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July 11th and 12th, 2007 Colorado Supercells

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2007

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July 11th and 12th provided Colorado some much needed moisture, but also some very large hail. Many areas in northeast Colorado experienced crop devastation due to copious amounts of golfball and larger sized hail during this time period. Moderate northwest flow aloft, with upslope southeasterly surface winds would create decent wind shear, while moderate instability would develop. On July 11, storms formed along a convergence boundary over east central Colorado and became severe, taking on relatively high based supercell features. I caught one such beast just north of Limon that produced 1.5" diameter hail. On July 12th, I wasn't going to chase, but storms forming along a boundary over southeast Wyoming, and dropping into northeast Colorado, would give me a  great reason to chase. I encountered hail to golfball sized north of Ft Collins along I-25 as the storm was rotating quite nicely, even in the lowest levels. Despite a tornado warning for that area, no tornado was confirmed. Although it certainly tried!
Check out the photos below. Click on an image for a much larger image.

 

 

 

High based supercell north of Limon on July 11th.

 

Hail covering the highways. Quite intense!

 

Winds blown hail covering the ground.

 

Supercell moving south north of Ft Collins on the 12th.

 

Another shot of the Ft Collins striated supercell.

 

Wild structure as hail core intensifies.

 

Large lowering here, had significant rotation.

 

Golfball sized hail covering I-25.

 

Close shot of the hail.

 

Lighting was beautiful with this storm!

 

Gorgeous bolts north of Ft Morgan, CO.

 

Another pretty lightning stroke!


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