SmugMug
Home | Login | Help |
|
Style:
|View Cart
share photo
stormdoctor  > Weather > 2006 Chase Season!
This year was unparalleled in so many ways: its almost complete lack of severe weather; the sheer number of miles I drove (4550); the myriad states I drove through (10); and the absence of a single Tornado Warning on any cell I chased this year. The lattermost is a major "first" for me, and underscores how quiet the season actually was. Nevertheless, it was a gratifying chase season in many different ways: I visited areas I'd never been (such as Mt. Rushmore) and I got to do more sightseeing than I normally get to. I got better lightning shots than I've had before, and overall I enjoyed myself in spite of the quiet season.
Gallery pages:  1  2  >  
Buy:
this photo buy this photo
multiple photos buy multiple photos | view cart view cart
< 1 of 16 >
stormdoctor > 180 degree panorama shot of a flanking line over a quiet road near Burlington, CO.
stormdoctor > My best lightning photo ever.  This sunset photo was taken with the gorgeous sunset reflected in the railroad tracks in the foreground.  This was near Limon, CO.
stormdoctor > Spectacular sunset with reddened virga reflected in the railroad tracks.  Near Limon, CO.
stormdoctor > An outflow dominant, southward propagating supercell, the only one that formed during my two week trip, took me through the beautiful Red River Valley on the TX/OK borders.  This is near Lawton, OK.  The Red River dirt is very powdery, like flour, and I actually ruined one of my video cameras here years ago simply by having it fall into the dirt.
stormdoctor > Supercell at sunset near Concordia, KS, with the sun sitting on the horizon to the right.
stormdoctor > The sun sets on the horizon beneath a NE/SW traveling midlevel inflow tail.
stormdoctor > This anvil formed from a storm that was over Pikes Peak, CO.  The storm was high-based, and clung to the mountain the whole afternoon.  Periodically the intensity of the anvil would result in a very impressive crisp edge.  That edge, here, hangs over the gorgeous SE Colorado scrub.
stormdoctor > No one but me seems to like this photo.  I loved the intensity of the green pasture, the seemingly oblivious cattle, and the intense precip core bearing down on them just 1/2 mile away.  I guess it was the color that struck me.  This was near Sayre, OK.
stormdoctor > Intense electrical storm near Sayre, OK.  The strike to the left set off an impressive structure fire and wildland fire that fortunately was extinguished by the quick thinking of neighbors, and by the dowsing intensity of an amazing HP wet downburst.  The home was threatened, but the flames extinguished shortly thereafter.
180 degree panorama shot of a flanking line over a quiet road near Burlington, CO.
 > 180 degree panorama shot of a flanking line over a quiet road near Burlington, CO.
180 degree panorama shot of a flanking line over a quiet road near Burlington, CO.
Original size: 8243px x 1871px |
Current: 400px x 91px |
Other sizes: Small · M · L · O |
Share photo: links, forums, blogs |
Keywords: coloradostormpanorama
Gallery pages:  1  2  >  
Buy:
this photo buy this photo
multiple photos buy multiple photos | view cart view cart
< 1 of 16 >

Comments

| hide gallery comments |

New comment:

Comment on: | Rating: stars
Name:
Link:
To foil spammers, enter this code: copy this text in this box: Code unreadable?
News | Browse | Keywords | Communities | Forum | Wiki | Gear | Prints & Gifts | Shopping Cart | Login
Terms | Privacy | About Us | Contact SmugMug | Blogs | API | Affiliates | © 2008 SmugMug, Inc.
Show FeedsAvailable Feeds | What are feeds?
gallery photos:
Atom FeedAtom | RSS FeedRSS
Updating...