Tag: Storm Chasing

  • 04/28/09 Storm Chase Recap

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    Ended up just west of Roswell, New Mexico on a sweet looking LP supercell.  This is one thing I like about chasing eastern New Mexico is the great views and awesome storm structure.  Never really made a good wall cloud or attempts at tornadoes after we got on it, but Bob Schafer who we met up with there said earlier it had a huge wall cloud just dragging the ground.  The way it looked on radar I can believe it!

    After that storm died we went back south of Carlsbad, New Mexico on a supercell along the Texas/New Mexico border that was crawling along.  Road options are sparse out there, and our attempts to take an east west road along the border were foiled by flash flooding washing out the road (always a danger out in these areas) and Texas Longhorn cattle in the road!

    We were able to drop back south and come up towards Jal, NM from the southwest and get in perfect position to view the base as a wall cloud  was forming.  We killed the vehicle lights at sat out on a lonely road for an hour and were the only people out there.  Tons of cloud to ground lighting causing power flashes in the oilfields, illuminating the wall clouds and a nice thin snake like funnel cloud at one point extending almost to the ground (that didn’t come out in pics unfortunately, hopefully the video caught it but I don’t have time to go through it now).  It was quite the surreal experience!

    Storm finally died out near Jal, New Mexico and we headed home!  Some pics from the second storm below:

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  • 04/28/09 Chase Forecast

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    Nice setup in place for this afternoon/evening in eastern New Mexico, southwest Texas and the Texas South Plains.  Not one of those highly advertised severe events, but rather one of those days that can produce some real surprises.  While winds speed shear isn’t crazy, it’s sufficient, but even more importantly is the directional shear, which right now is analyzed to be greater than 90 degrees.  We could see some great wind sculptures in supercells today!

    Cloud cover is the fly in the ointment today, which is still covering the area here at noon.  I am seeing some clearing west of Odessa along the Pecos River valley in southwest Texas, and I suspect storm will initiate first there along the edge of the mountains.  If we don’t get some clearing further north soon, that could greatly inhibit our storm chances further north.