May 16th-17th, 2005 Central Kansas Supercells
Last Updated on Saturday, 09 January 2010 17:51 Written by Roger Hill
I was to play the boundary in central Kansas these two days. May 16 was a tough forecast with the greatest potential for tornadic supercells in Nebraska. We sat in North Platte till things got a bit clearer. We decided to head south into northern Kansas as heating and instability was best there. However, as we drove south of McCook a supercell exploded 45 miles to our east. Too late to catch this northeast (and soon to be tornadic) moving at 45 mph supercell. We continued our trek south. When we arrived at our target of Oakley, a beautiful rotating supercell was southwest of us. We core punched to get in front of it and encountered hail almost softball sized. It was incredible! We stayed south of this storm as inflow raged at a clocked 72 mph!! If dewpoints would have been mid 60s instead of mid 50s I am certain large tornadoes would have occurred. Near dark an absolutely gorgeous mothership supercell formed as we watched in awe. This storm had a nice funnel cloud but could not touch down and become tornadic.
The next day would have us continuing to play the boundary/triple point just west of Hays. By mid afternoon convection fired west of Hays and could not sustain itself. Finally a cluster of storms formed east of Hays from which a nice classic supercell tracked along I70 from Russell eastward. This storm tried very hard to produce a tornado, but couldn't quite focus rotation strong enough in the updraft to do it. Several times rapidly rotating wall clouds would form only to dissipate as occlusion after occlusion occurred. Finally, near Wilson, the storm dissipated.
The next day would have us continuing to play the boundary/triple point just west of Hays. By mid afternoon convection fired west of Hays and could not sustain itself. Finally a cluster of storms formed east of Hays from which a nice classic supercell tracked along I70 from Russell eastward. This storm tried very hard to produce a tornado, but couldn't quite focus rotation strong enough in the updraft to do it. Several times rapidly rotating wall clouds would form only to dissipate as occlusion after occlusion occurred. Finally, near Wilson, the storm dissipated.
May 16 near Gove county, Kansas
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Intense supercell develops.
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Crazy 70 mph inflow!!!
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Awesome mammatus!!!!
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Baseball sized hail falling!!!
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Hail over 3" in diameter on the ground.
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Another shot of the monster hail.
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Nice cinnamon swirl as storm gets better organized.
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Funnel!! Large funnel that became rain wrapped north of Utica. Tornado warning at this point in the storm.
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Wall cloud from second supercell northeast of Scott City.
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Incredible mothership from the western supercell northwest of Scott City!!! Beautiful structure.
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Another shot of the mothership with wall cloud.
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Landspout tornado or weak supercell tornado!
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May 17 near Russell, Kansas
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Scud bomb forms as storms intensifies.
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Developing wall cloud.
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Incredible rotating wall cloud!!!!
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Wall cloud loses its rotation and focus.
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Storms starts to diminish as wall cloud disappears.
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Storm continues to weaken.
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