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Chase Day: April 15, 2003 PDF Print E-mail
Chase Logs - 2003 Chase Logs
Written by Chris Nuttall   
Thursday, 17 April 2003

I was lucky that this chase happened on a Tuesday.  I don't have Tuesday classes this semester.  My classmate and Kappa Kappa Psi Brother Grant Qualley went with me.  We decided to leave early and take our fishing gear with us.  The plan was to fish until storm time, or if the chase was a bust, we'd find a lake to fish.  After analyzing the data, we picked Woodward, OK, as a target.

Unfortunately, or fortunately (depending on your point of view), we never did get to break out the fishing poles.

Chase Target:  Woodward, OK

Fishing Target:  Fort Supply Lake, OK



Chase Partners:
Grant Qualley
Location: W Oklahoma and E Texas Panhandle
Miles Travelled:
491
Total Time:
11 Hours
 
At 11:00am, Grant and I left Norman and headed NW towards Woodward.  The plan was to get to Ft. Supply a couple of hours before initiation, fish until something happens, then chase.  We stopped at the Wal-Mart in Woodward for Rain-X and lunch.  After calling for a nowcast, we were told to head east for Pampa.  So, no fishing.  Kepp moving.  We ate some chicken, applied some Rain-X to the car, and headed west to Gage, OK.  From Gage, we went south on US-60, then east to Higgins, TX.  We stopped just outside of town to gas up and make some phone calls.  SPC moved the tornado risk back in Oklahoma, so we decided to head for Elk City.  We headed south out of Canadian, TX, towards Shamrock, TX, and I-40.  Just outside of Wheeler, TX, I see some guy wearing and OU shirt with an expensive-looking camera with a BIG lens around his neck.  Sure enough, it was Aaron Kennedy, one of my roommates.  He was chasing with a co-worker from WDT.  We decided to hook up for the rest of the chase.
 
At 4:00pm, we headed south into Shamrock and stopped at a gas station to try to get some data via mobile Internet.  At the same time, a monster supercell rapidly develops just to the west of town.  It already has a very well defined inflow notch and shelf cloud (12.5 MB).   The storm was moving NE at an insane speed.  We headed north again to try to get up on a hill to see if anything would happen.  It quickly developed rotation and was severe within minutes of birth.  About 5:15pm, Aaron and Grant spooted dust swirls on the ground below a funnel.  I ran across the road with the camer, but by the time I got there, it's long gone...figures.  We headed north again, then turned east onto some Farm-to-Market road, which takes us to the SE of Wheeler.  A really nice wall cloud develops right in front of us, then promptly falls apart (12.5 MB).
 
We pulled over and watch a really cool area of rotation (1.2 MB).   We also saw a really interesting lowering, which dropped a real small, brief funnel.  There was a little hump that I could I have seen and videoed over if I was standing up, but according to everyone else, there may have been a brief dust swirl on the ground underneath it.
 
After the storm passed, we headed about 2 miles to Route 152.  There were some serious tumbleweeds going across the road.  One was as big as a door on my car.  We continued eastward into Oklahoma.  We passed through the town of Sweetwater in a desparate attempt to keep up with our storm, which was producing damage in Cheyenne and Strong City, and had dropped a tornado near Leedy.  As we tried to keep up, another tornado struck Sweetwater and destroyed the school and a few homes.  We followed the storm through Cheyenne, but eventually gave up, turning south to Elk City.  By now, things had developed into a major squall line with several embedded supercells.  With the loss of daylight and the crazy fast storm motions, we decided to head east on I-40 back towards Norman through the wind and rain.
 
At about 8:00pm, we were about 5 miles west of Clinton, OK, on I-40.  A Tornado Warning comes out with a reported touchdown near Burns Flat moving NE pretty fast.  After doing some mental math, I figured out that we and the storm will arrive at the same points at nearly the same time.  No bueno.  I called Aaron and discussed the situation with him.  We decided to go for it, figuring we could beat it and get out in front.  Just as we arrive in Clinton, the winds picked up to about 50-60mph out of the SE.  In less than a minute, they veer all the way to the west.  Bad news!  The rain and hail started going horiztonal.  No rain was hitting my windshield.  Instead, I was getting hail dents on the passenger side of my car.  We found a gas station to pull over and wait the storm out since it was too hard to see to drive.  After conferring with several chasers on various positions on the storm and by using radar archives, we figured the tornadic part of the storm crossed I-40 less than 4 miles behind us and we wound up in the worst part of the precip core.  That was way too close.  This is why I hate night chasing.
 
Anyway, with the excitement over, we headed back to Norman in some of the heaviest rain I've ever seen.
 
 
SUMMARY:

Another successful chase for the year.  Maybe I saw a tornado, or maybe not.  I don't know.  This puts the streak at 0-37, or something like that.  I was around tornadoes and Tornado Warnings all day.  If there was a tornado on the Wheeler, TX, storm, we couldn't have asked for better position.  Also, our "close encounter" on I-40 shows the danger of chasing HPs and squall lines at night.  Next time, if I have any doubt, I'm stopping.


 
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 25 June 2008 )
 
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