Archive by Author

May 22, 2026 Abernathy/Floydada, Texas Tornadic Supercells

Interesting set up this day. Old outflow boundaries were present in the Texas south plains and caprock. Although dewpoints were only in the 50s, with temperatures in the 80s, enough instability and shear were present to develop storms. One such storm formed near the Plainview area along a boundary that contained low 60s dewpoints. We knew this was out storm! We stayed with this for a couple of hours as it developed into a pretty supercell with that nice sculpted structure from the east. Later, storms developed near Lubbock and moved north. Other high based storms developed behind our supercell and all 3 collided north of Lubbock. We were on the east side still, with no true reason to go behind the storm (typically not a favorable place to watch!), but a fluke occurred and produced a 2-3 minute dusty, weak tornado behind our storm! I wouldn’t have changed anything in the way we chased this, as this is usually the best view of a supercell. A couple of chasers caught the tornado as they blasted south to try and get around the south side of our storm from behind and basically were fortunate to witness this dirt bomb. Funny day, still like how we chased it but did witness a landspout tornado during its lifetime.

May 21, 2026 Anton, Colorado Tornadic Supercell

May 21st took us to Colorado. Between upslope into the Palmer Divide, as well as an outflow boundary, most models had storms forming near Limon, before intensifying and moving east. That is pretty much what happened. A supercell formed near Deer Trail and moved east, gaining strength and becoming tornado warned. Good shear, but relatively cool surface temps kept this from being a major event, but the storm still produced softball sized hail, several funnel clouds and one brief tornado south of Anton. As it continued to move east, it encountered cold air with temps in the 50s and became an elevated hailer. Eventually near Burlington it weakened as instability waned and nocturnal cooling set up. A fun time was had by all the guests as the structure was quite nice and the funnels fairly close with the road network being sparse. Enjoy the pics!!

May 20, 2026 Davis Mountains Supercell

May 20th the environment was not overly conducive to supercell thunderstorms. Overnight stratus generated from elevated storms, covered the area and kept it pretty cool. Due to this low level cloud cover, we headed south from Ft Stockton to the David Mountains where the elevation is much higher. When we arrived skies were clearing instability was building. Storms formed over the mountains and eventually intensified and moved off of them to the east. One storm became a supercell, warned for big hail and high winds. As it moved it, it’s gust front blew up a lot of dust. There were many gustnadoes, which could have fooled people into thinking they were real tornadoes. Eventually the storms gusted out and weakened. A fun day, with better results than anticipated! Enjoy the pics!!!

May 17, 2026 St Libory, Nebraska Violent Tornado

May 17th had a lot going for it. Great shear, good moisture and instability and a triple point just to the west of Grand Island, Nebraska would set the stage for intense supercell development. As storms formed near the triple point, they were just on the cool side of the boundary. Anchoring in that spot, one cell latched on to it and started to spin. Soon a tornado warning was issued. As we had to reposition, the storm quickly became tornadic and produced a high end EF3 tornaddo near the small town of St Libory. We couldn’t get back in front of it and had to watch the tornado from the poor contrast side to the south. Soon the storm rapidly weakened and we dropped south to chase other tornado warned storms. A wild day and some crazy moments. Our hearts and prayers go out to those affected by this strong tornado.

May 16, 2026 Goodland, Kansas Tornado Warned Supercell

A triple point surface low over northwest Kansas would provide the convergence needed to fire off supercell thunderstorms this day. One storm formed northwest of Goodland and meandered east/southeast becoming a prolific hailstorm. Lack of real quality moisture would prevent tornadoes from occurring, however, as a left split from a storm over Rush county raced north, it collided with our storm and caused it to spin. A tornado warning was issued and a wall cloud formed, also spinning. Due to the higher based nature of the storm, it did not produce a tornado. As it moved east, more storms formed as a complex eventually developed that had winds up to 90mph in it! We raced east to get ahead and were treated to a sunset beast that also tried to become tornadic. An awesome day, great storms and lightning, as well as a tornado warning. Enjoy the pics!!!

May 15, 2026 Western Iowa Tornadic Supercell

May 15th took us into Iowa. An old outflow boundary/cold front intersection would be our target in northwest Iowa. Plenty of shear, modest moisture and instability would support severe storms, with some tornado threat. We caught several storms, but one, west of Ida Grove, would produce a short-lived tornado. This storm was also an electrified beauty! Several CG strikes occurred per minute, and everyone’s cameras were clicking away! I managed to get a few decent ones as well. A fun day, tons of storms and a brief tornado to boot! Enjoy the pics!

May 9, 2026 Sayre, Oklahoma Gorgeous Supercell

May 9th looked like a day where things just weren’t in sync. Good shear and lift were in place, but poor moisture with moderate CAPE were also in play. We targeted southwest Oklahoma where there was a bit higher moisture, however it was very thin. Storms blew up along a boundary near I-40 and became severe. They were fairly high based, but with good shear and steep lapse rates, they rained down hail to baseball size. We blasted north to catch the tail end storm as it moved into western Oklahoma. It hit the theta-e axis and rapidly strengthened. As it moved southeast towards us, structure steadily improved.  We stayed with it till after sunset as it started producing copious amounts of CGs. Finally, it weakened around 10pm so we left and made it to the hotel before midnight. A great day with arguably the best structure of this young 2026 season! Enjoy the pics!!!

May 8, 2026 Chattanooga, OK Tornado Warned Supercell

Good shear, but limited moisture would be the problem this day. Storms formed along a cold front in central Oklahoma by mid afternoon, but were high based. We were watching a cluster of towers west of Lawton and hoped something would form from them. Later in the afternoon, they did just that. A supercell emerged and produced baseball sized hail. Early evening it became tornado warned. It produced a couple of funnels but was moving into capped air and weakened. The setting sun made for a cool image as the updraft evaporated.

May 6, 2026 Garden City to Brookhaven, MS Tornadic Supercell

A crazy day for us and of course the unfortunate good folks of southern Mississippi. Spent the night in West Memphis and targeted south of Jackson, MS. After a cluster of storms formed, became severe and tornado warned, they moved northeast and weakened. We decided to play a new cluster west of Nachez in an environment that was far better than MS. Higher dews, clearer skies and stronger flow would allow the cluster to consolidate into a large rotating storm. We dropped south, south of Sibley, MS to wait for it instead of trying to get across the Mississippi river and not having a return route due to the now tornado warned storm. As it approached us, rotation was seen and the CGs were off the chart striking every 5-10 seconds!!!  We soon had to quickly get out of the way as the rfd wrapped around this massive bowl shaped lowering. It raced off east of us across the trees and planted a rather large EF-3 wedge tornado. This tornado became quite strong and a TORNADO EMERGENCY was issued for towns in its path. The supercell produced multiple strong class tornadoes for the next 100 miles as it churned across the southern part of the state. We approached it one other time and could see violent wrapping rain curtains and strong downward motion, showing us the rain wrapped wedge was very close and intense. Eventually due to darkness we called off the chase and went back to Garden City, MS to see if anyone needed help. Many downed trees, power lines and much debris blocked the highway. Several of us jumped in to clear the road and get to a woman who was injured. We had to use chain saws to cut through the trees as another tornado warned storm was approaching. An absolutely insane day and I am very proud of our guides and even some of the guests in getting their hands dirty to help others! Our hearts and prayers go out to those affected by this monster!

 

April 26, 2026 Osage County, OK Tornadic Supercell

April 26, 2026 took us to Osage county, Oklahoma to chase a tornadic supercell from Foraker to Herd. Strong shear, a dryline and extreme instability would set the stage for supercells. One such storm formed near Blackwell and intensified as it moved east. It became tornado warned as it moved east towards Foraker. Due to poor, muddy roads, we had to drop south to highway 60 and east to Pawhuska, then north to get in front of it. During this 20 minute process, of course, fate would have it that it produced a tornado! However, it was on the ground for less than a minute. As the supercell approached us a broad, rotating wall cloud was evident, and multiple funnels formed over the next 30 minutes. This storm had great structure and intense cloud to ground (cg) lightning! As it approached our location, a large bowl formed under it and soon a cone funnel descended to the ground. It persisted for a few minutes. We stayed with the storm in the dark as it moved east and eventually dissipated near Bartlesville. Fun day, frustrating at times as is often the case in Osage county, but good end results! Enjoy the pics!