Now in St. Louis!

<< Home | Blog Main >>

Storm Chasing Logs and Photos
HD Video Clips

Recent Posts
- Next chase event?
- Week in photos
3/10 photos and video
Day 1: KS/OK/MO
- First chase days
- First convection
- More spring hope
- Millions of blackbirds
- March 1 post
- Deep winter end?
- STL chase range
- Icy roads update
- WV house for sale
- IL sunset 2/17
- Hail and rentals
- 2/13 Miscellaneous
- 2/9 STL snow
- MidAmerica Airport
- Midwesternisms 1
- Persistent winter
- Jan 28-31 storm

- Blog post archives
- Mobile device version
- HD videos
- DashCam videos
- Blog main

Dan's FeedRoomDan's FeedRoom
Storm Highway Twitter FeedTwitter Page
Storm Highway Facebook pageFacebook Page

Personal
Extreme Weather Gallery
Storm Chasing Storm Chasing RSS/XML feed
Dan's Blog
Photography
Weather Data
The Message

News/Editorial
Clients & Credits
Subjects & Coverage
Icy Road Safety

Commercial
Storm Chasing Tours
Weather Stock Footage
Stock Photography
Video Production
Television ENG
Web Site Design

Contact
Midwest 64 Multimedia, LLC
Phone 314.480.6538
Email Form

Home

The Message | Chase Logs | Videos | Blog Archives | Feeds | Contact | Home


                Monday, June 15, 2009 - 11:50PM    Storm Highway blog RSS/XML feedStorm Highway Twitter FeedStorm Highway Facebook page

Summer storm pattern ahead

The jet is forecast to be hanging around our region in the next few days, which will bring the chances for organized severe weather to home territory (Kentucky, Ohio and WV). At least one chase day either west or northwest looks likely, although I may not need to go anywhere most days according to some of the model runs. Wednesday looks the most interesting to me so far, for which the NAM is showing 4500 J/kg CAPE under nice upper level support in central Kentucky, precip holding off until late afternoon, and more than likely some boundaries hanging around. The model may be overdoing some of that instability, but nonetheless it's rare to see those numbers in Kentucky.


NAM CAPE (instability) for Wednesday

In other news items:

New US 35 section opens
Chase trips into southern and central Ohio are getting easier and easier! A 9-mile section of the 4-lane US 35 from Teays Valley to Buffalo opened today, which along with the new I-64 interchange will shave some significant travel time off of my trips northwest into Ohio (and beyond, including Indianapolis and Chicago). This new section leaves the gap from Buffalo to Point Pleasant in WV as the only remaining two-lane section of US 35, as all of the highway has been upgraded to 4-lane through Ohio now. My first few chases into Ohio many years ago meant negotiating some pretty hairy 2-lane sections between Teays Valley and Chillicothe, so it is great to see the upgrades happening.

Sky cover issues
Thanks to a frontal boundary lingering around, hazy low-level moisture and cirrus blowoff from Midwestern storm complexes, skies have not been conducive to any scenic photography recently. It may be a while before I can resume work on any of that. Once we get a nice frontal passage to clean out the low-level moisture, I'm planning on a two or three day camping/photography trip across the state to fill in the remaining subject gaps I need.

Plains season staying bad to the end
And finally, the remnants of the Plains tornado season continues to be a bitter time for most chasers who are still out. Tornadoes are happening, but they are not coming easy for most who are out trying. The best action has stayed far west into Colorado, while supercells are playing a tough game in their normal central/southern Plains hangouts. It is doubtful that I would have seen much, if anything, had I decided to go out for a second trip this month. No breaks when it comes to expenses either - higher gas prices and much longer westward drives are elevating chase costs for the latter half of this season. What I would have had to do this season reminds me a lot of what my 2003 expeditions were like - I chased long and hard that season, more than any other year before or after - determined to get just one tornado (which didn't happen). I've accepted the fact that I may go tornado-less this year, and from the looks of things I'm not alone. I'm still remaining optimistic for a couple of good fall events come September-November, when tornado season makes its climatological Midwestern 'secondary' peak. As I've said before, tornado season in the USA never really ends, it just moves around from month to month. If I don't get any Midwestern chances this fall, I may go after the climatological southern US tornado season that starts in December!

Comments

Post a comment
Anti-spam notice: This form automatically removes html or bbcode links.
Your Name:   Location (optional):
Validation: Enter only the numbers colored in GREEN above:
This comment system is moderated - please read the
posting rules before submitting a comment
.

 
Storm Chasing Guide Services
Now Booking for Spring 2010

Home for sale :: 831 Scenic Drive
Charleston, WV house for sale

Friends, Family & Chasers
- Matt & Beth
- Katie, Randy,
  Caleb & Adelina

- Jes & Rob
- Bill Coyle
- Randy Barlow
- Jesse Bass
- Kurt Hulst
- Dave Crowley
- Justin Teague
- Warren Faidley
- Tony Laubach
- Jeff Gammons
- Mike Peregrine
- Spencer Adkins
- Paul Hadfield
- Dann Cianca
- Bob Hartig

More Galleries

Charleston, WV Photo Gallery
Charleston, WV Gallery

2008 Storm Chasing trip
2008 Storm Chasing trip


Site contents © 2008 - no content usage permitted without a paid license.