home!  I was going to take some photos of some of the fires after dark, but I just literally felt too horrible to mess with it.