The Yuma CO cyclic supercell on August 8, 2023 was the craziest supercell I’ve ever seen. It was a truly gigantic storm that made even other tornadic supercells that I’ve chased look small.
Now as far as the craziest/best tornadoes that I’ve seen, the Akron CO cyclic supercell on June 21, 2023 takes the cake. So many good tornadoes from that day, wish I’d been there earlier but oh well.
Never stop learning! I was commenting to someone earlier this week I feel like I'm bringing more and more advanced knowledge to the field each year and I'm leaving with more questions after I get answers. If you let yourself, its a rabbit hole that never ends! ...At least so far!
Yep, lines are very common down there. Actually tending to be more and more common further west too as our QLCS tornado numbers rise in places like Oklahoma and Texas with time.
I still try to be able to read all of this stuff 😅 Just starded storm chasing last year in Germany😊. Had a supercell a few months ago and my first thunnel cloud and i didnt even noticed that until i reviewed the timelapse 😅 i had a suspicion since i saw a beavertail on the thunderstorm but i thought the Atmosphere is not very loaded 😅
Radarscope has them on their pro plus plan for sure! But they're limited to existing sites. For pulling historical soundings with something like RAP data, I'm not really sure how its done other than I know it can be done! (Not that helpful I know and I apologize!)
@@TornadoTitans no worries, I appreciate the info. I just thought it be interesting to see the sounding data for when an ef0 and heavy straight line winds hit our town last year. Though, looking at current sounding stuff at dupage, it looks like our closest site is Greensboro, which is a good 60 or 70 miles from us, so maybe not that useful in the end.
Informative and well-presented. Great work! Thanks!
Thanks for watching!
The Yuma CO cyclic supercell on August 8, 2023 was the craziest supercell I’ve ever seen. It was a truly gigantic storm that made even other tornadic supercells that I’ve chased look small.
Now as far as the craziest/best tornadoes that I’ve seen, the Akron CO cyclic supercell on June 21, 2023 takes the cake. So many good tornadoes from that day, wish I’d been there earlier but oh well.
@@keatonterry That Akron supercell is one I'd love to see a repeat of in open country again. What a day that was.
That hydro mode was wicked...Excellent video...Always learning...Thank you 😎💯
Never stop learning! I was commenting to someone earlier this week I feel like I'm bringing more and more advanced knowledge to the field each year and I'm leaving with more questions after I get answers. If you let yourself, its a rabbit hole that never ends!
...At least so far!
Excellent teaching video.
Thanks so much for watching!
Interesting information, thanks for presenting, good hosting!
Thanks for watching!!
Lines of thunderstorms and 'bow echos' are the bread-n-butter in the Southeast. Good show! 🇺🇸 👍☕
Yep, lines are very common down there. Actually tending to be more and more common further west too as our QLCS tornado numbers rise in places like Oklahoma and Texas with time.
We have another catagory in UK! Invisible storms lol. Don't have many at all
Understandable for sure, but the Plains are only about a 8-10 hour flight away!
I still try to be able to read all of this stuff 😅 Just starded storm chasing last year in Germany😊. Had a supercell a few months ago and my first thunnel cloud and i didnt even noticed that until i reviewed the timelapse 😅 i had a suspicion since i saw a beavertail on the thunderstorm but i thought the Atmosphere is not very loaded 😅
is there a reason that i should buy satsquatch instead of using the website on mobile? i don’t plan on buying pro either
Is there a place to look up historical sounding information for a particular area?
Radarscope has them on their pro plus plan for sure! But they're limited to existing sites. For pulling historical soundings with something like RAP data, I'm not really sure how its done other than I know it can be done! (Not that helpful I know and I apologize!)
@@TornadoTitans no worries, I appreciate the info. I just thought it be interesting to see the sounding data for when an ef0 and heavy straight line winds hit our town last year. Though, looking at current sounding stuff at dupage, it looks like our closest site is Greensboro, which is a good 60 or 70 miles from us, so maybe not that useful in the end.
❤❤❤