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Sunday (22nd) was an alright chase with a tornado in the rain near Clarendon, TX, but definitely could have been better. I was dealing with a tire that I had got patched a few days before that leaked the entire chase. Every Time I stopped I got out in the rain and hook a pump to it to keep at safe levels. I made it through the chase without issue. First thing Monday morning I went and had it patched again, but it remained a concern for me. My new tires were not coming in till Tuesday afternoon, though I have yet to put them on a week later at this point. I just wanted the patch to get me through the next 2 days of chasing. That entire day felt like getting kicked in the kneecap.
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Monday left a foul taste in my mouth as I ended up in the middle target area with area where storm went to die. Caught a fantastic storm at sunset with lightning, which was the only thing that made the drive home acceptable.
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The burn from Monday (mainly the Woodward storm) left me focused on going wherever I needed for Tuesday's setup. The area with backed surface flow from around Garden City, KS down to Woodward, OK was the obvious area to target to me. Hodo's for that entire area looked pretty and just about everything but the 200mb was in the "you are going to get a tornado" category IMO. I initially set out Buffalo, OK, like hundreds others, from Amarillo headed up US 60 at about noon that day. After passing Canadian, TX, I began to favor KS a bit more. I had considered KS before I left and the satellite loop finally convinced me. I drove north through Lipscomb and then backtracked to Beaver and made my way to Meade, KS. Analyzing satellite loop, the same type of bulge that had kicked off the Scott City storm with a tornado was forming right over Meade, KS (SW of Dodge City).
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I tried to get my stream and dome cam functioning as a rain free base expanded and an RFD cut tried to poke in with a developing wall cloud. The stream just wouldn't connect. The dome cam I had thought overheated again so I kept checking it but was getting no response. I eventually gave up on getting either to work. Figured out after the chase why the dome cam never worked. The battery had become just dislodged enough not to turn on, but not where I could tell. Would have been great to have that video but was better I didn't have to deal with it during the chase on what would be soon muddy roads.
I pushed north 4 miles following the storm that was really beginning to spin. Saw my first other chasers at County Line Rd. Just a few though. We all pushed along right up behind a now pretty intense little wall cloud with occasion funnels, which may have touched down. I was sure this storm was going to turn east now, so I took a right turn on 'I-kid-you-not' Whirlwind Rd. That road forced me to go 3 miles east before turning north again. Putting me just 3 miles west of 283, yet I was still right up behind the action.
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As I tracked north, this tornado continued to move further west as it went north till it moved back into the rain and roped. Before it finished, the new meso had dropped a few needles just north of me. This new meso soon wrapped up into another laminar cone and had another meso or 2 forming very close to it. The storm was incredible. It had a new wall cloud going long before the previous meso's tornado had even matured. The new meso, especially the one forming just east of 2nd primary tornado seemed to a have a few areas of rotation, even a anticyclonic one on the edge of it's RFD region. This could have been bolstered by the close proximity to the mature tornado just to it's west. When the 2ns primary tornado began to rope out, its circulation was sucked around the south side of the new meso area that had been dropping needle tornadoes. The needles had morphed into a stout cone under a now large wall cloud. This new tornado would be the one to track just west of Dodge City and eventually rope out NW of town.
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Nothing on radar was super appealing so I began to track SW and quickly began to find damage. I waited for a few minutes for the storm to reorganize, but it never happened. I kinda got stuck where I pulled up the road out west of the damage, but was real lucky and was able to free myself. All that chasing then getting stuck after the chase would have made sense. Expecting lots of Damage just west of Dodge, I went all the way west to Cimarron and south from there. Power was out all the way out there too. As I drove south the sky really began to light up so I started looking for a windmill. I was able to find one in the midst of a wind farm. Was a complete of a chase as I could have ever have hoped for. Only a few snafu's but nothing too bad. I started my trek back to Amarillo, which I got home just at 12:30 am.
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Here is my video of highlight clips from the DDC storm:
Here is my timelapsed video of the entire chase by DDC:
Clips from the May 22nd chase and Clarendon, TX tornado:
Chase route while on the storm:
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