View Full Version : 2008 Signature Tornado
Jay McCoy
07-06-2008, 01:08 PM
Maybe its just me but every year there is at least 1 tornado episode that produces the "signature tornado" for the year. A tornado that when anybody sees they instantly know where and when it happened like the Mulvane tornado or last year it was the 3-28-07 Bryce, Tx. tornado. Well so far this year I dont recall a tornado that really stands out. There hasnt been that picture perfect frame shot that alot of chasers caught or became infamous. maybe its due to most of the tornados occuring in HP conditions, after dark, or in bad chase country. Has anybody else noticed this this year??
Dennis Sherrod
07-06-2008, 01:20 PM
The closest I have seen to it this year Jay looks to be the "Quniter" tornado from May 23rd. It seems to be the one so many are talking about and there are lots of photos of it as it was on the southside of I-70, although most are bad contrast, mine included.
John Wetter
07-06-2008, 01:21 PM
Maybe some (one) of the Quinter, KS shots? Or, the slender tube on the 22nd... Seems many of the 'signature' shots would have been from May 22-23 days, but I don't know what would distinguish them a lot from others. Had the Parkersburg, IA storm been more photogenic, it would probably be the signature for the year, as about any EF-5 probably should be.
Jay McCoy
07-06-2008, 02:03 PM
Thats what I mean. The Quinter tornado is generic in many ways. yes it was shot by a number of people from different angles but 5 years from now will you see a pciture and say "that was may 23rd in Quniter, Ks."?? It doesnt stand out in anybodys mind. Maybe cause everybodys shot is different. I am looking for the 1 shot that everybody can identify with and say oh ya I remember that. I havent seen it for this year.
Jim Saueressig
07-06-2008, 02:36 PM
I was watching this one on someones live cam as well as seeing a few different pics of it. This is one that sticks in my head like some of the past one of a kinds.
From Tony's post in 2008 tornadoes (easiest to find)
http://www.tornadoeskick.com/images/2008/20080522_66.JPG
Shane Adams
07-06-2008, 03:00 PM
I think it depends on the chaser. For example, IMO, the signature tornado of 2007 was Greensburg, hands down. Other chasers would disagree. Chasing has changed so much in the last few years, now every storm is covered by chasers. Everyone is getting right next to tornadoes, and every chase day, dozens return home with shots that, even as recent as 4-5 years ago, would've been considered amazing and world-class. Now they're just typical. How can you pick a signature tornado from dozens that were shot from within a half mile away, by hundreds of chasers? What makes one tornado stand out now, from a photogenic/chased point-of-view? IMO these days, you have to look at the event itself, the magnitude, the newsworthy aspect, and the historic significance.
Every chase day produces a Mulvane now, because anyone with the money can be in the tornadoes with all the technology. The shelf life of amazing tornado video has shrunk to about 2 hours, which is about the average time from the time the tornado is shot until it's being aired on networks all over the country. By the time a clip first hits youtube, it's old news. At least for those who are into the scoop business. The art of the tornado video has long since been lost to the urgency of being first. Chasers are now abandoning dream chase days to get video uploaded before the next guy,giving up half or more of the event in the process. To each their own.
But to digress (?), it's virtually impossible to isolate one tornado these days that stands above all others. Look at 2008. You could argue any number of tornadoes from May 22-24, May 29, June 4, the list goes on and on. Does anyone else notice how it's a bigger deal these days when a chasers posts in a thread that he/she didn't see a tornado? What chaser, with techno gear and a mod risk day that produces tornadoes, busts? Everyone's on everything these days. It's become more difficult to bust than it is to succeed, if you have all the available options. And thus, it's become far more difficult to come away from any season with one single tornado that stands out among the rest.
Just my opinion.
But the signature tornado of 2008? No clue, could be one of several.
Jay McCoy
07-06-2008, 03:43 PM
Shane I agree the greensburg event was the tornado of the year. The only reason I didnt mention it was it was dark and most of the photos are siloettes even though they are dramatic. I was thinking more like one you could recognize by the tornado, landscape, etc.. without any captions. You would just know the date and place 5-10 years from now.
I also understand what you mean about it becoming harder to have 1 single tornado since we now catch so many but there is usually 1 each year that really sticks out in everybodys mind from ewither the photo quality or the number of chasers who caught it. Not his year though.
Darrin Rasberry
07-06-2008, 04:36 PM
I don't think there's one that would make a poster, if that's what you mean. The two best ones I've seen have been the Quinter tornadoes and the Chicago tornado.
I'm partial to Wakeeney on May 22nd, too - not just because it was my first real grab of my career, but because everyone chasing that day who hadn't thrown in the towel early either got hit by it or by the torrential RFDs. It was gorgeous, but only lasted ten seconds before it got wrapped up in rain. If you want a signature tornado that captures the spirit of 2008 in a nutshell for chasing, that one's it IMO.
There's also Jim Reed's landspout that he basically left his car to go tackle. What a year when a landspout is the most picturesque.
There's also Parkersburg and Picher, but the latter is remembered by most (including us) as being rain-wrapped by the time we arrived from the huge wall cloud 20 miles north of it that never produced, and the former is remembered by most (including us) as an uncatchable storm. It's been a long time since I've been kicked in the gut with as much reality and sadness as I was on those two days.
Chicago, Oklahoma City, Memphis, Atlanta, Springfield, and Omaha are off the top of my head as the major metro areas that got hit this year. Despite Iowa's Parkersburg and Little Sioux storms, Arkansas was the hardest hit state. All of these major events went alongside Jay's description, except maybe the Chicago area wedge. There were three nice, comfortable "armchair chases" which featured slow-moving, long-lived tornado machines (two in Oklahoma and one in Iowa) but one was way HP and one was at night, and the other caught many of us with our pants down in Nebraska on May 24.
Quinter would be the closest call for this year, I guess, but I wouldn't buy the poster.
Darrin Rasberry
07-06-2008, 05:28 PM
Every chase day produces a Mulvane now, because anyone with the money can be in the tornadoes with all the technology.
I think you may have unintentionally (or maybe not ... :D) typed out the rub here. Since so many have been difficult to catch, in many cases that we've bailed the braver have gone on to score ... half the time we regret not getting the cajones, but then the other half of the time someone invariably either reports or gets called out as being hit by the storm. IMO, gear has added a certain tinge of bravery that has led to disaster more often than not. No doubt some are directly responsible for getting too close, but in many instances that I recall, it was an over-reliance on radar data and subsequent poor positioning in low-visibility storms that got most people. One of my biggest lessons I've learned through hard knocks myself this year: having radar is good to help you pick out a storm, but when you get there it's time to shut it off, because if you keep watching it like a pot trying to boil it WILL go out on you someday, perhaps in the middle of Hill Country in a TOR-warned storm at night on March 17th, say. I won't ever do that again. I canceled my tethering and since then I've just been looking at a few Weathertap grabs on my cell to check out initiation that's not in my view. My only regret is that I can't get the Mesoanalysis page while I'm sitting and waiting for storms. If I could pick one of the two to carry with me, it would be the Mesoanalysis page above even radar.
The biggest help to me has been the NOAA weather radio. When I got it in early May, the uncertainty with this year's messes went down a bit, and I became a braver chaser on my own with it.
The shelf life of amazing tornado video has shrunk to about 2 hours, which is about the average time from the time the tornado is shot until it's being aired on networks all over the country.
Yup. I think, though, that the prevalence of tornado videos isn't as much of a wrecker; the average public will just go to Youtube, type "TORNADO" in the search box, and watch any clip from any old year. And based on the 2008 tornado "quality," the only way I'd keep watching a video from this year if I were still "Joe Public" is if it hit in or near my hometown. My brother, a weather enthusiast, will probably just watch the Discovery shows this year instead of watching any Youtube video at all, since he likes to see "how things work behind the scenes" (i.e. he loves the addition of the reality show drama).
Does anyone else notice how it's a bigger deal these days when a chasers posts in a thread that he/she didn't see a tornado? What chaser, with techno gear and a mod risk day that produces tornadoes, busts?
I've failed hard and manned up to it on tornado days I've wiffed (May 23rd for example). Maybe it was standard once to report your busts as well as your wins, but I think (or like to think) that people just kinda forget to report when they bust out nowadays. Personally, I like to have the writeups at my fingertips so I can review them later and recall tactics we used to save our butts bailing on storms that ended up directly hitting people (e.g. May 23rd again), or so I can integrate my forecasting mistakes and correct them later (e.g. the long-track Iowa supercell, which I bypassed because I went out unaware of the slow storm motions that day).
I've been told by quite a few chasers that this year was a good initiation year, even though it wasn't a picturesque tornado year. My chasing partner said that he wished his first year was like this, since even he's learned more this year than any other year of the decade he's chased.
Bob Schafer
07-06-2008, 06:00 PM
Though I had some pretty good success this year, the one tornado that stands out in my mind is the one I missed 5 miles from my house:
http://media.lamarledger.com/cola/content/img/photos/2008/06/05/Granada_tornado_web.jpg
I was along I-135 chasing the high risk that day, and witnessed nothing as photogenic as the "Granada Tornado'. Not that day nor any other day in 2008, LOL! So I vote for the notion that "It depends on the chaser". Here's the whole story about the Granada tornado:
http://www.lamarledger.com/news/2008/jun/05/tornado-touches-down-outside-granada/
P.S. From what I hear, the damn thing was on the ground for nearly a half hour.
Dustin Wilcox
07-06-2008, 06:12 PM
And based on the 2008 tornado "quality," the only way I'd keep watching a video from this year if I were still "Joe Public" is if it hit in or near my hometown.
It continues to amaze me the number of people who keep bashing 2008, based on my experiences and observations I would be more than happy if you were to tell me 2009 would be a carbon copy. I personally have seen some pretty incredible tornadoes and storms, and I have seen some pretty impressive video of tornadoes captured by other chasers. I would even go as far as to say that its pretty bogus to say that there weren't any extremely photogenic tornadoes this year. I saw some scenes that would have produced some pretty amazing stills, I was just solo most of the time and due to limited time spent my effort focusing on video.
As for the idea of a yearly "signature tornado" IMO its going to vary from chaser to chaser, for example you mention just last years 3-28-07 Bryce, Tx. tornado, I wouldn't be able to tell you where and when that tornado occurred if you provided me a picture, though if you showed me a picture of the Bird City Tornado I could pin its location on a map. IMO excluding the obvious universally recognized "signature tornadoes" EF-5's and a rare high based white tornado with a rainbow stretching through it, each chasers idea of the years "signature tornado" is going to be different.
Mike Hollingshead
07-06-2008, 09:42 PM
Every chase day produces a Mulvane now, because anyone with the money can be in the tornadoes with all the technology.
Does anyone else notice how it's a bigger deal these days when a chasers posts in a thread that he/she didn't see a tornado? What chaser, with techno gear and a mod risk day that produces tornadoes, busts? Everyone's on everything these days. It's become more difficult to bust than it is to succeed, if you have all the available options.
I guess I feel like a tard now! Oh crap, I've felt like a tard for a while now, nevermind. I've had "the money" to chase, "the super duper techno saver stuff"(a whopping laptop and cell phone) and seem to miss the "daily Mulvane's" quite well. So I will raise my hand high on the question of "What chaser, with techno gear and a mod risk day that produces tornadoes, busts?". Me me me. Maybe I need two laptops and two cell phone connections to bag with all the others who are bagging. Perhaps a brain transplant would be more effective.
Jason Boggs
07-06-2008, 09:53 PM
I guess I feel like a tard now! Oh crap, I've felt like a tard for a while now, nevermind. I've had "the money" to chase, "the super duper techno saver stuff"(a whopping laptop and cell phone) and seem to miss the "daily Mulvane's" quite well. So I will raise my hand high on the question of "What chaser, with techno gear and a mod risk day that produces tornadoes, busts?". Me me me. Maybe I need two laptops and two cell phone connections to bag with all the others who are bagging. Perhaps a brain transplant would be more effective.
Mike, don't feel so bad dude. I only got a brief tornado this year with all the bells and whistles I have acquired over the years. Maybe we can go in and get the transplant at the same time, then team up and kick everyone's butt!
Michael O'Keeffe
07-06-2008, 09:54 PM
Does anyone else notice how it's a bigger deal these days when a chasers posts in a thread that he/she didn't see a tornado? What chaser, with techno gear and a mod risk day that produces tornadoes, busts? Everyone's on everything these days. It's become more difficult to bust than it is to succeed, if you have all the available options. And thus, it's become far more difficult to come away from any season with one single tornado that stands out among the rest.
This is how I see it. You can have ALL of the best radars, nowcasters, and internet, but if don't have the "instinct" then sure you may see some tornadoes, but if you want to see tornadoes at the right place or right time...you must have the instinct or experience to find the storms and tornadoes.
An example if he doesn't mind me using him is Simon Brewer. I mean he doesn't even chase with a laptop for god's sake, but he sees tornadoes on almost every chase he goes on! I really envy his skills as a forecaster and chaser.
I may be wrong, but I have never really been a huge fan of having tons of gizmos and gadgets. Just give me a map, a wx radio, and a camera and I'll be content. I guess it's all opinion.
Mike Hollingshead
07-06-2008, 09:59 PM
Mike, don't feel so bad dude. I only got a brief tornado this year with all the bells and whistles I have acquired over the years. Maybe we can go in and get the transplant at the same time, then team up and kick everyone's butt!
LOL this could be another thread. "Whose brain would you transplant yours with?"
Mike Hollingshead
07-06-2008, 10:03 PM
This is how I see it. You can have ALL of the best radars, nowcasters, and internet, but if don't have the "instinct" then sure you may see some tornadoes, but if you want to see tornadoes at the right place or right time...you must have the instinct or experience to find the storms and tornadoes.
An example if he doesn't mind me using him is Simon Brewer. I mean he doesn't even chase with a laptop for god's sake, but he sees tornadoes on almost every chase he goes on! I really envy his skills as a forecaster and chaser.
I may be wrong, but I have never really been a huge fan of having tons of gizmos and gadgets. Just give me a map, a wx radio, and a camera and I'll be content. I guess it's all opinion.
One thing is forgotten in this, and is certainly another player. It's called luck. I know this. How do I know? It's impossible to be as dumb as I've been out there for oh, the last 3 years. I've aquired some serious bad luck. I don't believe in instinct, I'd rather call it what it is...brains. Those can get you so far in this. Luck can take care of the rest, in either direction...imo. No one is smart enough to know everything that will happen in the future on a given day. Luck fits in for the missing "pieces". Brains is a bigger piece than luck, of course....but luck is a piece. I'd say it's right up there with techno gadgetry...but brains(or sort of "instinct") is on top.
I have a down right absurd list of "bad luck" I started to list on my site. Maybe one day I will finish and actually post that topic. I sort of laughed at the "bad luck" I heard that some vets had gone through in the past. I thought to myself, I will learn a lot and just be all over where I need to be at the times I need to be there, and avoid that. It's not so laughable anymore lol. I've even seen some chasers that seemed to be on "fire" hit some of their own stretches. You wonder, what the hell happened there. Maybe chasing is a lot like poker. Of course it is. Just can't bluff mother nature!
Darrin Rasberry
07-06-2008, 10:26 PM
It continues to amaze me the number of people who keep bashing 2008, based on my experiences and observations I would be more than happy if you were to tell me 2009 would be a carbon copy.
Maybe it was just bad luck on some of our parts. Iowa gets storms (we got the strongest of the year) but there's always tons of moisture and not enough anvil support for anything apart from LP madness. I think half of my deal with 2008 is that it's my first chasing year, the majority of chases have been confined to not far from Ames, and therefore "messes" are all I'm used to seeing.
Probably part of it is the transition moving from Texas; even though I didn't chase, the vast majority of storms I saw in NTX and WTX were beautiful. The more I live here, the more I want to move to Beatrice or Wakeeney or OKC or something - when I graduate and search for teaching positions, I'll have the fortune of getting to choose almost anywhere in the Great Plains/High Plains region, since I don't have any motive to focus on any place in particular for a job.
The storms I've seen in person and on video are great, but nothing has been awe-inspiring (Wakeeney, Chicago, and Quinter came close though). I haven't actually seen any of the video from the May 25th supercell in NOK but I heard it was fantastic; I'm looking forward to seeing that. I'm also getting a free DVD courtesy of a longtime chaser and user here to help disprove my bias about 2008, so when I watch that maybe I'll change my mind.
It's certainly not envy above and beyond the usual Iowa/Illinois group bawling, since none of this is any kind of competition to me. I'm a shaky taper and worthless photographer, and I have years to go before I can learn, and besides, my favorite chaser video of all time was from the Elie F5 last year, which was taken after I had started chasing. I love it when others succeed and show it, since I get to see all the pretty things I missed in person, or (especially for the Wakeeney tornado this year) a different perspective on storms I did see. I know Shane got a lot of footage and you got a lot of footage, as well as other chasers; I'm eagerly awaiting seeing all the stuff I missed. I want to buy as many forthcoming DVDs as I can, as soon as they're on the proverbial shelves; even if I end up not seeing anything I opine as "truly memorable," they're still tornadoes and severe weather, and I'll love them.
I have seen some pretty incredible tornadoes and storms, and I have seen some pretty impressive video of tornadoes captured by other chasers. I would even go as far as to say that its pretty bogus to say that there weren't any extremely photogenic tornadoes this year. I saw some scenes that would have produced some pretty amazing stills, I was just solo most of the time and due to limited time spent my effort focusing on video.
I certainly don't mean any offense to anyone who's captured the hidden treasures from this year. It's that I haven't seen anything truly comparable to that Mulvane "super duper storm footage" just yet. Perhaps after getting this year's storms on DVD I will.
IMO excluding the obvious universally recognized "signature tornadoes" EF-5's and a rare high based white tornado with a rainbow stretching through it, each chasers idea of the years "signature tornado" is going to be different.
That's true, but not even Parkersburg was "pretty" this year (I'm assuming this thread deals with aesthetics, BTW, and not significance in and of itself). In fact, the best footage of Parkersburg, the one I've watched time and again, is from the bank cameras there (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jrgct-AqccE&feature=related).
And yes, I think the "signature tornado" idea will definitely vary from chaser to chaser, depending on whether they were on the storm or not (that's why I hold back from singing Wakeeney's praises, since it was my first), and how quality the footage looks in their opinion.
Darrin Rasberry
07-06-2008, 10:47 PM
Just give me a map, a wx radio, and a camera and I'll be content. I guess it's all opinion.
When I go chase in Western Iowa alone or with my ex, this is what I have. AT&T is dead in every rural area west of 35 in this state, so I have to report anything I see when I get home and hope that I don't ditch out in nowheresville. Even though I haven't seen anything more than a wall cloud in Western Iowa, these have been some of my favorites this year.
May 25th in Nebraska was also a day when Craig's laptop stopped working, as well as our WX radio until I got batteries at the very end - and it turned out to be my favorite chase of the whole year (even though the 22nd was the most memorable). Even though we "only" saw a funnel, the potluck nature of the day and the generally stressfree atmosphere led to a chase more worth my money than the 23rd or 29th.
It just seems that the pressure's off when you don't have the added confusion of a "better storm" 20 miles south of you to worry about intercepting. You become too critical of the storm you're on that way, and we've even lost an eventual producer to go to a warned storm that had finished its work by the time we got there.
Derek Weston
07-06-2008, 11:33 PM
Using stormtrack as a gage, the Quinter tornado was probably the most widely experienced significant tornado of the year, and thus, probably most memorable from the collective's standpoints.
The Parkersburg tornado, while less experienced, was obviously a major event and much discussed. (even if it didn't live up to the Greensburg level of discussion)
Picher OK Tornado is also quite memorable for many chasers.
If we're talking events too, the Super Tuesday outbreak can be included.
For me, personally, the most enjoyable/memorable experience would May 23rd in Dighton Kansas watching a beautiful Mesocyclone put down a fat, violently rotating wall cloud that was a 'would-be' wide multi-vortex tornado. I sat just east of the city and had a perfect view of the whole thing, lucky enough to see beautiful structure before it moved off north and became rain-wrapped. While I can't confirm that I saw a condensed tube on the ground under it -- ohhh, it was dang close -- the whole storm and experience was really perfect, just what I had imagined really-good storm-chasing to be.
(also memorable was barely beating the Waukeeney tornado east on 70...freaking out as we got majorly cored)
Shane Adams
07-06-2008, 11:39 PM
I totally agree it's mostly luck. Even when you're on the storm before the tornado, nobody knows if it's going to produce or not. Most of us say so, but we really don't know. I'm living proof that you can survive on 90% luck, because scientifically, I don't know a damn thing about forecasting or weather. I just look at colored graphics and decide whether or not the area that's painted the way I like to see is for real.
Shane Adams
07-06-2008, 11:41 PM
For me, personally, the most enjoyable/memorable experience would May 23rd in Dighton Kansas watching a beautiful Mesocyclone put down a fat, violently rotating wall cloud that was a 'would-be' wide multi-vortex tornado. I sat just east of the city and had a perfect view of the whole thing, lucky enough to see beautiful structure before it moved off north and became rain-wrapped. While I can't confirm that I saw a condensed tube on the ground under it -- ohhh, it was dang close -- the whole storm and experience was really perfect, just what I had imagined really-good storm-chasing to be.
There was definitely a brief multi-vortex just west of town, and then another multi-vortex further north about 6-8 minutes later.
Andrew Stoller
07-07-2008, 10:03 AM
There was definitely a brief multi-vortex just west of town, and then another multi-vortex further north about 6-8 minutes later.
From my vantage point north east of Dighton - directly east of the meso/tornado, after a couple dusty multi-vortices touched down, it looked like it completely occluded and became rain wrapped (HUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUGE clear slot wrapped almost all the way around the sucker) with about a mile wide wedge on the ground for at least 20 minutes.
That, and the new meso and rope/curved elephant trunk that formed soon after northeast of Dighton, were the signature tornadoes for me............wait, they were the only tornadoes I saw this year!
I can't believe no one has mentioned that crazy storm near Beloit/Glen Elder KS from May 29th. I'd say that could be included in the overall debate as to 1 signature storm/tornado (although it apparently put down about 10 different naders) for the year.
Kem Poyner
07-07-2008, 11:42 AM
I am surprised nobody seems to have a fantastic shot of the Parkersburg Iowa tornado. I was very visable, great lighting and it was an EF5. It had features that would be recognizable from any other. The structure above the tornado blended into the tornado itself at times. Though these pictures do not show this feature, they are a teaser of what could have been taken with good equipment and the right location. These were taken by a friend through her basement window!
John Hudson
07-07-2008, 12:46 PM
I am surprised nobody seems to have a fantastic shot of the Parkersburg Iowa tornado. I was very visable, great lighting and it was an EF5. It had features that would be recognizable from any other. The structure above the tornado blended into the tornado itself at times. Though these pictures do not show this feature, they are a teaser of what could have been taken with good equipment and the right location. These were taken by a friend through her basement window!
Those are some pretty intense pictures, Kem. Thanks for showing!
John
Darrin Rasberry
07-07-2008, 02:05 PM
These were taken by a friend through her basement window!
Yup.
Either chasers were behind it and got held up by damage, were to the north of it and got to watch black rain because they chased a huge decoy wall cloud (me and tons of others), or they managed to fiiiiiinally get ahead of the thing only to get more rain-wrapped shots.
The only time it was rain-free was in Parkersburg, where a few chasers smart enough to CHASE THE SOUTHERNMOST STORM got to film, for a few nervous minutes, the back side of the meso basically dragging its butt on the carpet (think Hallam). The only way one could have kept up with the wedge was with a hovercraft, since damage got in the way of the only real route. The wedge was filmed from the front (I saw yesterday a shot from a cellphone camera on Youtube), but ... let's just say I wouldn't have been in my car on that side of things for all the money and media fame in the world. Perhaps a few chasers were, but the road options from Parkersburg to Iowa City aren't primo, either, and the entire storm itself was one not even Craig wanted to mess with diving deep into even though it was near his home county.
Tony Lyza
07-07-2008, 06:07 PM
A certain picture of the incredible Clinton, AR, tornado from Super Tuesday is what I consider the signature pic of the year.
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/lzk/images2/vbtor020508.jpg
Maybe it has to do with me being rather obsessed with tornado history, but that picture will always be readily identifiable to me. It shares the appearance of the Forgotten F5 that struck Lawrence County, TN, on April 16th, 1998.
Laura Duchesne
07-07-2008, 06:33 PM
Personally, my tornado of the year would have to be the tornadoes around Kearney, NE from May 29th... just because that was the biggest one we were on and stuck out the most in my mind.
Overall, I think "the" tornado of the year would be Quinter.
Chris Hayes
07-07-2008, 08:44 PM
There was definitely a brief multi-vortex just west of town, and then another multi-vortex further north about 6-8 minutes later.
I'm waiting for DDC to put out a map of the 50 torandos that occured in the warning area. Especially want to see what they confirm around Ness City, and to it's north and east 1-2 hours after Quinter #1
Gene Moore
07-13-2008, 12:12 AM
Overall, I think "the" tornado of the year would be Quinter.
Ahhhh, but which one the early one, or the later model? Seems there were more shots of the first one south of l-70 before it passed by town. I met it 2 miles north of town and it was not so photogenic to me. Then we have Quinter II the quintessential 2-1 wedge (twice as wide as high). Again, not all chasers really bagged this one, but a few dazzled us with their shots.
There were big wedge events in Colorado and near Chicago, but Quinter II gets my vote....and it was rated EF-4 correct?
I did get Quinter II.....well kinda sorta I did and in kind of a way I didn't. Truth is I got beat down by a tornado that formed only 2 1/2 miles to my west....tough chase for me. So I chose to poke a little fun at the day: http://chaseday.com/QuinterIItornado.htm
Danny Neal
07-13-2008, 01:00 AM
As Gene mentioned, my vote for this general area is the Chicago area tornadoes, but that is biased since I live here :) Overall I believe the Quinter event probably is what I think about most when I hear "tornado 2008"
cdcollura
07-14-2008, 12:30 PM
Good day all,
I am sure this will "stand out" as easily recognizable ...
http://www.sky-chaser.com/image/mwcl2008/m9ktor4.jpg
Hint: May 22, 2008 near Grinnell, KS.
Now if you have a shot of MULTIPLE tornadoes...
http://www.sky-chaser.com/data/misc/quinterpan.jpg
Hint: Quinter, KS on May 23.
Patrick McCarthy
07-14-2008, 01:01 PM
Last year we had Greensburg, mostly because of its notoriety, and from Canada's perspective, the EF-5 Elie, MB tornado...it's tough to beat video of flying houses.
What strikes me about 2008, a year with massive numbers and deaths, is how few spectacular tornadoes their were from widely published video/pics. So many were rain-wrapped, after dark, in the trees, fast movers, etc.
Now 2008 isn't over yet. The Northern Plains is currently active. 1987 is probably best remembered by the two F4 tragedies, Saragosa, TX and Edmonton, Alberta. The latter occurred on July 31.
Pat
Doug_Kiesling
07-14-2008, 01:11 PM
I'm thinking more of a chase week to remember vs a storm or tube. The week and weekend of May 21st - 28th were one's to remember.
Of course, I have to go with Quinter KS. From pulling Brandon out of the mud (I want to see that video Chris) to honking at the DOW's while telling they Discovery camera crew standing in the road their number one as I drove past them and everyone else just so I could get a shot with no tail lights in the footage.
http://www.lightningboy.net/files/blog/052308_Quinter_ST.jpg
Verne Carlson
07-14-2008, 02:44 PM
http://www.stormchaserco.com/20080522_CollyerKStornaodopano_sm.jpg
Anyone south of Collyer, KS on May 22 will recognize the two tornadoes on the ground there as well. (from Eric's video composite)
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