stormdoctor > Vaulted CeilingMassive supercell over the north half of Pampa, Texas in May, 2002.  This storm was over 45kft tall (~8 miles tall) and persisted for hours.  This photo clearly shows the "vault" of the storm where softball size hail fell decimating a large amount of county; the vault is located above the lightning strike and tends to be one of the more visually stunning parts of the storm (but rarely is photographable secondary to the possibility of large hail--this strike provided a unique view--one I've never seen before).  As you can see by the rounded leading edge, this massive storm was violently rotating.  Below the lightning strike is the midlevel inflow jet into the updraft of this tornadic cell.  Shutter speed was 6 seconds with f/3.5.
stormdoctor > Jamestown Tornado in Cloud County, KansasThis potent tornado was on the ground for about 10 minutes and was almost 1 mile wide (based on the width of the damage path) doing F3 damage on the Fujita scale).  This was taken on May 29, 2004 just west of Concordia, Kansas (and immediately to the north of Jamestown, Kansas).  The parent cell created several other tornadoes (5 that I was lucky enough to photograph) including rare anticyclonic tornadoes which formed as a result of the violent rotation from this updraft.
stormdoctor > Field of DreamsTaken in Rebuplic County, Kansas, May 21, 2004, 30 minutes after sunset, this 6 second exposure captured a rich blue sky with faint lightning in the clouds behind.
stormdoctor > Sunset Over Tornado AlleyAfter storms had been churned up by the dryline, nearly clear skies oversee the fields recently damaged by hail the size of softballs.  The sun sinks below a blue, clear sky.
stormdoctor > Unpaved Road to Hail
Near Smith Center, Kansas, on May 21, 2004, his storm rapidly became severe.  To the right of the photo is the precipitation core which included hail the size of baseballs.
stormdoctor > Lines and ChaosNear Smith Center, Kansas.  I liked the interplay of the storms and trees (nature) with the straight lines creaed by the powerlines and fence poles.
stormdoctor > Reversing SunsetThis explosive updraft formed on the dryline at the Kansas/Nebraska border.  As it shoots upward the updraft moves "backwards" through the sunset rising up high enough to be back in daylight at its peak.
stormdoctor > Back Shearing Sunset AnvilEvolution of the previous photo as the storm intensifies into a back-sheared anvil.  Back shearing indicates the intensity of the storm: it explodes upward so rapidly that the top portion of the storm spreads in all directions as it hits the tropopause, even against the winds aloft.
stormdoctor > Nuclear SunsetThis rotating high-based storm is the evolution from the previous two photos.  A small wall cloud can be seen at its base.  While this storm frequently received tornado and severe thunderstorm warnings, it never produced a tornado.  But it was a truly visually stunning show.
Vaulted Ceiling

Massive supercell over the north half of Pampa, Texas in May, 2002. This storm was over 45kft tall (~8 miles tall) and persisted for hours. This photo clearly shows the "vault" of the storm where softball size hail fell decimating a large amount of county; the vault is located above the lightning strike and tends to be one of the more visually stunning parts of the storm (but rarely is photographable secondary to the possibility of large hail--this strike provided a unique view--one I've never seen before). As you can see by the rounded leading edge, this massive storm was violently rotating. Below the lightning strike is the midlevel inflow jet into the updraft of this tornadic cell. Shutter speed was 6 seconds with f/3.5.
stormdoctor > Vaulted CeilingMassive supercell over the north half of Pampa, Texas in May, 2002.  This storm was over 45kft tall (~8 miles tall) and persisted for hours.  This photo clearly shows the "vault" of the storm where softball size hail fell decimating a large amount of county; the vault is located above the lightning strike and tends to be one of the more visually stunning parts of the storm (but rarely is photographable secondary to the possibility of large hail--this strike provided a unique view--one I've never seen before).  As you can see by the rounded leading edge, this massive storm was violently rotating.  Below the lightning strike is the midlevel inflow jet into the updraft of this tornadic cell.  Shutter speed was 6 seconds with f/3.5.
Vaulted Ceiling

Massive supercell over the north half of Pampa, Texas in May, 2002. This storm was over 45kft tall (~8 miles tall) and persisted for hours. This photo clearly shows the "vault" of the storm where softball size hail fell decimating a large amount of county; the vault is located above the lightning strike and tends to be one of the more visually stunning parts of the storm (but rarely is photographable secondary to the possibility of large hail--this strike provided a unique view--one I've never seen before). As you can see by the rounded leading edge, this massive storm was violently rotating. Below the lightning strike is the midlevel inflow jet into the updraft of this tornadic cell. Shutter speed was 6 seconds with f/3.5.
See photo in gallery

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