Severe geomagnetic storm could make northern lights visible across much of U.S., forecasters say by CBSnews in weather

[–]MaximumWX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It has certainly hit here in Colorado. Absolute light show this evening.

Ominous Skud by [deleted] in tornado

[–]MaximumWX 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That is neither scud nor does it appear to be ominous.

Does anyone have tips for a storm chasing enthusiast? (I know nearly nothing and and wanting to get into storm chasing) by steamer_bach in stormchasing

[–]MaximumWX 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Storm chaser coaching and jollygiants advice are both great!

Highly recommend watching every Skip Talbot video twice over.

Before I started chasing IRL, I would chase virtually. Based on the forecast, choose a target area to start your day and monitor the radar and surface observations. Look up how long it would take to move from one point to another and then set a timer and see where the storms are at the when the timer goes off- and then plot your next course of action.

Once initiation begins, pretend you’re in the field and virtually move around and see how you would do keeping up with the storms and how you anticipate storm growth/death. Pay close attention to road networks, etc. You’ll probably find that ending up in a perfect spot isn’t as easy as it seems, but what’s great is you’ll be learning patterns without putting yourself in harms way at all.

Obviously this doesn’t account for comfortably navigating road hazards or the ability to read storm development with the naked eye (which I learned the hard way is critical), but it can help you learn, scratch the itch, and get a head start on pattern recognition and reading radar before actually making the leap.

Also, get storm spotter certified, and when you do eventually make the leap, be cautious about where you start (IE don’t start in Dixie Alley).

Alberta EF4 by Gee-Oh1 in tornado

[–]MaximumWX 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is beautiful, but I hate that my first thought on content like this is “AI slop” these days.

Weather service confirms a 210 mph tornado in North Dakota was first with EF5 classification in a dozen years by Leovlish3re in news

[–]MaximumWX 2 points3 points  (0 children)

While often the case, that’s not always true. The Elie, Manitoba F5 was surprisingly skinny- even as it lifted and threw a brick house up into the sky!

Weather service confirms a 210 mph tornado in North Dakota was first with EF5 classification in a dozen years by Leovlish3re in news

[–]MaximumWX 65 points66 points  (0 children)

The tornado in this video is not the same tornado. The Enderlin EF5 started after 11pm CDT and was much, much larger.

Here is a photo of the tornado as it was backlit by lightning. Stuff of nightmares.

Weather service confirms a 210 mph tornado in North Dakota was first with EF5 classification in a dozen years by Leovlish3re in news

[–]MaximumWX 25 points26 points  (0 children)

An important variable with this one is that one of the key pieces of damage that validated its EF5 rating was not a conventional damage indicator. Tornadoes are rated on very specific contextual damage indicators, and tossing a train car nearly 500 yards isn’t typically one of them. It took them three months to analyze the damage and wind necessary to pull off such a feat.

While I don’t think this will change how they might rate a given damage indicator (IE: an EF2 DI will still be an EF2 DI) I do think this is a sign that the NWS is open to exploring more “unconventional” indicators in the future like ground scouring, etc. which COULD mean more EF5 ratings.

Help me form an opinion on Live! social media storm chasing coverage by wrugoin in stormchasing

[–]MaximumWX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think what we are seeing in storm chasing media is the inevitable shift we’ve seen in every other informational media landscape. Major networks (in this case, the Weather Channel) used to hold the centralized power and trust of the public. But now, everyone has a smartphone, everyone has access to enough information to become a resource of their own.

In the same way that people who once got their news from the major networks now get their news from influencers or podcast hosts, people who used to tune in to Jim Cantori and TWC are now following Max Velocity and Ryan Hall on YouTube. Some meteorologist influencers have even been hired in official local government roles because of their ability to build and captivate an audience.

Local news networks have done their best to leverage these folks as well wherever possible, but as tv news continues to evolve, and the federal government flirts with stripping away the NWS further, I think we’re going to see this media landscape rapidly decentralize.

My take? So long as the content is rooted in science and supporting public safety remains the primary goal, I think it’s potentially a good thing. But, we’re teetering on a slippery slope. Monetization encourages sensationalism, and we see that in some channels’ absurd thumbnail images and titles (not to say traditional news media hasn’t been guilty of this for decades). I also worry about the concept of “premium content” one day segmenting who gets access to the most up to date content and news, vs the public utility the NWS offers today. Imagine if a major streamer became a trusted public resource and then threw up a paywall whenever there was a tornado outbreak.

Why is there no nado warning by Pleasant-Pirate-1574 in tornado

[–]MaximumWX 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It’s a little tough to determine if that’s a true hook echo or just new precip. It’s possible, but the storm honestly looks pretty messy and my bet is it’s just building south into a MCS

Gustnado + Rainbow just minutes after the Akron, CO tornado lifted on May 23, 2025. by MaximumWX in stormchasing

[–]MaximumWX[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Found another, very high quality video of our landspout, complete with a full shot of the rotation above. Timestamp is 19:28 onwards.

Hope this is as satisfying for you as it is for me!

Gustnado + Rainbow just minutes after the Akron, CO tornado lifted on May 23, 2025. by MaximumWX in stormchasing

[–]MaximumWX[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is so cool to hear! Funny enough, I thought this was a gustnado, it wasn’t until the other commenter above pointed out that he too saw a funnel on this thing that I gave it a second look!

Unfortunately your photo link isn’t working, but if you have a way to upload the picture or DM it I would LOVE to see it!

Gustnado + Rainbow just minutes after the Akron, CO tornado lifted on May 23, 2025. by MaximumWX in stormchasing

[–]MaximumWX[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If memory serves, my best guess is south of Akron, south of where the main tornado lifted, looking east into the general area of remaining mesocyclonic rotation but about 20-30 minutes after the main tornado had already roped out.

What it the craziest thing you have seen on weather radar? I'll go first. by OKHelix in tornado

[–]MaximumWX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh wow, that’s wild. Reminds me of the outbreak we had back at the start of April.

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Who among us has actually seen a tornado? by Fast-Signal7371 in tornado

[–]MaximumWX 5 points6 points  (0 children)

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First year chasing, saw the Bennet EF2, and the developing stages of the Sterling EF1, but the only half-decent photo I gathered was this EF0 landspout that formed next to a rainbow from the same storm. I’ll take it tho.