Topic: Supercell over Kansas

I think this shot to be proof that God, among all other things He is, is an artist.  My understanding is that the original shot was taken with a camera phone, and since I have witnessed much wild weather in my 75 years I have tried to create what I think may have been the original look of the storm.  I used Affiniti Photo as the tool.

If I have erred in my representation of the event I apologize to the original photographer and, of course, to the artist that created the source work.
https://i.postimg.cc/Z062qgvx/supercell-over-kansas-edited.jpg

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Re: Supercell over Kansas

There's a few more at https://geographical.co.uk/science-envi … s-america?, including a recent one from your state.

Re: Supercell over Kansas

This may sound a bit odd, but as long as weather is not being destructive I like it wild.  Even as a pup I enjoyed watching thunderstorms in all their fury and glory.

When I lived outside Los Angeles California I got funny looks from those I worked with when I said, "Your weather is boring.  Even when it rains it usually just drips from an unexciting sky."

Re: Supercell over Kansas

Robert The Texan wrote:

This may sound a bit odd, but as long as weather is not being destructive I like it wild.  Even as a pup I enjoyed watching thunderstorms in all their fury and glory.

When I lived outside Los Angeles California I got funny looks from those I worked with when I said, "Your weather is boring.  Even when it rains it usually just drips from an unexciting sky."

I've always loved wild and rough weather. I'm the one on the ferry, in rough seas, chowing down in one of the eateries while everyone else is outside in the fresh air, looking green and trying not to throw up. https://punster.me/images/whistling.gif

I spent a few years of my childhood in Australia and the thunderstorms there were spectacular. Alas, it spoiled me; the ones we get here in the UK are extremely tame in comparison. https://punster.me/images/unsure.gif

"I meant," said Ipslore bitterly, "what is there in this world that truly makes living worthwhile?"
Death thought about it.
"Cats," he said eventually. "Cats are nice."
Terry Pratchett, Sourcery

Re: Supercell over Kansas

Some years ago I dated a lass who lived in Norman, Oklahoma, which is about a three to four hour drive from where I lived in the Dallas area.  Every other weekend I boogied to her place, and on those other weekends she came to see me.

The National Weather Center is located in Norman.  There is a simple reason for this:  Norman is located in the Tornado Belt of the U.S., and is well situated to observe violent weather throughout a region of the country cursed by such weather.  Norman, which is next door to Oklahoma City, has witnessed much really ugly weather.

There were times when I would be driving back to Dallas and see enormous thunderstorms building off to the side of the road.  These things would have the classic anvil shape to their tops, and while they were beautiful to observe I always knew that whoever was underneath them was likely getting the crap pounded out of them by torrential rain, large hail, and possibly worse... like a tornado.

I was once on a Lear Jet (a company aircraft) headed to Tampa, Florida from Texas.  The plane passed over the Houston area at an altitude of around 42,000 feet.  The pilots managed to skirt around a massive thunderstorm over Houston, and we could look out the windows of the plane and see that the tops of this monster were well above us.  Clearly the folks underneath that thing were getting pounded.  Lately I learned the tops of that beast reached about 50,000 feet.

Beautiful?  Yes.  Monstrous?  Also yes.

Re: Supercell over Kansas

In another life I would love to be a storm chaser!

Re: Supercell over Kansas

Ann...

I have seen hail bigger than baseballs.  I have seen straight-line winds of seventy miles per hour.  I have seen rain over two and a half inches an hour.  I have seen hail driven by high winds strip the bark off trees and the siding off houses.  I have seen the aftermath of a tornado that killed thirteen people in my West Texas home town.   These things were a part of simple thunderstorms and not something like a hurricane.  At any rate, I have seen some "interesting" weather but I have never seen a tornado in action.

While I think it would be a hoot to chase and observe these things, people have died doing it.  I think I'll pass.  I respect the courage of those who do it, because what they do teaches us things about these visitations from hell.

To repeat something I have said before, I like wild weather... as long as it is not being destructive.  I understand your sentiment, though.  Even when being destructive, weather can be interesting and fascinating.  It is part of God's earth, and we are simply observers... and hopefully survivors.

Re: Supercell over Kansas

Robert The Texan wrote:

Ann...

I have seen hail bigger than baseballs.  I have seen straight-line winds of seventy miles per hour.  I have seen rain over two and a half inches an hour.  I have seen hail driven by high winds strip the bark off trees and the siding off houses.  I have seen the aftermath of a tornado that killed thirteen people in my West Texas home town.   These things were a part of simple thunderstorms and not something like a hurricane.  At any rate, I have seen some "interesting" weather but I have never seen a tornado in action.

While I think it would be a hoot to chase and observe these things, people have died doing it.  I think I'll pass.  I respect the courage of those who do it, because what they do teaches us things about these visitations from hell.

To repeat something I have said before, I like wild weather... as long as it is not being destructive.  I understand your sentiment, though.  Even when being destructive, weather can be interesting and fascinating.  It is part of God's earth, and we are simply observers... and hopefully survivors.

I've been in a few tornadoes.  I was just a kid in Dayton, Ohio.  I can't say I saw it, because we were in the basement, riding out the storm.  It sounds scary -- very high pitch -- screaming -- no telling how close we were but it didn't touch down -- I can't imagine if it did.  We use to see them coming - twisters -- up in the sky with a funnel -- Wizard of Oz like.  No radar or accurate storm forecasts in those days.  Most of them never touched down.