Chase July 10: III

2010.07.18

The rest of the pictures of the July 10 Chase…

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Different ways…

2010.07.16

Three different views…  same scene but different in white balance, different in time,different looking …

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A capital “S” sized shelf…

2010.07.15

A massive destructive shelf cloud in the West of Venlo (Netherlands), exact location can be found here

The “n” th chase with Peter and Bart this week and we finally got to see something… not that we never see anything but sometimes models and reality are so different that using your eyes and some internet (if there is any) are the only options left open… Sometimes the lack of internet is  good,  you are bound to use your eyes and taking decisions in those moments are completely different than www related choices…(radar, models and other electrical influences…)

We started early with a drive towards Eindhoven. Just before leaving Belgium we stopped at exit 26, an excellent spot with a wide view from where we easily could gain Eastern kilometers in no time.  When I say early, well… it was…left 10 AM for a nice wait near Retie… ideal for some macro photography, there was plenty of time… After a last check on the radar images we decided to move on, due to the lack of activity in the part that was moving towards us. We left the neighborhood of Retie around  17 PM for a ride towards Venlo and further if necessary…  Of course, as usual, as we should know since long… once a convective system started its progression, especially with the amount of jet, it is difficult to stay ahead of its progression… We unanimously stopped the chase van here

Arrived at our photography location around 17.34 pm with a short wait as future.  Shanti (our chase dog) disappeared into the car after 15 minutes wondering whatever we were doing watching from a protected little corner…  Witnessed a very disturbed, messy shelf cloud due to the collision with another expanding thunderstorm next to it which produced it’s own “shelf”.  A fight of  air, moist, temperature and progression… we were lucky not to be in the path of the new born…

Left at 18.02 PM in hail, rain and severe wind gusts…

Tried to get in front, at moments I was pretty confident… :) …but and as usual, especially in shelf cases, once the system passes overhead there  is no way of getting back in front… Learned the lesson multiple times but we always seem to make the same mistakes…  Stuck in rain and lightning, massive amounts of water on the roads, here and there a tree laying down it’s last moments on the road, we searched for some internet…

And found some… only to realize that it was over… Hopeful signs of a electrical shower somewhere in the North of  France… on our way to Gent…

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A shelf cloud is a low, horizontal wedge-shaped arcus cloud. Unlike a roll cloud, a shelf cloud is attached to the base of the parent cloud (usually a thunderstorm). Rising cloud motion often can be seen in the leading (outer) part of the shelf cloud, while the underside often appears turbulent and wind-torn. Cool, sinking air from a storm cloud’s downdraft spreads out across the surface with the leading edge called a gust front. This outflow undercuts warm air being drawn into the storm’s updraft. As the cool air lifts the warm moist air, water condenses creating a cloud which often rolls with the different winds above and below (wind shear).

Weather pictures

2009.12.15

from the last 2 months… There’s a little bit of everything…optics, cloudscapes and a nice tour bus sunset… next weather update in a week with, I hope, a massive amount of snow in Belgium… lol

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Fuzzy Mammatus…

2009.11.22

Some fuzzy mammatus taken tonight just after sunset. Barely visible with the naked eye… no tripod in reach… Fuzzy it is!

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